Friday, January 02, 2015

PAL eyeing Cebu Pacific's share in seat entitlements to Papua New Guinea

InterAksyon

MANILA – The Philippines' flag carrier wants to mount more flights to Papua New Guinea.     

                    

In a filing with the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), Philippine Airlines (PAL) has asked for the reallocation of seat entitlements previously granted to Cebu Pacific.
At present, PAL and Cebu Pacific each holds 300 seat entitlements a week.
Both airlines have yet to use the entitlements since the governments of the Philippines and Papua New Guinea concluded air talks in 2012.
To recall, the government of Papua New Guinea dropped the Philippines' request for 720 additional seat entitlements per week because of local carriers’ failure to maximize the existing 600 seats.
CAB executive director Carmelo Arcilla had said PAL wants additional seats so it can fly four times weekly, while Cebu Pacific is aiming for three weekly flights.
There are about 25,000 overseas Filipino workers in Papua New Guinea.
Niu Guniea, the flag carrier of Papua New Guinea, flies three times a week to and from Manila.
PAL's request for additional seat entitlements will be heard on January 14 at the regulator's headquarters in Pasay City.
 

Thursday, January 01, 2015

PM O’Neill: 2015 will bring challenges and PNG well-placed to make progress despite global conditions

1 January 2015 
Office of the Prime Minister

Prime Minister Peter O’Neill (pictured)  is looking forward to the challenges that will be faced and progress that will be made through the new year.

“The year 2015 will mark our 40th year of independence as a nation, and will provide an opportunity to take stock of and build on our recent progress,” he said.
“Our nation will also hold the largest Pacific Games that has ever been undertaken, we will host the Leaders of the Pacific Islands’ Forum and welcome hundreds of APEC delegates as we prepare to host APEC Presidents and Prime Ministers in 2018.”
O'Neill said the focus of the Government would remain on the core policy areas that it promised to the people at the 2012 election, while managing global economic concerns relevant to Papua New Guinea.
“As a government we will continue to ensure the development of our four key priority areas of free education for all of our children, universal healthcare, improving law and order around the nation and delivering vital infrastructure.
“There will be challenges, particularly as the larger economies around the world face difficulties, but we are working to insulate people and businesses in our country from these complications.
“In particular, while the price of oil has dropped in recent months, for the most part this will not overly affect LNG revenues as we have forward contracts in place that are set at fixed pricing formula.
“Our domestic economy remains strong with a range of major projects underway that have already been funded and are creating tens of thousands of jobs throughout the country.
“This includes the infrastructure programmes that are needed to ensure our economy continues to generate business and create jobs into the future.
“Projects such as new roads, bridges and wharfs, new teachers colleges other educational institutions, and ongoing hospital improvements will be delivered in 2015.
“We are building thousands of new houses that will also be completed in 2015 giving thousands of Papua New Guinean families their own home through one of the best personal home loan schemes in the world.
“We will continue to devolve decision-making and spending power away from Waigani to local level governments and communities where this authority can be better undertaken in a targeted and transparent manner.
“Local people know their local areas and we are empowering people in the provinces, districts towns and villages to utilise government resources in a more effective and transparent manner.”
O'Neill said that despite the challenges posed by the international economy, the economy was moving forward and growth was positive.
“Our economic growth over the past few months has been very stable.
“The economy has been growing at around 8% per annum and this positive growth will continue.
“Inflation is steady, interest rates are steady, our foreign reserves are very high with enough in reserve to cover six months of imports, and employment levels continue to increase.
“The fundamentals of our economy are sound and the people of our nation have a hard-working Government, hard-working ministers and a hard-working Parliament that is working for the good of Papua New Guinea.”
The Prime Minister has wished all members of the public, and all members of the Parliament, a safe and prosperous 2015.
  

Mt Hagen goes to the dogs

Story and pictures by SIMON GESIP

Sadly Santa has never arrived in this part of the Highlands town of Mt Hagen.
We will be moving into the New Year with all this rubbish
 

Rubbish, rubbish everywhere and not anybody to clean it up.




There is no concern shown by the leaders of this town as there seem no budget to fund for garbage collection.

The gate into the K7 million market smells horrible.
Mt Hagen Market
The bus stop is no different from a sewerage pond.
Stinky and smelly.
Hope 2015 holds some change for this town.

Catholic Bishop declares war on ‘witch hunters’ in Papua New Guinea

By Thomas D. Williams, Ph.D.

In Papua New Guinea, four women have been accused by other villagers of practicing black magic and may face an excruciating death, along with their thirteen children and grandchildren.

