visitors since April 2008

News 12.2011.2

 

 

 

24.12.2011 - Christmas Eve - Heiligabend - Veille de Noel

Source: TOROT tv


Just in time for Christmas 2011 TORO tv published this video on YouTube. It shows how the People of Bougainville celebrated 100 years of the arrival of the first Marist Missionaries in 2001. In 1901, when the  Marist Missionaries arrived on Bougainville it was still a German colony. One hundred years later, 2001 became the year of the Bougainville Peace Agreement after years of unrest on the island. So it became also   the year of hope for a better future.

 

Carolus Ketsimur from Tinputz Village composed this Jubilee Song. Today he serves Bougainville as ABG Minister of Communications. He was also the Founder of Radio New Dawn on Bougainville.

 

 

 

 

24.12.2011

Source: The Australian


Somare beaten, but defeat is not the Melanesian way

BY ROWAN CALLICK

 

CANBERRA'S VERSION OF THE GREAT GAME of politics is anaemic by comparison. Removing a serving prime minister through a palace coup after dark? Not bad. Shows promise. 


But the boldness, the pace, even these days the stakes, of politics in resource-rich Papua New Guinea are breathtaking.

Underpinning them is the Melanesian Way of resolving issues through constantly pushing envelopes until resistance ultimately prevents progress, and through working tirelessly to build majority support, which then tends to create rapid consensus.

The last tumultuous 12 days in PNG began with the Supreme Court ordering the reinstatement of Michael Somare, "the chief," veteran of 43 years in parliament, as prime minister.

The court also did its best to heighten the drama of the occasion, by having the five judges read their decisions one by one. The last eventually gave the day to Somare, 3-2.

The three judges - including Chief Justice Salamo Injia, whom the government led by Peter O'Neill tried three times to suspend - found that the Speaker, Jeffrey Nape, was wrong when on August 2 he had declared the prime ministership vacant, paving the way for O'Neill to be elected prime minister 70-24.

Somare, aged 75, spent five months in Singapore, from early April, undergoing medical treatment, including heart surgery. But he did not resign. And the government had failed to obtain the constitutionally required medical evidence that he was unfit to continue to govern.

The problem for those challenging Somare - many of whom have been critical not so much of PNG's founding father personally, but of the "first family" syndrome surrounding him - was that the usual way of changing government, through a vote of no confidence, presented a big problem.

For in the year before a five-yearly national election - of which the next is due in mid-2012 - a successful vote of no confidence triggers an early dissolution and brings forward the poll.

But the government in which the parliament has lost confidence, remains the caretaker and is thus positioned to resource its own candidates and to prevent awkward investigations into its record.

This is what has been at stake, primarily, during these tumultuous times in Port Moresby….

 ___________

 

The broad sense that "it's time" favours O'Neill, who is 30 years younger than Somare and whose frontbench is mostly younger. But O'Neill has constantly consulted the older generation of politicians in Morauta and Bart Philemon.

O'Neill has also seized the upper hand in communicating to the broader public, who have proven remarkably calm - due to disillusionment - through the crisis.

Even though O'Neill and many of his team have served in Somare cabinets, he has conveyed a sense of freshness and overdue realism.

"We have had unprecedented economic growth," he told parliament on Tuesday, "and we have squandered it."

A new report from PNG's National Research Institute points out that more than two thirds of new buildings in Port Moresby are chiefly in squatter settlements and that "many public servants and private sector staff can't afford a decent house or even a car loan."

O'Neill has emphasised parliament as the people's house, which is more attractive appeal to many voters than Somare's to the authority of the courts.

O'Neill's supporters have also made especially strong use of social networking media which are burgeoning in PNG thanks to the new ubiquity of mobile phones, driven by Irish firm Digicel.

Somare is not giving up before elections in six months. For further electrifying politics, watch that space.

 

 

 

23.12.2011

Source: The National


ABG member requests road aid 

By STEPHANIE ELIZAH


AUTONOMOUS Bougainville Government Member for Eivo-Torau constituency Melchior Dare has called on the ABG to allocate K20 million to build a new Southwest trunk road.

Dare raised this at the one-day sitting of the Bougainville House of Representatives on Tuesday.

