Sunday, March 25, 2018

A month after PNG quake, cash-strapped government struggles to help the hardest-hit

by Tom Westbrook, reuters.com
March 25, 2018

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Almost a month after a deadly earthquake, Papua New Guinea is struggling to get aid to desperate survivors, having allocated just a fraction of its relief funds, while a rent dispute left disaster officials briefly locked out of their offices.
The scale of the emergency is testing the finances and capacity of one of the world’s poorest countries, disaster and relief officials say, after the magnitude 7.5 quake rocked its remote mountainous highlands on Feb. 26, killing 100 people.

(For a graphic on 'Papua New Guinea quake' click tmsnrt.rs/2ow1YLR)

Thousands of survivors have walked to remote airstrips and jungle clearings, awaiting helicopters bringing supplies of food, water and medicines, aid agencies and authorities say.
“To date, we do not have any money to do all the necessary things,” Tom Edabe, the disaster coordinator for the hardest-hit province of Hela, said by telephone from Tari, its capital.
“(The) government is trying to assist and have budgeted some money, but to date we have not received anything...we have only been given food, and non-food items supplied by other NGOs.”
Continuing aftershocks rattle residents, who have to collect water brought by daily rainstorms to ensure adequate supplies, Edabe, the disaster coordinator, said.
“The biggest thing that people need, apart from food, is water,” said James Pima, a helicopter pilot and flight manager at aviation firm HeliSolutions in the Western Highlands capital of Mt. Hagen, about 170 km (100 miles) from the disaster zone.
“They don’t have clean water to cook or drink ... they are standing there staring. The expression on their faces is blank.”
His firm’s three helicopters fly relief missions “fully flat-out every day,” Pima added.
Destruction to roads and runways means authorities must rely on helicopters to fly in relief.
But while nimble, the craft can only carry smaller loads than fixed-wing aircraft and cannot fly during the afternoon thunderstorms.
The logistics problems wind all the way to PNG’s disaster center, where officials told Reuters they had been locked out of their office in Port Moresby, the capital, for two days last week after the government missed a rental payment.
“That was correct, Monday and Tuesday,” a spokeswoman said.
In a joint report with the United Nations published on Friday, the agency cited “lack of quality data” about food shortages, limited aircraft assets and “significant gaps” in sanitation support as being the biggest problems it faced.
The office of Prime Minister Peter O’Neill did not respond to emailed questions from Reuters.
On his website, O’Neill has previously said, “There will be no quick fix, the damage from this disaster will take months and years to be repaired.”

POLITICAL GAMES’

The government had approved relief funds amounting to 450 million kina ($130 million), O’Neill said initially, but a later statement mentioned only 3 million kina in initial relief - or less than 1 percent - had been allocated to the worst-hit areas.
In its November budget, the government made plans to rein in spending and trim debt projected to stand at 25.8 billion kina in 2018.
The impoverished country is also missing its largest revenue earner, after the quake forced a shutdown of Exxon Mobil Corp’s liquefied natural gas project, which has annual sales of $3 billion at current LNG prices.
The firm is still assessing quake damage at its facilities.
O’Neill last week hit out at critics of the aid effort for playing “political games,” while thanking Australia and New Zealand for military aircraft that provided assistance beyond the capacity of PNG’s own defense forces.
His political opponent, former Prime Minister Mekere Morauta, had called the government’s response “tardy” and inadequate.
“Relief sources say mobile medical centers and operating theaters are needed urgently, and that only international partners can supply them,” Morauta said last week.
Foreign aid pledges of about $49 million have come in from Australia, China, the European Union, Japan, New Zealand and the United States, says the United Nations, most of it provided by private companies.
Exxon and its partner, Oil Search Ltd, say they have provided $6 million in cash and kind for quake relief.
Local officials say the scale of destruction, with villages buried by landslides and provincial towns flattened, has overwhelmed authorities in Papua New Guinea, which straddles the geologically active Pacific Ring of Fire.
“Policemen are still struggling because there is no support flying in and out,” said Naring Bongi of the quake-damaged police station in the Southern Highlands capital of Mendi.
“There is not enough food to supply care centers, they need fresh water,” he added.

