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PNG would welcome more US investment

ABC NEWS Papua New Guinea would welcome more investment from the US as the superpower continues its battle for supremacy with China, according to Bougainville president John Momis. US secretary of state Hillary Clinton has issued a warning that PNG is one part of the Pacific where the US is engaged in a strategic competition with China over resources and leadership. Ms Clinton was blunt about US strategic intentions when she went before the foreign relations committee last week. She says China is "wining and dining" politicians from across the Pacific. "Let's put aside the moral, humanitarian, do-good side of what we believe in and let's just talk straight, real politique," she said. "We are in a competition with China. Take Papua New Guinea - huge energy find. "Exxon Mobil is producing it. China is in there every day in every way trying to figure out how it's going to come in behind us, come in under us. They're supporting the dicta

Is the District Service Improvement Program Working?

OP.ED It is sad really to read every week that rural people are fixing their roads with their hands so that cars can run to and from their villages, like the story we have today about that community at Kudjip in South Waghi, Jiwaka Province. They have to take up their spades and bush knives to do the work because the machines are not coming. It will cost money to engage machines and they are too poor to hire the heavy earthmoving equipment. But the story is even sadder when one learns that the road they are repairing is a provincial road or a national road – meaning the responsibility is with the provincial government or the national government. The road assets in this country are the lifelines of PNG, the arteries that pump the life sustaining nutrients to the body. It’s time MPs account for the District Service Improvement Program funds. In the name of transparency, accountability and good governance, this must happen. It is of interest to every Papua New Guinean in this country to

Is the District Service Improvement Program Working?

OP.ED It is sad really to read every week that rural people are fixing their roads with their hands so that cars can run to and from their villages, like the story we have today about that community at Kudjip in South Waghi, Jiwaka Province. They have to take up their spades and bush knives to do the work because the machines are not coming. It will cost money to engage machines and they are too poor to hire the heavy earthmoving equipment. But the story is even sadder when one learns that the road they are repairing is a provincial road or a national road – meaning the responsibility is with the provincial government or the national government. The road assets in this country are the lifelines of PNG, the arteries that pump the life sustaining nutrients to the body. It’s time MPs account for the District Service Improvement Program funds. In the name of transparency, accountability and good governance, this must happen. It is of interest to every Papua New Guinean in this country

Arnold Amet under Scrutiny

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OP.ED Former Madang Governor Sir Arnold Amet was Papua New Guinea’s second Chief Justice of the National and Supreme Courts. He took over from another eminent Papua New Guineans, Sir Buri Kidu, the late husband of Dame Carol Kidu, the MP for Moresby South. As Chief Justice, he was highly regarded and respected by the people of this country and overseas. Sir Arnold was seen as one of the pillars of this nation. Ordinary people used to think of him simply as a good man, a good Papua New Guinean. When he retired from the Judiciary, he provided consultative services to the public and private sectors because his views on the Constitution and laws of PNG were highly regarded and respected. When Madang MP Sir Peter Barter decided to quit politics due to health reasons, Sir Arnold was asked by Sir Peter to take on the challenge to represent the people of Madang. Sir Amet accepted the invitation and announced to the people of Madang and PNG that he was to contest the 2007 national elections. M

Arnold Amet under Scrutiny

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OP.ED Former Madang Governor Sir Arnold Amet was Papua New Guinea’s second Chief Justice of the National and Supreme Courts. He took over from another eminent Papua New Guineans, Sir Buri Kidu, the late husband of Dame Carol Kidu, the MP for Moresby South. As Chief Justice, he was highly regarded and respected by the people of this country and overseas. Sir Arnold was seen as one of the pillars of this nation. Ordinary people used to think of him simply as a good man, a good Papua New Guinean. When he retired from the Judiciary, he provided consultative services to the public and private sectors because his views on the Constitution and laws of PNG were highly regarded and respected. When Madang MP Sir Peter Barter decided to quit politics due to health reasons, Sir Arnold was asked by Sir Peter to take on the challenge to represent the people of Madang. Sir Amet accepted the invitation and announced to the people of Madang and PNG that he was to contest the 2007 national electi

Gang Rape on the Rise in Papua New Guinea

TRUSTLAW A gang of security personnel at one of Papua New Guinea’s largest gold mines allegedly brutally beat and raped a woman and left her for dead at one of the mine’s waste dumps. When her husband discovered what happened, he demanded a divorce while she was still bedridden and recovering from her wounds. Another woman told Human Rights Watch (HRW)  that one of the guards at the Canadian-owned Barrick Gold mine in Porgera – a lush, remote and impoverished part of the country’s highlands – kicked her in the face for resisting a gang rape, shattering her five bottom teeth and three top teeth. Yet another said she and three other women were raped by 10 security personnel, one of whom forced her to swallow a used condom he had used while raping two other victims. Their stories and others, recounted by the rights group in a recent report on alleged abuses at the mine over the past three years, make for a harrowing read. Even worse, after apparently suf