AP

The accusations followed on a measles epidemic that recently hit the village, which, according to some of the inhabitants, is the result of a curse.
The Catholic Bishop of Wabag, Arnold Orowae, has launched a campaign against the persecution of so-called witches, and has threatened Catholics who get involved in sorcery-related attacks with excommunication.
In an interview Tuesday, Bishop Orowae expressed his disgust at people who call themselves Christians and yet spread dissension and lies linking innocent individuals to sorcery. He also said that the Catholic Church would fight against these witch hunters together with the police.
“The unethical and unlawful killing of women alleged to be witches must and will be stopped in 2015,” the bishop said.
The Bishops’ Conference of Papua New Guinea has also published an open letter in the two major Papuan dailies, to condemn the persecution of pseudo-witches.
Human Rights Watch said that violence against women in PNG “is rampant,” often involving charges of sorcery. In February, 2013, a mob in Western Highlands Province accused 20-year-old Kepari Leniata of sorcery after a six-year-old child died in her city. The mob stripped her and burned her to death as a witch. Eight other women reportedly were victims of such attacks during the course of the year.
The accused women are from the isolated Hewa area of the Enga province, a part of the country where there are no police and only a few missionaries. In the absence of decent roads, the area is accessible only by charter plane.
The dominant religion in this area is Lutheranism, but Catholics make up more than a quarter of the nation’s people, and the Church has launched an awareness campaign throughout the country, threatening to excommunicate any Catholic taking part in the torture or killing of so-called witches.
Rueben Mete, national youth director for the Evangelical Lutheran Church of PNG, says his church is also taking a very strong stand against people attacking or killing people accused of witchcraft.
A Lutheran missionary, Rev. Lutz, said that at least 25 suspected witches were tortured and murdered in the region Hewa the past 10 years.
The Catholic Church has been fighting a deeply rooted mentality in the area that attributes natural calamities to sorcery. Last January, the Church organized a conference titled “Church and Media – A Joint Reflection on Sorcery” in Boroko, a suburb of the capital, Port Moresby.
An Italian missionary and sociologist, Fr. Franco Zocca, was keynote speaker at the conference, and discussed the Church’s attitude toward magic and sorcery, as well as the findings of the Melanesian Institute, which studies indigenous cultures of the region.
Fr. Zocca has spent years researching attitudes toward sorcery in Papua New Guinea, and told conference attendees that “only scientific enlightenment and a massive education effort can help overcome sorcery beliefs” in the country.

Follow Thomas D. Williams on Twitter @tdwilliamsrome

Domestic violence as a way of life: The reality for Papua New Guinea's women

Commentary
December 31, 2014
 
In Papua New Guinea (PNG), the South Pacific's largest island, extreme forms of gender-based violence are frequent and unpunished—and more than half of reported victims of sexual abuse are age 15 or younger.

A woman in traditional costume performs a welcome dance for guests from the expedition ship Orion, Kuiawa Island, Papua New Guinea, April 15, 2014


Groups like Doctors Without Borders say the widespread abuse of women by domestic partners, criminal gang members, and even members of law enforcement across the nation of 7.3 million resembles what is observed in conflict zones. This view is supported by studies that estimate interpersonal violence, including intimate partner violence, to be far more prevalent and more costly than violence perpetuated during civil wars.
Efforts by the national government to address violence against women have been slow, due to policymakers' reluctance to acknowledge what the community considers “social” or “private” issues as public matters. Domestic violence in PNG has been trans-generational and embedded in the culture's low view of women's place in the family.
Women's status in PNG not only subjects them to harm at home but is also reflected in their poor health outcomes. WHO studies have shown that when women experience interpersonal violence, they are 16 percent more likely to bear a low birth-weight child and be at a higher risk for contracting sexually transmitted infections. PNG women also have a lower life expectancy than men, although the reverse is typically true in most countries around the world.
There is no comprehensive data that fully details the different ways women in PNG experience violence; most islanders live in remote areas where data collection has been a challenge. The available information has come from qualitative community studies by government and non-governmental organizations (NGOs). These data are substantiated by direct accounts from survivors and victims' families.
A 2009 study (PDF) noted that nearly two-thirds of participants said they were survivors of domestic violence. These percentages are extremely high when compared to the global average wherein 30 percent of women say they experienced intimate partner violence—the most common form of violence experienced by women—at one point in their lifetime. Most women in PNG said it was difficult to disclose abuse to family members or to report incidents to authorities because of the stigma that exists about these crimes, the lack of community support, and a weak criminal justice system.
In recent years, efforts to reduce violence against women have received greater attention from policymakers due to the work of civil society organizations interested in women's rights and increased media coverage. In 2012, 101 East, a weekly program broadcast by Al Jazeera English, featured a documentary on the plight of PNG women, exploring why so many are assaulted and highlighting community-driven recommendations to reduce the violence rates.
Most recently, Vlad Sokhin, a freelance photographer and multimedia producer, published his photo book Crying Meri, which documented gender-based violence in PNG. This two-year project was supported and showcased by groups like UN Women and Amnesty International. He worked with NGOs, local social workers, and human rights advocates to identify survivors willing to tell their stories—and most he approached agreed to be photographed, in hopes their sharing might spare their daughters and granddaughters their horrific experiences. He also photographed perpetrators who openly talked about their crimes without qualms about prosecution. The final product is a stunning compilation of harrowing pictures and short stories.
In the meantime, two dozen employees of the National Public Service, PNG's largest employer, volunteered to become role models with the goal of changing attitudes and behaviors about PNG women's rights both at the workplace and at home. These men are the faces of 19 government departments and have pledged to support the National Public Service Gender Equity and Social Inclusion Policy (PDF) by identifying loopholes in laws and policies that might deprive women from attaining justice.
There also are many PNG women, such as Monica Paulus, who work tirelessly at their own peril, to defend women's rights in their communities. Paulus' group, the Highlands Women's Human Rights Defenders Network, seeks to rescue and support women accused of the still prevalent claim of sorcery. Paulus strives to help the accused women find temporary shelter, health care, and legal help to prepare their cases for court.
Although PNG has sought to improve its criminal justice system for decades, it was only in April 2014 that lawmakers approved family protection laws first drafted in the early 1990s. Besides criminalizing domestic violence, this new legislation strengthens protection orders and instructs law enforcement authorities to aggressively pursue and prosecute family violence and sexual assault cases.
A recent report by the Lowy Institute for International Policy argues that Australia, PNG's neighbor to the south and largest aid donor and key development partner, has the opportunity and responsibility to use its aid programs to support gender rights and equity. Canberra, through bilateral agreements, can press officials in Port Moresby to give higher priority to addressing gender-based violence by identifying and strengthening weak links in PNG's legal system and by providing resources to local initiatives that support affected individuals and families.
The problem of gender-based violence against women is a persistent one in PNG, and around the world. In addition to ratifying international and national agreements that protect women from abuse, the PNG government should invest in more research so that the true extent of the problem can be captured. Moreover, local programs, especially those that actively involve men, should be encouraged and sustained.