(For an interactive graphic on 'Aftermath of Papua New Guinea's earthquake' click tmsnrt.rs/2Fdu74B)

Papua New Guinean students learn about the benefits of commercial farming at University of New England

by Madeline Link, armidaleexpress.com.au
March 23, 2018

MORE THAN 2000 kilometres from home, a group of students from Papua New Guinea are learning how to pull farmers out of poverty.
FARM FUN: University of New England students Priscilla Pius and Dickson Kenas.
In Papua New Guinea, most farmers are small land owners and will share space with their neighbours.
Rarely do they use their land to farm products commercially.
Student Priscilla Pius said rural communities depend on what they grow in their gardens.
Priscilla Pius and Brian Yak working with nature pastured eggs in Guyra.

“Everyday you depend on what you grow, it’s a way to sustain their livelihood but not for selling in big quantities,” she said.
”The idea of diversifying, of trying to do different things and sell products for a living is something we can take back with us to start small.”
The students have covered a range of subjects, from people management, to financial record keeping, risk management and marketing and developing business proposals.
They’ve visited farms in Guyra to learn the ropes of commercial farming.
Course coordinator Peter Fitzgerald said there are commercial farms in Papua New Guinea but they are few and far between.
LOOKING FORWARD: University of New England course coordinator Peter Fitzgerald.

“It’s very diverse but at the end of the day we’re trying to help bring up the people farming for livelihoods to become a bit more commercial and sell their product,” he said.

Chris Owen - requiem for a filmmaker between worlds

by Les McLaren, screenhub.com.au
March 12, 2018

Chris Owen - veteran filmmaker and the guiding presence behind many prominent documentaries from Papua New Guinea -died this month.
Chris Owen with an Enga man during the filming of  Tighten The Drums in 1974.

His father was killed flying over France in WW2, while his mother was an executive assistant in Bomber Command.
Owen was born in the UK in 1944.
He came to Australia in 1961 and worked variously as a bank clerk, a station-hand, wheat farmer and as a psychiatric nurse.
 In 1968, he travelled overland back to the UK where he completed a Diploma in Visual Communication in Birmingham.
He arrived in Papua New Guinea in 1972 as a photographer with the Tourist Board when the country was still under Australian control, and remained there as a resident until 2010.
 In 1974 he joined the newly established Institute of PNG Studies, and made his first film Tighten the Drums, about ceremonial decoration in the Western Highlands.
In September 1975 he documented an elaborate fertility ritual in the remote border area of the West Sepik, and days later filmed the nearby Independence celebrations for Dennis O’Rourke’s documentary Yumi Yet.
This was Chris’ first contribution to a suite of landmark documentaries made by Australians in PNG over the next 25 years.
He would go on to collaborate as cinematographer, associate producer, advisor and friend with Dennis O’Rourke, Gary Kildea, Bob Connolly, Robin Anderson, Andrew Pike, Les McLaren, Annie Stiven, Alec Morgan, Noriko Sekiguchi and Oliver Howes, as well as with leading filmmakers and anthropologists from Australia, France, Japan, the UK, US and New Zealand.
The list of prize-winning/renowned films he collaborated on include Yumi Yet, Ileksen, Sharkcallers of Kontu, Angels of War, Cannibal Tours, First Contact, Joe Leahy’s Neighbours, Black Harvest, Cowboy and Maria in Town, Taking Pictures and the Japanese production, Senso Daughters.
And there was his own impressive and prizewinning body of documentaries including The Red Bowmen, Gogodala – A Cultural Revival?, Malangan Labadama, Man Without Pigs, Bridewealth for a Goddess and Betelnut Bisnis.
The last was commissioned by SBS.
These films stand out for their compelling images of culture and change in PNG, and an engagement with the issues and influences affecting ordinary people at the village level.
He also directed a feature film with Albert Toro, Tukana – Husat I Asua? (Who’s to Blame?) about the impact of the Bougainville mine which screened on SBS, and also made information outreach works such as Ramu Pawa (a 5-year cinematic diary of the giant Yonki Dam), Lukautim Bus (Look After Nature), and Re-Forestation Naturally.
Chris believed strongly in the power of film to inform people and shape outcomes for a better society, and it was the mentoring of PNG filmmakers and the promotion of community video production which pre-occupied his last decade in PNG.
 After training filmmakers at the Institute of PNG Studies, he moved to Goroka to become Director of the National Film Institute, where he guided many emerging PNG filmmakers including Martin Maden, Baike Johnston, Leoni Kanawi, Ruth Ketau and Ignatius Talania.
The current head of the National Film Institute is a female filmmaker and archivist, Chicco Baru, also mentored by Chris.
He was generous in many ways to many people, and despite his fulsome advocacy against the self interests of the powerful, he was a disarming and witty raconteur – drawing on a wealth of hair-raising and remarkable adventures in the Land of the Unexpected.
As well as numerous international awards for his films, Chris was also honoured with PNG’s distinguished Order of Logoho in 2010, a lifetime achievement award from the Society for Visual Anthropology (USA) in 2017, and Honorary Membership of the Australian Cinematographers’ Association in 2018.
But perhaps the most fitting testimony is from PNG filmmaker Martin Maden: "I do not know of one other culture whose children will inherit a film heritage such as the one Chris Owen has given to the people of Papua New Guinea."
Chris died on 9 March 2018 in the Fred Ward Gardens nursing home in Canberra, after a long battle with illness and blindness.
-----
His detailed credits can be found here.
A glimpse of the band of Australians who have worked in PNG is provided by the NFSA which quotes an interviewee in Kama Wosi, which Les McLaren made in 1979.