He said when constructed, the road would connect Bato static steel bridge via Kuneka, Katauri; Kaspeke to Karato, Torokina and to Northwest Bougainville.

“This is a strategic ABG investment initiative to open a corridor for potential economic growth for ABG beyond 2012,” Dare said.

He urged that K5 million be appropriated annually for the next four years out of the K100 million the Papua New Guinea government’s special support grant to Bougainville.

He said the impact project could be built in phases and jointly funded by economic investors of resources development for Southwest Bougainville.

“This infrastructure development will be a cornerstone for socio-economic liberation and advance investment priorities for the government,” Dare said.

He said with the high impact Torokina Oil Palm project progressing into construction phase, investment in the major Southwest trunk road was inevitable.

“This will ensure that the bulk of the rural population participates in business activities which provide access to markets and access to socio-development services that will improve the quality of life for our people,” he said.

His request was met with overwhelming support from members of the Bougainville House of Representative with a motion passed to have the matter referred to the Bougainville technical service

 

 

 

 

22.12.2011

Source: Radio New Dawn on Bougainville


KOLES RESIGNS FROM ABG


LONG time public servant and Autonomous Bougainville Administration deputy administrator operations Patrick Koles has resigned from the public service after clocking more than 30 years.

Koles will take up his new role as a senior management executive of the World Bank funded Bougainville Cocoa development project.

Current Chief Executive Officer of ABG division of Autonomy, Implementation and Monitoring Paul Kebori will assume the position of acting deputy administration operations.

And current research officer of the ABG division of Autonomy, Implementation and Monitoring Steven Kolova has been promoted to acting CEO of his division with his new role to take effect in January.



22.12.2011

Source: Radio New Dawn on Bougainville


PEA GUARANTEES RISK ALLOWANCES


BOUGAINVILLE executives of the Public Employees Association (PEA) have assured its union members that they will be paid their risk allowances by the first quarter of 2012.

This assurance by PEA president Herbert Kimai was made at a public gathering of union members at the Bougainville Administration premises today.

Kimai said ten million kina has been approved for payment of some of the applicants by the first quarter of next year with thirteen million kina to be appropriated from the 2012 Autonomous Bougainville Government budget to pay out the rest.

More than 2000 public servants who served the then North Solomons Provincial Government from 1990 to 1994 have lodged in their applications for payment of risk allowances.

The applications lodged amounted to a total of K23 million through which successful facilitations by PEA, the ABG HR division and the national Department of Personal Management has ensured the public servants are paid.



22.12.2011

Source: Radio New Dawn on Bougainville


Power


Residents in Arawa on easy pay are now receiving consistent supply of PNG Power.

The electricity supply service to nearly the whole of Arawa town was commissioned today.

PNG power says the official handover of power services from the Autonomous Bougainville Government to PNG power as the contracted power manager is being planned for January 25.

PNG power is also calling on residents and business houses in Arawa not yet on easy pay meter to register with its Arawa office in order to receive power to their buildings.



22.12.2011

Source: Radio New Dawn on Bougainville


GG on holidays in Bougainville


GOVERNOR General Sir Michael Ogio and Ladie Esmie arrived to a rousing welcome from a small crowd of supporters including members of the Autonomous Bougainville Government and administration at the Buka airport this afternoon.

In thanking everyone, Sir Michael said the trip was not about him but for his new wife who is for the first time visiting Bougainville.

He said they were on holiday and that this was his first leave since taking on the job of the Governor General.

He also imparted strong advice to the young men and women of Bougainville to maintain their dignity of being peace loving and proud people.

Sir Michael urged that the generation of young Bougainvilleans stay free from drugs, alcohol and being a nuisance to society.

He urged that the young men and women lead a good life which would create a better future for Bougainville.

Bougainville acting president Patrick Nisira said it was a big honor to have the governor general of Papua New Guinea and a son of Bougainville join the people of the autonomous region in celebrating Christmas.

Nisira told Sir Michael that the GG was joining Bougainville at a time when it has succeeded in stabilizing and maintaining peace in South Bougainville which is evident in the cease fire agreement that was signed early this month with warring factions in South Bougainville.

