Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Tuesday July 23 is Remembrance day in Papua New Guinea







Tuesday July 23  is a public holiday in Papua New Guinea and marks the 71st anniversary of the first engagement by PNG and Australian forces against the invading Japanese in WWII.
Out of the chaos and death that followed came the enduring heroism of the Kokoda Trail, and the special relationship that has bound PNG and Australia ever since.
One of the bloodiest campaigns of the Second World War began 66 years ago on Wednesday this week, July 23.
And it has forever sealed the relationship between Australia and Papua New Guinea.
It was on this day, in 1942, that Japanese troops landed on the northern coast of New Guinea and unexpectedly began to march over the Owen Stanley Ranges with the intent of capturing Port Moresby.
Had they succeeded, the mainland of Australia would have come under dire threat.
July 23 - Remembrance Day - marks the 60th anniversary of the first engagement between the opposing troops on July 23, 1942, and from that engagement, as the Australian force was progressively outnumbered, began the long fighting withdrawal over the Owen Stanley Range.
The 21st Brigade, commanded by Brigadier Potts DSO MC, was rushed to New Guinea and within days, its 1500 men were closing in on the precarious Owen Stanley Ranges in an attempt to position themselves to stop the advance of the Japanese forces - now building up to over 10, 000 men.
The brigade also engaged the ill-trained but gallant militia 39th Battalion at Isurava in the foothills on the far side of the range.
Kokoda was arguably Australia's most significant campaign of the Second World War.
More Australians died in the seven months of fighting in Papua, and the Japanese came closer to Australia, than in any other campaign.
Many of those young Australians, whose average age was between 18 and 19, now lie buried at the Bomana War Cemetery outside Port Moresby.
The famous photograph of "fuzzy wuzzy angel" Raphael Oimbari leading a blindfolded wounded Australian epitomizes the close relationship between Australians and Papua New Guineans which has come about because of the battle of Kokoda.
To read between the lines of "Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels", the celebrated poem by Australian digger Bert Beros, will bring you to tears.
The poem, while sentimental, touches a chord that has endured to this day in the hearts of both Australians and Papua New Guineans.
It tells of the prayers of worried Australian mothers, whose young sons are fighting the Japanese on that rugged trail, and how their prayers are answered in the form of "fuzzy wuzzy angels".

Many a mother in Australia when the busy day is done
Sends a prayer to the Almighty for the keeping of her son
Asking that an angel guide him and bring him safely back
Now we see those prayers are answered on the Owen Stanley Track.

For they haven't any halos, only holes slashed in their ears
And their faces worked by tattoos with scratch pins in their hair
Bringing back the badly wounded just as steady as a horse
Using leaves to keep the rain off and as gentle as a nurse

Slow and careful in the bad places on the awful mountain track
The look upon their faces would make you think Christ was black
Not a move to hurt the wounded as they treat him like a saint
It's a picture worth recording that an artist's yet to paint

Many a lad will see his mother and husbands see their wives
Just because the fuzzy wuzzy carried them to save their lives
From mortar bombs and machine gun fire or chance surprise attacks
To the safety and the care of doctors at the bottom of the track

May the mothers of Australia when they offer up a prayer
Mention those impromptu angels with their fuzzy wuzzy hair
.