"What are you taking pictures for? Day and night, day and night taking pictures for nothing. You take these pictures and then take them away. What does it mean."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Les McLaren is a veteran documentary filmmaker who has made many films in PNG with Annie Stiven since the early 1970's.
Taking Pictures and Cowboy and Maria In Town are among five films which have been shown in festivals around the world.
In 2003 Les spent four months in Bougainville working with the UN-led peace monitoring group as a liaison officer with Bougainvillean, Australian, New Zealand, Fijian and ni-Vanuatu personnel.


Saturday, March 24, 2018

6.8-magnitude quake hits off Kimbe, Papua New Guinea: USGS

HONG KONG, March 24 (Xinhua) -- An earthquake with a magnitude of 6.8 jolted 146 km east of Kimbe, capital of the province of West New Britain of Papua New Guinea on Saturday at 9.23pm local time, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said.
The epicenter, with a depth of 59.7 km, was initially determined to be at 5.743 degrees south latitude and 151.452 degrees east longitude.
Reuters reported the revised 6.3 quake posed no tsunami threat to the region.
There were no immediate reports of damage or casualties from the quake, which comes after the magnitude 7.5 tremor that rocked the country’s mountainous mainland Highlands on Feb 26, killing 100 people.
The epicenter of Saturday’s quake was located 180 kilometers (112 miles) southwest of Rabaul on New Britain island, some 900 km northeast of the capital Port Moresby, at a depth of 68 km (40 miles), the U.S Geological Survey (USGS) said. 
The quake was revised down from an initial reading of magnitude 6.8 and a depth of 60 km.
“Based on all available data a destructive Pacific-wide tsunami is not expected,” the Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said in a bulletin.
Quakes are common in Papua New Guinea, which sits on the Pacific’s 'Ring of Fire', a hotspot for seismic activity due to friction between tectonic plates. Rabaul lies in the shadow of Mount Tavurvur, an active volcano that destroyed the town in 1994 during a severe eruption.
The latest quake comes as Papua New Guinea struggles to get aid to desperate survivors of the Feb 26 quake, which flattened whole villages and spoiled water supplies on the country’s main island. 
A month on, disaster and relief officials say the scale of the emergency is testing the finances and capacity of the country.
The country is also missing its largest revenue earner, after the quake forced a shutdown of ExxonMobil Corp’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) project, which has annual sales of US$3 billion at current LNG prices. 
The firm is still assessing quake damage at its facilities.

Update on Anglican response to Papua New Guinea earthquake

anglicanalliance.org | March 23, 2018
With ACPNG and ACNS

The Anglican Alliance has been in touch with the Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea after a large earthquake of 7.5 magnitude struck on 26th February.

