SOMARE WILL RETURN - ARTHUR

The son of dumped Papua New Guinean leader Sir Michael Somare has vowed to bring his father onto the floor of parliament when it next sits, defying Speaker Jeffery Nape's decision to end the political veteran's 43-year parliamentary career.

Arthur Somare, himself a suspended MP, has told local media he will bring the ailing 76-year-old Sir Michael into the chamber when parliament gathers on September 20.
"Wefeel confident that there is no vacancy in the East Sepik provincial seat," Mr Somare is reported to have said in the Port Moresby-based newspaper, The National.

The Post Courier reported a "visibly angry" Mr Somare as saying neither the prime minister, Peter O'Neill, nor Mr Nape could stop him "literally open[ing] the door to the chamber and bringing in the Grand Chief".
Comment is being sought from Sir Michael.

Sir Michael was dismissed from parliament on Tuesday by Mr Nape, who said the nation's longest-serving prime minister did not have permission to be absent for the five months he was in Singapore recovering from three heart operations since April.

He returned to PNG on Sunday after declaring in The National he was still fit to be PM.
Wearing a light grey suit, Sir Michael sat in a wheelchair at the back of parliament and left before Mr Nape announced his decision to dismiss him.
Parliament was recalled for an urgent sitting on Tuesday, two weeks ahead of the scheduled September 20 sitting.

Opposition MPs attacked the decision last week, saying the government was trying to end Sir Michael's career to make itself legitimate.
Sir Michael's government fell apart on August 2, when Mr O'Neill was elected prime minister in a controversial vote of 70 to 24 after Mr Nape declared the prime ministership vacant.
That move is now the subject of an ongoing Supreme Court battle that has been adjourned until September 26.

Sir Michael was PNG's first prime minister when it gained independence from Australia in 1975.
He served as PM until 1980, before regaining the top job in 1982 and served until 1985.
He was re-elected in 2002, and again in 2007, becoming PNG's first PM to serve a full five-year parliamentary term.

-AAP

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

HIGHLANDS FRAUD F*CKS RUNNING GOVERNMENT AGENCY,,,

AUGUSTINE MANO PNG'S PREMIER CORPORATE CROOK

PNG, VERY RICH YET STILL A VERY VERY POOR COUNTRY

BLIND LEADING THE BLIND, WHY THE PNG ECONOMY STILL SUCKS

James Marape's Missteps Openly Exposed at Australian Forum

MARAPE & PAITA ABOUT TO SIGN AWAY PNG GOLD

A Call for Local Ownership and Fairness