- Bert Beros

In 1942, a seldom-used track climbed from the small village of Buna on the north coast of Papua, over the Owen Stanley Ranges and on to Port Moresby.
The track was fairly easy up the slopes through Gorari and Oivi to the village of Kokoda, which stood on a small plateau 400 metres above sea level, flanked by mountains rising to over 2000 metres.
It then climbed over steep ridges and through deep valleys to Deniki, Isurava, Kagi, Ioribaiwa, Ilolo and, at Ower's Corner, linked with a vehicle road leading from plantations in the hills above Port Moresby down to the coastal plains.
Between Kokoda and Ilolo, the track often climbed up gradients so steep that it was heartbreaking labor for burdened men to climb even a few hundred yards.
Much of the track was through dense rainforest, which enclosed the narrow passage between walls of thick bush.
At higher levels the terrain became moss and stunted trees, which were often covered in mist.
From July to November 1942 this was the setting for a bitter campaign to prevent the fall of Port Moresby.
On January 23, 1942, the Japanese landed at Kavieng on New Ireland and at Rabaul on New Britain where they quickly overcame the Australian defenders.
On March 8, the Japanese established themselves firmly at Lae and Salamaua in Morobe.
But the famous Battle of the Coral Sea from May 5 to 8 averted a Japanese sea-borne invasion of Port Moresby.
The American success at the Battle of Midway in June not only destroyed Japan's capacity for undertaking long range offensives but also provided the Americans with the opportunity to move from the defensive to the offensive.
The Japanese, who were regularly bombing Port Moresby with 20 to 30 bombers with fighter escort, decided on the overland attack across the Owen Stanley Ranges.
On the Kododa Trail the Australian 7th Division resisted the Japanese General Horii's overland attempt to capture Port Moresby, and the advance was halted within 30 miles of the city.
A small force of Australians known as "Maroubra Force" arrived at Buna on July 21st, 1942, as the first Japanese force of 1500 men landed at Gona, eight miles to the west.
What followed will forever go down as one of the most heroic defensive actions in the annals of military history.
The first engagement between the opposing troops was on July 23, 1942, and from that engagement, as the Australian force was progressively outnumbered, began the long fighting withdrawal over the Owen Stanley Range.
Kokoda is a small plateau on the north-east slopes of the Owen Stanley Range and possessed a small airstrip the retention of which, for at least as long as it would take Australia to fly in supplies and reinforcements, was of great importance.
However, the remnants of "Maroubra Force", exhausted by a month's constant fighting, were unable to achieve this. Valiant though their effort was, even recapturing the plateau after being driven out, the Japanese need was of equal importance.
They needed a forward base at Kokoda for their drive over the ranges along the "Kokoda Trail" to Port Moresby and they struck before the Australians were able to muster sufficient strength.
The initiative now remained with the Japanese and Australian withdrawal began again - through Isurava, Alola, Templeton's Crossing, Myola, Efogi, Menari and Nauro until at Ioribaiwa Ridge, beyond which the Japanese could not be permitted to penetrate, a final stand was made.
From August 26 to September 16 in 1942 Brigadier Potts's Maroubra Force, consisting of the 2/16th Battalion, together with the 2/14th, the 2/27th and the militia 39th and scattered elements of the ill-trained 53rd Battalion - outnumbered and outgunned by an estimated 5 to 1 - fought the Japanese to an eventual standstill on the ridges overlooking Port Moresby.
Two main battles were fought during that period (Isurava, August 26 to 29 and Brigade 'Butchers' Hill, from September 6 to 8).
In general, the desperately-tired but determined force kept themselves between the Japanese Major General Horri's South Sea Force and Port Moresby -- defending, retreating and then counter-attacking in a masterly display of strategic defence.
Conditions were almost indescribable.
It rained for most of the time, the weary men endured some of the most difficult terrain in the world and they were racked by malaria and dysentery.
But they kept on fighting, making the enemy pay dearly for every yard of ground. They bought time for those being prepared to come up from Port Moresby to relieve them.
The Australians, however, had a surprise in store for the enemy.
This was in the form of 25-pounder guns brought from Moresby to the road head at Ower's Corner and then laboriously dragged into position at Imita Ridge, opening up on the enemy's barricades.
It was now the turn of the Japanese to suffer what the Australians had suffered in the preceding two months.
Australian shelling smashed Japanese defences and aggressive patrols inflicted severe losses.
On the morning of September 28th, the Australians were closing in and it became evident then the Japanese were withdrawing.
The chase, with the Australians the pursuers, was now on.
The Japanese, despite sickness and hunger, were still formidable and tenaciously defended all the places in their withdrawal as the Australians had in their retreat some weeks earlier.
Kokoda was entered on November 2 and this was the beginning of the end of Japanese hopes in Papua.
The campaign now entered a phase known as "The Battle of the Beaches".
The Japanese were bottled up in the area from where they had begun their drive against Port Moresby some months previously -- Buna and Gona.
This final campaign began on November 19, 1942, and ended on January 22, 1943, when all organised resistance by the Japanese in Papua ended.
Lt Col Honner DSO MC, who commanded the gallant 39th in the campaign, later wrote of these men in the foreword to Peter Brune's book 'Those Rugged Bloody Heroes': "They have joined the immortals." Of those that did not survive, he wrote: "Wherever their bones may lie, the courage of heroes is consecrated in the hearts and engraved in the history of the free."

Notorious PNG criminal William Kapris shot and killed by police

ABC

One of Papua New Guinea's most notorious and violent criminals, William Kapris, has been shot and killed by PNG police.
National Capital District and Central Divisional Commander Jim Andrews has told reporters that the events follow a tip from the public, ending a nearly three-month manhunt.