Gang Rape on the Rise in Papua New Guinea

TRUSTLAW A gang of security personnel at one of Papua New Guinea’s largest gold mines allegedly brutally beat and raped a woman and left her for dead at one of the mine’s waste dumps. When her husband discovered what happened, he demanded a divorce while she was still bedridden and recovering from her wounds. Another woman told Human Rights Watch (HRW)  that one of the guards at the Canadian-owned Barrick Gold mine in Porgera – a lush, remote and impoverished part of the country’s highlands – kicked her in the face for resisting a gang rape, shattering her five bottom teeth and three top teeth. Yet another said she and three other women were raped by 10 security personnel, one of whom forced her to swallow a used condom he had used while raping two other victims. Their stories and others, recounted by the rights group in a recent report on alleged abuses at the mine over the past three years, make for a harrowing read. Even worse, after apparently

NEW HANOVER ISLAND IN NEW IRELAND PROVINCE NOW FOREIGN OWNED

POST COURIER Island of New Hanover sold for K4 million THE entire Island of New Hanover in New Ireland Province has been sold to foreigners for US$1.6million (K4m) in what has been described as the biggest scandal in the country’s short history. Documents obtained by Post-Courier clearly give details of the sale, entered between Tutuman Development Ltd (seller) and a Singaporean Company identified as Palma Hacienda Ltd (buyer) in June 2009. The documents are the Sale and Purchase Agreement and a Supplementary Agreement entered between the two parties. The deal to sell the island by Tutuman Development Limited whose directors include a former premier of the province and the foreign company was done without the consent of any authority from the landowners Documents show the purchase price was paid into a director‘s personal bank account with the Citibank Singapore Ltd. Ishmael Passingan, who is the company secretary for Central New Hanover Ltd, a landowner company, confirmed to this pape

NEW HANOVER ISLAND IN NEW IRELAND PROVINCE NOW FOREIGN OWNED

POST COURIER Island of New Hanover sold for K4 million THE entire Island of New Hanover in New Ireland Province has been sold to foreigners for US$1.6million (K4m) in what has been described as the biggest scandal in the country’s short history. Documents obtained by Post-Courier clearly give details of the sale, entered between Tutuman Development Ltd (seller) and a Singaporean Company identified as Palma Hacienda Ltd (buyer) in June 2009. The documents are the Sale and Purchase Agreement and a Supplementary Agreement entered between the two parties. The deal to sell the island by Tutuman Development Limited whose directors include a former premier of the province and the foreign company was done without the consent of any authority from the landowners Documents show the purchase price was paid into a director‘s personal bank account with the Citibank Singapore Ltd. Ishmael Passingan, who is the company secretary for Central New Hanover Ltd, a landowner company, confirmed to thi

Watch Papua New Guinea fall

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FRUSTRATED CITIZEN Papua New Guinea as we know is now totally corrupt, the Judiciary the last beacon of hope for PNG is not as impartial as it used to be. In recent months we very experiences Judges sitting in the National and Supreme Court have been made to quit without having their tenures extended only to be replaced by senior lawyers who have been part of this government’s grab of power and statutory corruption at the beginning. The recent appointments of Justice Kassman and Justice Murray is a slap in the face to the Judiciary, it paints a picture of how cheap the judiciary has become by allowing two lawyers involved with the government given preference to become judges. The Chief Justice handling of the Somare Tribunal is also a signal that the mechanisms held in place in the Judiciary is crumbling and so it seems when you hear of other Judges coming out in the national media lamenting decisions made is a signal that we have a country on the verge of falling like those with a dic

Watch Papua New Guinea fall

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FRUSTRATED CITIZEN Papua New Guinea as we know is now totally corrupt, the Judiciary the last beacon of hope for PNG is not as impartial as it used to be. In recent months we very experiences Judges sitting in the National and Supreme Court have been made to quit without having their tenures extended only to be replaced by senior lawyers who have been part of this government’s grab of power and statutory corruption at the beginning. The recent appointments of Justice Kassman and Justice Murray is a slap in the face to the Judiciary, it paints a picture of how cheap the judiciary has become by allowing two lawyers involved with the government given preference to become judges. The Chief Justice handling of the Somare Tribunal is also a signal that the mechanisms held in place in the Judiciary is crumbling and so it seems when you hear of other Judges coming out in the national media lamenting decisions made is a signal that we have a country on the verge of falling like those with a

