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Maladinas and Nape destroying PNG

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Moses Maladina and Jimmy Maladina together with Jefferey Nape are all complicit in the destruction of our PNG Constitution....they strategised about the destruction of our laws and have been committing consecutive contemptuous actions ever since. The Maladina family have been receiving "golden handshakes" in terms of the jobs for the boys since August 2011 - Check the overseas appointments list. Merit Schmerit! Why has Jimmy Maladina re-emerged after stealing millions from our people (NASFUND) to assist in the destruction of our laws together with his brother Moses and the kanaka Speaker? Nape has used Parliament coffers like an inheritance since his appointment nearly 9 years ago now. We're seeing lots of smoke people because there are various fires. And we will all be burnt at the stake as a result! Not the crooks! What exactly is the factual error in the memo? Moses Maladina was appointed by Somare - YES, but so was Speaker Jefferey Nape who dismissed Somare as a Memb

Maladinas and Nape destroying PNG

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Moses Maladina and Jimmy Maladina together with Jefferey Nape are all complicit in the destruction of our PNG Constitution....they strategised about the destruction of our laws and have been committing consecutive contemptuous actions ever since. The Maladina family have been receiving "golden handshakes" in terms of the jobs for the boys since August 2011 - Check the overseas appointments list. Merit Schmerit! Why has Jimmy Maladina re-emerged after stealing millions from our people (NASFUND) to assist in the destruction of our laws together with his brother Moses and the kanaka Speaker? Nape has used Parliament coffers like an inheritance since his appointment nearly 9 years ago now. We're seeing lots of smoke people because there are various fires. And we will all be burnt at the stake as a result! Not the crooks! What exactly is the factual error in the memo? Moses Maladina was appointed by Somare - YES, but so was Speaker Jefferey Nape who dismissed Somare as

Judge’s memo shows extreme bias against O’Neill government

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PNG Exposed Blog A memo, purportedly signed by Justice Kirriwom and published on PNGExposed blog 13th March 2012, if genuine, shows extreme bias exists in certain parts of the judiciary against the government of Peter O’Neill. All judges are supposed to be political impartial but the memo shows it may be hard for the current government to get a fair hearing in the various cases now before the courts over its removal of the previous Somare regime. There are also a number of worrying factual errors in the memo. For example, the memo says that Prime Minister  O’Neill has put his own people on the mercy committee so that if he or Namah get charged with contempt they will be pardoned. This would seem to be untrue as the Chairman of the mercy committee is Moses Maladina and he has been the chairman since 2005 when Michael Somare put him there. The memo also suggests that judges should be above the law and due process. The memo says the Chief Justice should not stand trial on alle

Judge’s memo shows extreme bias against O’Neill government

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PNG Exposed Blog A memo, purportedly signed by Justice Kirriwom and published on PNGExposed blog 13th March 2012, if genuine, shows extreme bias exists in certain parts of the judiciary against the government of Peter O’Neill. All judges are supposed to be political impartial but the memo shows it may be hard for the current government to get a fair hearing in the various cases now before the courts over its removal of the previous Somare regime. There are also a number of worrying factual errors in the memo. For example, the memo says that Prime Minister  O’Neill has put his own people on the mercy committee so that if he or Namah get charged with contempt they will be pardoned. This would seem to be untrue as the Chairman of the mercy committee is Moses Maladina and he has been the chairman since 2005 when Michael Somare put him there. The memo also suggests that judges should be above the law and due process. The memo says the Chief Justice should not stand trial

Carr's threat of sanctions sparks PNG altercation

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BOB CARR has sparked a diplomatic crisis in his first days as Minister for Foreign Affairs after Papua New Guinea dressed down Australia's top envoy in the country over his threat of sanctions. The Gillard government was scrambling yesterday to contain the fallout after its star recruit warned any delay to midyear elections in PNG would leave Australia ''no alternative but to organise the world to condemn and isolate Papua New Guinea''. The comments were met with dismay in Port Moresby. The PNG Foreign Minister, Ano Pala, took the rare and serious step of calling in the acting Australian high commissioner, Margaret Adamson, to complain about the threat. Senator Carr made the comments in a Wednesday night interview with long-time friend and former Labor numbers man Graham Richardson. He warned any delay to the elections after months of political turmoil would be a ''shocking model'' in the Pacific. ''We'd be in a position of having to cons