People affected by the earthquake in PNG. Source: AMB
The quake has caused landslides and sinkholes in the region, and phone lines have been cut.
 Aftershocks continue to cause fear, particularly after one of 6.7 magnitude hit the same area on 8th March.
Staff from the Anglican Board of Mission (ABM) Australia have been in PNG working with the church leadership to shape the humanitarian response.
The official death toll has risen to 145 but still has further to climb, officials have said. It is expected that the figure might increase once all people have been accounted for. From the reports received at the command centres in Tari and Mendi, 45 have died so far in the Southern Highlands province and in Hela 80 people are confirmed dead. About 270,000 people, including 125,000 children, require urgent humanitarian assistance.
As well as food, water is a challenge as traditional water sources have been interrupted, with the danger of water borne diseases as people are forced to drink from unsafe sources.
 Shelter and health are also priority needs. Aftershocks are continuing in some areas and people are not returning to their homes and mountainside crops for fear of further landslides.
The Church Partnership Program in Papua New Guinea (PNG) has brought together members of the Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea, the Baptist Union of PNG, the Catholic Church, the Lutheran Church, Salvation Army, Seventh Day Adventist and the United Church in PNG.
The United Church has established church-led response centres in Tari, Hela Province and Mendi, Southern Highlands, to coordinate initial needs assessments and share church actions and to plan for the coordinated response and recovery efforts.
“People are bewildered and traumatised by the severe events . . . and families continue to sleep outside for fear of the ongoing aftershocks,” said United Church Bishop Wai Tege.
“People of the highlands are not used to the impact of natural disasters, and this Magnitude 7.5 earthquake has taken everyone by surprise.
" The last major earthquake to hit the highlands region . . . was in 1922 – almost a century ago.”
Many people have been traumatised by the earthquake and aftershocks.
We continue to ask for prayers from around the Communion for all those who are acting to respond in the relief effort.
The Church intends to purchase supplies locally, in Goroka or Mt Hagen, and transport them to parishes by road or air. Archbishop Allan Migi is asking Anglicans and others to support the emergency appeal.
Anglican Board of Mission (ABM) in Australia seeks to raise funds for humanitarian aid so that vital supplies of food and water can be provided for the many people in need.
To donate to ABM’s PNG Earthquake Emergency Appeal please visit here.
Anglican Missions Board of the Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia has also launched an appeal. To donate please click on this link.
We will continue to update this page as more information comes in .
Please continue to pray for those affected by the earthquake and pray for  the Church’s response.

God of all creation, we lift up before you the nation of Papua New Guinea and especially the people of the Highlands Province as they recover from earthquakes and landslides. We mourn with them for those who have died, we pray for the healing of those who are injured, for strength and courage for all those who work to provide safe shelter, to bring aid and recovery. We pray for Bishop Nathan, Archbishop Allan and all who provide leadership to these communities in this time of need. May your strength, wisdom and hope rest upon them and all they serve. We pray for the whole Anglican Church of PNG, for the people of Mendi and the communities throughout the Highlands, that they may know the presence of your compassionate and life-giving spirit, that they may work together for the good of all people. Through Christ our Lord we pray, Amen.

– Bishop Andrew Hedge, Diocese of Waiapu (New Zealand partner diocese to ACPNG)

The challenges of tuberculosis in Papua New Guinea

msf.org | March 23, 2018

Three years ago, tuberculosis (TB) became the joint lead as the world’s deadliest infectious disease - neck and neck with HIV/AIDS.
In Papua New Guinea (PNG), the epidemic is such that the government has declared a state of emergency in several provinces.
Giakila was diagnosed with drug-resistant TB at Gerehu Hospital, Port Moresby, where MSF supports TB treatment and diagnosis.

With an estimated 30,000 new cases in 2016, expanding and improving TB care in PNG is an uphill battle.
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is providing TB diagnosis and treatment in two of these provinces: Gulf Province and National Capital District, in conjunction with the Ministry of Health.

Extreme geography

In Gulf Province MSF’s teams are based in Kerema – a town seven hours’ drive from the capital, Port Moresby, and literally at the end of the road.
Further west, there are no roads and extremely limited access to healthcare and other services.
Patients travel for hours or even days to reach our clinics, using a combination of dinghies, cars and walking.
Transport can be prohibitively expensive – around 100 kina (40 US dollars) for a few hours in a dinghy.
It’s not only the extreme geography that is challenging.
In the remote villages around Kerema, access to education is limited.
The low health literacy of some patients means they were never explained essential facts about TB, including the fact it is infectious, or that it passes through the air. Many people across the country still believe TB is an effect of witchcraft.
These geographical and cultural barriers contribute to one of MSF’s biggest challenges – ensuring that patients adhere to TB treatment.
TB is not a simple chest infection.
It’s an insidious infection with very hard-to-kill bacteria.
 Successfully treating TB takes at least six months, using a combination of various antibiotics.
Some patients develop drug-resistant TB: when the bacteria mutates to resist the drugs because they are not taken in the necessary amounts, intervals or combinations.
 For these patients treatment takes up to two years, including daily injections in the early stages.
 Patients often encounter serious side effects such as nausea, nerve damage and deafness.
Sticking to TB treatment is critical not only to cure individual patients, but also to reduce the risk of drug resistance developing in the community.
 Patients who develop drug resistance can infect others with these strong and deadlier strains.
 If this happens on a larger scale, the epidemic will claim more lives and become even harder to manage.