Mahlet Woldetsadik is an assistant policy analyst at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation and a Ph.D. candidate at the Pardee RAND Graduate School. This blog was written for the Pardee Initiative for Global Human Progress.

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Don't party like it's 1999

By MALUM NALU

My mind goes back 15 years to Dec 31, 1999, Y2K year, when everyone was saying computers would go haywire and the world would end at the stroke of of midnight.
The missus and I lived in a big three-bedroom house at Rotary Park, West Goroka, and had no kids then.
An apocalyptic, surreal, silence shrouded Goroka that day as everyone stayed indoors and said their last prayers.
The hellfire and brimstone mob had been working overtime in the markets, shops, and sidewalks of our town.
Such was the end-of-the-world feeling you would have actually thought that the Four Horsemen of the Apocalyse were riding into town that day. 
I told Hula, my missus,  that if the world ended, we might as well go out it in style riding on chariots of fire, so we went to the Bird of Paradise and drank, hugged, and kissed each other as if the world would end (I'm not recommending that you drink today or am I promoting alcohol).
Even the bar at the Bird was so quiet, (on a New Year's Eve) you could have heard a pin drop, and we thought we were in some mad scene in Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome.
That night, some of our guys from Butibam village in Lae, Egi Luther Daure, and his elder brother, David, drove down the highway from Mt Hagen in a 10-seater.
To cut a long story short, the world didn't end at midnight (contrary to what the prophets of doom and righteous brothers were preaching and singing on the streets), and on New Year's Day 2000, with the Highlands Highway being scot-free of vehicles (as Papua New Guineans, being Papua New Guineans, thought the world would end with a religious fervour), music blaring to silence any sad dirges, and eskies full of beer (our driver didn't drink), we hit Lae in a record three hours (thank to the Y2K paranoia and mass hysteria).
That's my little tumbuna story about our younger and wilder days (I'll write a book about it if I can find the time in 2015).
Happy New Year one and all, and stay sober...don't go out drinking like it's 1999...

Is Papua New Guinea descending into kleptocracy?

Note the use of "kleptocracy" to describe PNG in this article in the Sydney Morning Herald on Monday: "The recent collapse in oil prices, however, may mean that Australia will not have the luxury of ignoring the plight of Papua New Guinea, in particular, for much longer.
"Like Australia, PNG has spent the revenue of the resources boom as if it would go on forever.
"At the same time, the former Australian protectorate has been busily eroding its political and legal institutions to the point where kleptocratic behaviour has come to threaten the viability of the state itself.
"Unlike Iraq, Ukraine or China, there is no country other than Australia that the world will expect to intervene."
So what is "kleptocracy"?
According to Wikepedia:   " Kleptocracy, alternatively cleptocracy or kleptarchy, (from Greek: κλέπτης - kleptēs, "thief"[1] and κράτος - kratos, "power, rule",[2] hence "rule by thieves") is a form of political and government corruption where the government exists to increase the personal wealth and political power of its officials and the ruling class at the expense of the wider population, often with pretense of honest service.
"This type of government is generally considered corrupt, and the mechanism of action is often embezzlement of state funds.
"While the term can be used in its literal sense to mean a society based on theft, it is more commonly used derogatorily to point out a corrupt government or ruling class."