Carr's threat of sanctions sparks PNG altercation

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BOB CARR has sparked a diplomatic crisis in his first days as Minister for Foreign Affairs after Papua New Guinea dressed down Australia's top envoy in the country over his threat of sanctions. The Gillard government was scrambling yesterday to contain the fallout after its star recruit warned any delay to midyear elections in PNG would leave Australia ''no alternative but to organise the world to condemn and isolate Papua New Guinea''. The comments were met with dismay in Port Moresby. The PNG Foreign Minister, Ano Pala, took the rare and serious step of calling in the acting Australian high commissioner, Margaret Adamson, to complain about the threat. Senator Carr made the comments in a Wednesday night interview with long-time friend and former Labor numbers man Graham Richardson. He warned any delay to the elections after months of political turmoil would be a ''shocking model'' in the Pacific. ''We'd be in a position of

An open letter: Twenty questions for the Deputy Prime Minister

By Susan Merrell Dear Mr Namah,  The message I have from your personal assistant, Mr Anu Yadav is that you are not interested in giving an on-camera interview.  That notwithstanding, there are questions going begging.  And while I acknowledge that some may be of a personal nature, unfortunately, your position as the leader of a Christian nation makes your personal life a legitimate subject of public scrutiny as it impacts on Papua New Guinea and Papua New Guineans. MONEY Firstly, the amount of money that you purportedly had available to bet at the Star Casino last April was $800,000 (as reported in Sydney Morning Herald).   I have very roughly broken that down and have found that a PNGean on a wage of K3 per hour (more than the minimum hourly wage) would take around 250 working years to accumulate that much.  If a working lifetime is around 40 years then we are talking more than 6 PNGeans lifetimes to earn what you intended to spend in days. 1. Did you consider what sort of message th

Australia threatens PNG with Sanctions

FOREIGN Minister Bob Carr has threatened to consider sanctions against Papua New Guinea if it abandons plans to hold mid-year elections. PNG Prime Minister Peter O'Neill has pledged a full, free and fair election for late June but is facing calls - including from his own deputy - to delay. Deputy Prime Minister Belden Namah says the poll should be pushed back for 12 months to give the Government more time to implement its polices. He also argues there is potential for fraud because the electoral roll is only sixty per cent complete. Senator Carr today significantly hardened Australia's line on the Government's plans. "It is absolutely vital that Papua New Guinea, that the government of Prime Minister O'Neill commit unequivocally to this election," Senator Carr told Sky News. The failure to hold elections would create a "shocking model" for the Pacific, he said. "You've got Australia placed in a position where we'd have no alternative but

Australia threatens PNG with Sanctions

FOREIGN Minister Bob Carr has threatened to consider sanctions against Papua New Guinea if it abandons plans to hold mid-year elections. PNG Prime Minister Peter O'Neill has pledged a full, free and fair election for late June but is facing calls - including from his own deputy - to delay. Deputy Prime Minister Belden Namah says the poll should be pushed back for 12 months to give the Government more time to implement its polices. He also argues there is potential for fraud because the electoral roll is only sixty per cent complete. Senator Carr today significantly hardened Australia's line on the Government's plans. "It is absolutely vital that Papua New Guinea, that the government of Prime Minister O'Neill commit unequivocally to this election," Senator Carr told Sky News. The failure to hold elections would create a "shocking model" for the Pacific, he said. "You've got Australia placed in a position

PNG Deputy PM denies threat allegations

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Not true: Namah PAPUA New Guinea's deputy prime minister has denied his alleged involvement in threatening and sexually harassing staff during a drunken fracas at Sydney's Star casino last year . Belden Namah, who became PNG's deputy PM in August last year, is reportedly named in a Star incident report, which accuses him of refusing to leave the casino and propositioning the male blackjack dealer despite repeated protests. Speaking through his lawyer, Greg Sheppard, Mr Namah told AAP the accounts were inaccurate. "We confirm that if Belden Namah is named in those documents - and we couldn't see it because they are blacked out - they are mistaken and inaccurate," Mr Sheppard said. When asked if he could confirm Mr Namah's presence at Star on the night in question, Mr Sheppard said: "Whether he was there or not is not really relevant because it wasn't him. The incident wasn't him." Former prime minister Sir Michael Somar