Countdown begins for Panguna mine reopening - Bougainvilleans key to mine’s success

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ROWAN CALLICK Plans are under way for the opening of one of the world’s biggest copper and gold mines, with resources worth about $US50 billion, as the China-driven commodities boom keeps rolling on. So far, so predictable, if awesome. But few people expected ever to hear of this vast pit ever again—except those canny investors who hung on to their shares for decades.   It is the Bougainville copper mine in Papua New Guinea, where production was suspended—the owners insist, not closed—on May 15, 1989. Bougainville Copper Ltd—which is 53.58 percent owned by British-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto Ltd, 19.06 percent by the Papua New Guinea Government, and 27.36 percent by other shareholders—believes it will cost about $US3 billion to reopen the mine.   The vast trucks and electricity pylons may have been blown up or rusted or cannibalised, but the resources in the mine have not, of course, been damaged or diminished over the last 21 years. It contains 3.5 million tonnes o

Countdown begins for Panguna mine reopening - Bougainvilleans key to mine’s success

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ROWAN CALLICK Plans are under way for the opening of one of the world’s biggest copper and gold mines, with resources worth about $US50 billion, as the China-driven commodities boom keeps rolling on. So far, so predictable, if awesome. But few people expected ever to hear of this vast pit ever again—except those canny investors who hung on to their shares for decades.   It is the Bougainville copper mine in Papua New Guinea, where production was suspended—the owners insist, not closed—on May 15, 1989. Bougainville Copper Ltd—which is 53.58 percent owned by British-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto Ltd, 19.06 percent by the Papua New Guinea Government, and 27.36 percent by other shareholders—believes it will cost about $US3 billion to reopen the mine.   The vast trucks and electricity pylons may have been blown up or rusted or cannibalised, but the resources in the mine have not, of course, been damaged or diminished over the last 21 years. It contains 3.5 million ton

FINALLY EVICTED FROM THEIR LAND

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SCOTT WAIDE For two years, brothers Peter and John Kepma from Kurumbukare have been resisting attempts by the Chinese owned Nickel Mine to force them onto a temporary camp site. In September 2010, a group of armed police accompanied by mine workers forcefully evicted them from their ancestral home. The brothers documented how their huts were demolished and their lives destroyed. On the morning of the 8th of September 2010, John Kepma was suddenly awakened by noise outside his hut. He peered through the cracks in the wall and saw several policemen who had begun pulling down his dwelling. He came out of his hut and was confronted with a sight he had come to both dread and expect. Armed policemen had begun an eviction of remnant members of the Maure clan who had refused to move to a temporary relocation site. His clan members included his father, his uncles his older brother, Peter and several children.  “One of the ‘officers of the state’ told us that we were w

FINALLY EVICTED FROM THEIR LAND

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SCOTT WAIDE For two years, brothers Peter and John Kepma from Kurumbukare have been resisting attempts by the Chinese owned Nickel Mine to force them onto a temporary camp site. In September 2010, a group of armed police accompanied by mine workers forcefully evicted them from their ancestral home. The brothers documented how their huts were demolished and their lives destroyed. On the morning of the 8th of September 2010, John Kepma was suddenly awakened by noise outside his hut. He peered through the cracks in the wall and saw several policemen who had begun pulling down his dwelling. He came out of his hut and was confronted with a sight he had come to both dread and expect. Armed policemen had begun an eviction of remnant members of the Maure clan who had refused to move to a temporary relocation site. His clan members included his father, his uncles his older brother, Peter and several children.  “One of the ‘officers of the state’ told us that we w

Amet and govt have lost the plot

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Concerned Citizen I am compelled to write because I have lost my respect for someone I used to look up to. Sir Arnold Amet was a man of stature and integrity and he has become the latest casualty in a long line of leaders, including the pre­vious governor-general to have lost their integrity because of their association with the prime minister. These leaders, including Sir Michael Somare, have built their integrity over time but one wrong act in the public’s eye has destroyed their integrity and reputation. This, I believe, is of a great concern not only to me but many Papua New Guineans. Only a handful of leaders like Powes Parkop and Dame Carol Kidu have remained untainted. No matter how Sir Arnold tries to justify the sacking of acting Public Prosecutor Jim Wala Tamate, the public are no longer as ignorant as before and will not swallow such nonsense. We have come a long way, almost 36 years since independence, and our people are now better educated to see through any cover ups and