PNG criminal William Kapris killed in shoot-out
Photo: One of Papua New Guinea's most notorious criminals, William Kapris, has been killed in a shoot-out with PNG police. 

Reports from Port Moresby General Hospital suggest Kapris and fellow escapee Raphael Walimini were both in a shoot-out with police outside the capital, and were taken to the hospital late yesterday evening.
Kapris and Walimini escaped from the maximum security Bomana prison in May, using two pistols allegedly smuggled in by a guard.
Kapris is well known in PNG for his daring bank robberies and three prison escapes.
A reward of $US46,000 was offered for information that leads to his capture, but police said the public response was slow.
In June, Commander Andrews said he was aware his own officers are assisting the bank robber to hide in the capital.

PNG Prime /minister says asylum program not costed

ByEoin Blackwell, AAP Papua New Guinea Correspondent
Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Peter O'Neill says projects agreed to by Australia in exchange for expanding its asylum seeker processing capability have not been costed.
Australia and PNG agreed on Friday that asylum seekers travelling to Australia by boat will be turned away, processed and potentially resettled in PNG.
In exchange, Australia has a agreed to a raft of infrastructure programs in the university, roads, health and law and order sector.
"The costings for the Ramu-Madang highway has not been done, design and costings for of course Lae hospital has not been done. So it costs into millions of Kina," Mr O'Neill told journalists in Port Moresby upon his return from Brisbane on Monday.
"But I cannot just simply give you a figure that is imaginary."
When asked where in PNG asylum seekers will be resettled under the plan he replied: "We'll get there when we start processing them."
Mr also O'Neill declined to nominate an upper limit to the number of asylum seekers he expects to be processed in PNG.
Manus MP Ronnie Knight has said he was told up to 3000.
"It'll be down to what the capacity on the ground can take," Mr O'Neill said.
"Listen, I cannot give you a figure, I cannot know what's going to happen in the future.
"We are hoping this is going to stop the non genuine refugees and asylum seekers coming into our region. I don't think the numbers are going to be as big as what we think its going to be."
He cited Australian media reports of people smugglers saying the expanded processing plan had already had an impact.
"You will see genuine people travelling, but non genuine economic migrants will fall off," he said.
PNG's opposition whip Tobias Kulang on Monday took to the national newspapers to blast the plan.
He said Mr O'Neill should have explained the scheme to the nation's parliament before announcing it in Australia.
"I am convinced we are far less equipped to handle the situation at this stage, especially to respond and to accommodate these asylum seekers.
"Australia must also come out and explain what and how it plans to assist PNG manage this affair."
Church leaders have also condemned the plan.

Monday, July 22, 2013

PNG asylum deal could be in breach of UN convention

ABC

Monday 22 July 2013 

A respected expert on international refugee law has told RN Breakfast that Australia doesn’t have an asylum problem, but a political problem, and refugees are paying the price, as James Bourne reports.


The Federal Government has continued to defend its decision to send all asylum seekers arriving by boat in Australia to Papua New Guinea. Under the regional agreement, Australia will bear the full cost of the plan—including the cost of genuine refugees being resettled.