Improving adherence

While patients defaulting on their treatment is a huge problem for our teams, we’re working hard to increase treatment adherence.
All patients are provided with counselling and education to improve their understanding of the disease and to follow up their treatment.
 By embedding an anthropologist in our medical operations, we also try to increase our understanding of the local context and improve treatment adherence.
We have decentralised our care to bring treatment closer to patients.
 In Gulf Province teams travel for hours, often by boat and road, to visit health posts in small villages for regular consultations. We also provide transport to help patients reach care, as well as run a network of community health workers and treatment supporters who visit patients at home.
In Port Moresby, the outreach team provides home visits for patients with difficulties accessing their clinic or adhering to treatment, in an effort to reduce the still-high rate of patients ‘lost to follow up’.

Enhancing TB management

In many low-income settings, TB continues to be diagnosed as it was a century ago: sputum samples are examined under a microscope for signs of the tuberculosis bacillus.
The most reliable test of this type takes two months.
In many countries, this is complicated further by the lack of laboratories equipped for TB diagnosis, meaning samples need to be sent to a capital city, or even overseas. For these reasons the disease often goes undiagnosed, or far later than it should. In much of PNG, this remains the case.
In recent years TB diagnoses were revolutionised by a device called the GeneXpert, which can test for the presence of bacteria in less than two hours.
(It can also test for resistance to the TB drug rifampicin - meaning it can help diagnose drug-resistant TB.)
MSF uses GeneXpert in both Gulf Province and Port Moresby.
This means patients can be diagnosed and begin treatment far quicker.
 In 2017, our teams started 2,100 people on TB treatment in both projects.

UNICEF lifesaving supplies reach Papua New Guinea to help children and families hardest hit by earthquakes

unicef.org.au | March 23, 2018

UNICEF has this week delivered 23 metric tons of relief supplies to Papua New Guinea, including tents and tarpaulins, water purification tablets, hygiene kits, blankets and learning kits as part of ongoing efforts to help children and families who were hardest hit by recent earthquakes.
Barbara, 8, lost her elder sister and her cousin when a boulder struck their house. She has been living in difficult conditions at the makeshift camp with her father, Iso Putap, since 27 Feburary. © UNICEF/PNG-2018/JamesMepham


On February 26, a massive earthquake of 7.5 magnitude hit four provinces of Papua New Guinea, followed by another two major earthquakes and nearly 100 aftershocks.
More than 100 people were killed, with many more injured in landslides and collapsing houses.
The PNG Government estimates 270,000 people are in need of urgent assistance, including 125,000 children.
“Children’s lives are in danger,” said Karen Allen, UNICEF Representative for PNG. “With limited access to basic necessities, families are struggling to survive in crowded shelters, or to rebuild homes and food gardens.”
To date, UNICEF has already delivered 12,000 packets of therapeutic food and enough vaccines to protect 31,700 children against the increasing risk of disease outbreak and malnutrition.
Papua New Guinea already had low vaccination coverage and the world’s fourth highest rate of chronically malnourished children.
 UNICEF is working with the PNG Government and partners to ensure humanitarian supplies are distributed to affected communities as quickly as possible. Access to remote and isolated villages remains a huge challenge across vast and rugged terrain. UNICEF needs AU$17 million (US$14.6 million) to provide humanitarian assistance to children and families affected by the earthquake over the next nine months.
This will help provide clean water, sanitation and hygiene in temporary shelters, psycho-social support in safe places, vaccinations and malnutrition treatment, and support for children to return to school.
“The relief supplies that have been delivered today by UNICEF are part of the overall support by the Government of PNG, the United Nations System, the Governments of Australia and New Zealand, other humanitarian partners, and the private sector, to the affected people of PNG,” said Mr. Gianluca Rampolla, the UN Resident Coordinator in PNG.
“We have been working together since the onset of the disaster to help those most in need, and will continue to do so.”