PNG Deputy PM denies threat allegations

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Not true: Namah PAPUA New Guinea's deputy prime minister has denied his alleged involvement in threatening and sexually harassing staff during a drunken fracas at Sydney's Star casino last year . Belden Namah, who became PNG's deputy PM in August last year, is reportedly named in a Star incident report, which accuses him of refusing to leave the casino and propositioning the male blackjack dealer despite repeated protests. Speaking through his lawyer, Greg Sheppard, Mr Namah told AAP the accounts were inaccurate. "We confirm that if Belden Namah is named in those documents - and we couldn't see it because they are blacked out - they are mistaken and inaccurate," Mr Sheppard said. When asked if he could confirm Mr Namah's presence at Star on the night in question, Mr Sheppard said: "Whether he was there or not is not really relevant because it wasn't him. The incident wasn't him." Former prime minister Sir

Deputy PM sexuality questioned.

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By Susan Merrell Belden Namah, Deputy Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea is not homosexual according to his young, male, personal assistant.  Anu Yadav, an Australian recent law graduate who works as the Deputy Prime Minister's personal assistant and general 'gofor' and who was one of the passengers on the falcon jet last November when it was buzzed by Indonesian fighter jets, denied that Mr Namah was gay but would not reveal the source of his knowledge. Speculation as to the sexuality of Mr Namah and the conduct of a national leader was piqued by a report in Australia's Channel Seven news that spoke of a "senior minister from an overseas government" (this morning confirmed to be Belden Namah by a front-page exposé in the Sydney Morning Herald ) being ejected from the Casino last April for obscene behaviour. Internal casino documents , revealed this morning, tell how the now Deputy Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea sexually harassed a male dealer, and bec

The minister, the Star and the rules of the game

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THE Deputy Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea, Belden Namah, allegedly sexually harassed a blackjack dealer at the Star casino last year before being thrown out for threatening staff while drunk. Despite this, the casino readmitted Mr Namah, an opposition MP at the time, after it realised he and his colleagues planned to gamble hundreds of thousands of dollars, the Herald understands. But Mr Namah denies he is the person described in five separate incident reports, including one in which he is named by casino staff. His lawyer, Greg Sheppard, said Mr Namah ''did not misconduct himself'' at the casino.   Read the incident reports. Warning: people may find some language offensive. ''Until we are provided with the incident reports in question, Mr Namah is unable to comment further on how his name appears on these reports, except to say that if it does, they are mistaken,'' Mr Sheppard said. Mr Namah is a former PNG mi

The minister, the Star and the rules of the game

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THE Deputy Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea, Belden Namah, allegedly sexually harassed a blackjack dealer at the Star casino last year before being thrown out for threatening staff while drunk. Despite this, the casino readmitted Mr Namah, an opposition MP at the time, after it realised he and his colleagues planned to gamble hundreds of thousands of dollars, the Herald understands. But Mr Namah denies he is the person described in five separate incident reports, including one in which he is named by casino staff. His lawyer, Greg Sheppard, said Mr Namah ''did not misconduct himself'' at the casino.   Read the incident reports. Warning: people may find some language offensive. ''Until we are provided with the incident reports in question, Mr Namah is unable to comment further on how his name appears on these reports, except to say that if it does, they are mistaken,'' Mr Sheppard said. Mr Namah is a

The Lure Of Mining Money In PNG

By Antony Loewenstein At Port Moresby international airport in Papua New Guinea sits piles of free brochures labelled, "Map and Handy Mining/Petroleum Guide." Inside are emergency phone numbers alongside a foldout map that lists countless projects in more than a dozen places across the impoverished nation. The $15 billion, Exxon-Mobil LNG project dominates the page, with a red line representing proposed pipelines from the Southern Highlands straight to the capital. The glossy pamphlet is one of the first thing visitors see as they arrive in the resource-rich state and it speaks volumes about how Prime Minister Peter O’Neill and his government view the future prospects of the country. Minister for Petroleum and Energy William Duma, in comments given at the February opening of Shell offices in Port Moresby, proudly told the assembled crowd that, "in a small way and through consistent political leadership at the national level, PNG has been able to attract