RUDD png
Image: Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, (R) and Papua New Guinea's Prime Minister Peter O'Neill (L) talk to the media after announcing a policy on asylum seekers. (Aman Sharma/AFP/Getty Images)
Dr James Hathaway, an expert on international refugee law, told RN Breakfast that Kevin Rudd’s announcement on Friday was entirely unprecedented.
‘This plan is without question the most bizarre overreaction I have seen in more than 30 years of working on refugee law,’ said Dr Hathaway. ‘It just makes no sense.'
‘The only mandatory deportation to PNG is going to be so-called boat arrivals. Does the Prime Minister think that every refugee should arrive with a Qantas first class ticket in order to be real?'
Dr Hathaway, a professorial fellow at the University of Melbourne, suggested that the deal struck between Australia and Papua New Guinea was in breach of the the United Nations Convention relating to the Status of Refugees.
‘The convention itself says you can’t penalise refugees for arriving without authorisation,’ he said. ‘There is no visa that Australia or anybody else gives for a person to come and seek asylum.' 
‘To take people who are... coming and asking for asylum and dumping them into the hell hole of PNG is in my view both an illegal penalty and a discriminatory penalty, which puts Australia in breach of the convention on two points.’
The crisis Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says is addressed by the deal doesn't even exist, Dr Hathaway said. Compared to other developed countries, Australia’s intake of 30,000 refugees is ‘a totally average, absolutely manageable number’. 
‘What is really striking about this is that Australia, unlike any developed country that I know, has been attracting almost exclusively genuine refugees as boat arrivals,’ Dr Hathaway told RN.
‘It’s the boat people who seem to have attracted his ire. It’s the most extraordinarily bizarre singling out of the group that...ought to be the very group that we should care about the most,’ he said. 
‘So Australia does not have an asylum problem, it has a political problem, and refugees are being made to pay the price for Kevin Rudd wanting to appear, I think, more butch that Julia Gillard and more reactionary than Tony Abbott.’
‘The people who are so desperatewho so fear for their loss of life that they’re prepared to put their fate into the hands of smugglers and take a horrible boat journey to surviveare the very ones that Australia seems to want to punish.’
Dr Hathaway suggested that sending genuine refugees to Papua New Guinea was a reckless plan, despite the nation being a signatory to the Refugee Convention.
‘We’re talking about a country that ranks 168th in the world in terms of life expectancy, where more than half the country doesn’t have sanitation or clean water, one in two women in PNG have been raped, homosexuals can to jail for 14 years, this is where we’re going to send people who have done nothing wrong, other than have the courage to say that they don’t want to be persecuted for who they are in the country where they lived.'
The High Court’s 2011 ruling on the Gillard government’s proposed Malaysia Solution stated that an arrangement that doesn’t legally guarantee refugees the right to work, education and access to the courts breached obligations under the UN refugee convention. Despite these rights not being guaranteed by the PNG agreement, Australian Attorney General Mark Dreyfus has said that the arrangement ‘complies with our international obligations under the refugee convention’.
Dr Hathaway disagrees.
‘The word ‘rights’ doesn’t even appear in the agreement that the Prime Minister of Australia signed with the Prime Minister of PNG,’ he said. ‘That’s what makes it illegal.'
‘The government seems to think that its only obligation under the convention is to make sure that somebody at risk of being persecuted doesn’t get sent back to persecution.' 
‘That argument is what the government put to the High Court of Australia in the Malaysia case and the High Court quite explicitly rejected that argument.’

High internet costs due to lack of infrastructure



By MALUM NALU
The National
Monday, May 22, 2013
Internet costs are very high in Papua New Guinea because of lack of necessary infrastructure like optical fiber, according to leading PNG telecommunications engineer, Mathew Wari.
Wari, who is now based in the USA, said this last Friday when asked by internet costs were very high in PNG.
Optical fiber is used by many telecommunications companies worldwide to transmit telephone signals, internet communication, and cable television signals.
 Fiber-optic communication is primarily installed in long-distance applications, where they can be used to their full transmission capacity, offsetting the increased cost.
Fiber-optic communication is a method of transmitting information from one place to another by sending pulses of light through an optical fiber.
The light forms an electromagnetic carrier wave that is modulated to carry information.
First developed in the 1970s, fiber-optic communication systems have revolutionised the telecommunications industry and have played a major role in the advent of the Information Age.
Because of its advantages over electrical transmission, optical fibers have largely replaced copper wire communications in core networks in the developed world.
“The main reason why internet is so expensive here is because we don’t have infrastructure like optical fiber rings in PNG,” Wari told The National.
“By that, I mean fiber which runs from Port Moresby to Alotau, Lae, and then to the New Guinea Islands, then internet will come out cheap.
“Fiber is the only medium for fast internet.
“We don’t have that.
“Unless that comes in, internet will be hard to roll out.”
Wari’s company, Wantok Wireless, is offering a cheaper internet alternative to PNG through a VSAT link to Hawaii, and then fiber-optic links to mainland USA.
The state-of-the-art very short aperture terminal (VSAT) satellite communication system which Wantok Wireless set up for the National Weather Service.
“Currently, most people (in PNG) are paying for cap bandwidth,” he said.
“You are only allowed to download to a certain limit, and then you start paying by megabytes.
“What Wantok Wireless is offering is unlimited internet usage, fixed bandwidth, monthly payment, and single link into USA via Hawaii, and then fiber into mainland USA.”

ISPs 'ripping off people'



 By MALUM NALU
The National
Monday, July 22, 2013

Internet service providers (ISPs) have been bluntly accused of ripping off the people of this country when it comes to internet services.
Acting director of National Weather Service (NWS), Samuel Maiha, lashed out at the predominantly foreign-owned ISPs in no uncertain terms during the launching of its state-of-the-art very short aperture terminal (VSAT) satellite communication system last Friday.
One small step for NWS, a giant step for PNG…Maiha and former Teleikom CEO Peter Loko cut the ribbon to launch the revolutionary VSAT system last Friday.-Nationalpic by MALUM NALU

He said Papua New Guinea was way behind the rest of the world in information and communication technology (ICT) and children were missing out on so many educational opportunities because of the ridiculously high internet costs in this country.
Maihe said small and medium enterprises (SMEs) could not develop when internet costs were so high in this country.
Previously, the NWS used an ISP in Port Moresby, however, very high costs monthly costs and limited access forced them to seek VSAT services.
The new system, set up by 100% nationally-owned company Wanples Wireless, which is owned by USA-based PNG telecommunications and satellite engineer Mathew Wari and his family, allows NWS staff to have satellite access to real-time weather conditions in PNG and around the world at a fixed rate of K10, 000 a month with unlimited internet downloads – which will save the organisation millions of kina in the long haul.
“The internet rates in this country are the highest anywhere in the world,” Maiha told guests including school children.
“I believe there is gross collusion on the part of internet service providers to exploit the citizens of this country of their right to information, knowledge, and development.
“I say this because in the 21st Century, information, technology and communication are power, and infrastructure such as this milestone installation is a stepping stone.
“Our children need to learn at the same level with their counterparts elsewhere in the world to be on par in terms of knowledge.
“India and China, and the fastest-developing countries, are those that have embraced ICT in a herculean manner.
“All our educational institutions, except the international schools, don’t have access to adequate internet service to do their studies.
“The children either cannot afford it, or if they do, it is too expensive and their downloads get cut off.
“This is the first for Wanples Wireless and we are told that plans are underway to roll out the service to schools in NCD, and districts through respective members of parliament.
“From here on, our children will have affordable internet for their studies, and the small and medium enterprises will also benefit.”

PNG paper labels asylum plan 'Ruddiculous'

By Eoin Blackwell, AAP Papua New Guinea Correspondent

Asylum seekers sent to PNG and eligible for resettlement will not be guaranteed citizenship and may be sent elsewhere, Prime Minister Peter O'Neill says.
Mr O'Neill on Sunday said Australia's $A500 million aid budget will be aligned to PNG's national priorities "for the first time" as a result of the agreement.
"Those found to have genuine refugee status will be resettled in Papua New Guinea and other participating countries in our region," Mr O'Neill said in a statement.
"There is no guarantee of citizenship unless and until all the requirements of our residency and citizenship laws have been met."
The Australian Government will meet all costs for resettlement, from arrival through to processing and resettlement.
"There will be no negative impact on our budget," Mr O'Neill said.
"This will give our economy a massive boost, with the first benefits to be seen in a short period of time."
PNG citizenship can only be applied for after eight years of residency, and applicants must speak Tok Pisin, Hiri Motu or "a vernacular of the country, sufficiently for normal conversational purpose."
PNG currently does not allow dual citizenship, and applicants must pay about $A4,500 in fees, as well as provide birth and marriage certificates.
Processing and resettlement arrangements will take place under PNG laws, Mr O'Neill said, as well as the UN Convention on the Status of Refugees, to which PNG is a signatory.
Papua New Guinea awoke to the headline "Ruddiculous" on the front page of its only Sunday paper, the Sunday Chronicle.
The newspaper also carried a damning editorial of the plan, which said the controversial border protection plan was about winning votes for Kevin Rudd.
"He (Rudd) has unashamedly dragged our PM into Australian domestic politics under the guise of correcting a regional problem which in the long run will effect us all," it said.
"The big question remains, where is PNG going to resettle those identified as genuine refugees." AAP is seeking an answer to that question from Mr O'Neill's office.
Comment is also being sought from the opposition, who have vowed to mount a constitutional challenge against the current, temporary asylum seeker facility on Manus island.
Mr O'Neill said PNG will benefit economically to the tune of "hundreds of millions of kina" from the controversial program.
"Perhaps the most important aspect of our new agreement with Australia is that for the first time since independence, Australia's development assistance program with Papua New Guinea ... will be aligned with our own national policy and program priorities," Mr O'Neill said in a statement.
"This is a major achievement. It is something every prime minister in the last two or three decades has wanted to achieve. I am proud to have delivered it via the agreement I signed in Brisbane on Friday.
"The agreement will deliver substantial, long term benefits for Papua New Guinea as a whole, and not just provinces such as Manus, which will have regional detention and assessment centres." He said there will be significant ongoing spending in the management and operation of detention centres - such as staff, food, services and infrastructure.
He also vowed to ensure local benefits to local contractors and small businesses were maximised