He added that as a result, for the first time after six years, the people of Bougainville would be enjoying a peaceful Christmas.

Nisira also commended Sir Michael for recognizing the O’Niel/ Namah government.

He told Sir Michael that the GG had made a good call to recognize the O’Niel/Namah government because in the little time that their government took office, they had worked closely with the Bougainville government to ensure the constitutional grants of K15 million and special support grant of K100 million was released.

Sir Michael and Lady Esmie will spend their holiday accommodated at Buka town with visits planned for Tinputz in which a customary welcome for Lady Esmie is expected from Sir Michael’s family.



22.12.2011

Source: Radio New Dawn on Bougainville


SOUTH WEST ROAD PROPOSAL


AUTONOMOUS Bougainville Government (ABG) member for Eivo-Torau constituency Melchior Dare has called on ABG to allocate a total of K20 million for the construction of a new South-West trunk road.

Dare raised this as a matter of public importance at the one-day sitting of the Bougainville House of Representatives yesterday.

He said the South-West road infrastructure when constructed will connect through Bato static steel bridge via Katauri-Kuneka-Kaspeke to Paru Paru, Karato, Torokina and to North West Bougainville.

He urged that five million kina is appropriated annually for the next four years out of the K100 million PNG government’s special support grant to Bougainville.

He said the impact project could be built in phases and jointly counterpart funded by future economic investors of resources development for South-West Bougainville.

Dare added that this was a strategic direction on the ABG investment initiatives for potential economic boost and growth for ABG beyond 2012.

 

 

 

22.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacifique Beat


PM age limit in PNG condemned as "draconian"


Papua New Guinea's parliament has passed new legislation setting the retiring age for prime ministers at 72.


It was introduced by the government of Prime Minister Peter O'Neill this week, and effectively kills any chances of the founding father Sir Michael Somare reclaiming the top political post.


Presenter:Firmin Nanol

Speaker:Peter O'Neill, PNG Prime Minister; Sir Julius Chan, former PNG prime minister, Sir Arnold Amet, former PNG Attorney-General 

 

  Listen here !  

 

 

22.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Brèves du Pacifique


Papouasie Nouvelle-Guinée: Michael Somare, l’un des deux prétendants au poste de Premier ministre, ne lâche rien malgré la quasi victoire de son rival Peter O’Neill, qui a le soutien du gouverneur-général (le chef de l’Etat) et de la majorité du Parlement. Il a même réussi à faire voter le budget cette semaine. En outre, l’Eglise catholique a demandé à Michael Somare de se retirer de la vie politique. Globalement on peut dire que le Parlement a vaincu la Cour Suprême, qui avait réinstallé Michael Somare dans ses fonctions la semaine dernière. Michael Somare, qui lors d’une conférence de presse cette semaine, s’est déclaré Premier ministre d’un gouvernement minoritaire. «L’idée que la majorité gouverne est une simplification dangereuse», a-t-il souligné, estimant que le camp O’Neill «piétine la Constitution».

 

 

22.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Political fight in PNG may not be over


Papua New Guinea's Parliament has passed the national budget.


After a week of politcal turmoil and conflict the budget passing is a boost to Prime Minister Peter O'Neill in his fight for control against Sir Michael Somare.


Last week on the back of a Supreme Court decision that he had been removed from office illegally, Sir Michael, PNG's first ever Prime Minister, had himself sworn into office, picked a new cabinet, and appointed a new police commissioner. But the man who removed him from power earlier this year Peter O'Neill fought back, and by Tuesday he had the support of all PNG public and security agencies and most of the MP's. But many there do not believe the fight is over, including Sir Michael, although there are growing calls for him to retire.


Presenter: Campbell Cooney

Speakers: John Ribat, The Archbishop of Port Moresby; Sir Michael Somare, former PNG Prime Minister; Michael Malabag, President of the PNGTUC

 

  Listen here !  

 

 

22.12.2011

Source: The National


Power outages in Buka 


BUKA town in North Bougainville, is going through load-shedding of its electricity supply as PNG Power continues maintenance on the three main generators.

The generators are in various stages of maintenance – one is waiting for parts from overseas, the other is about to be commissioned after being serviced.

The third will take time to service after an electrical fire as a result of a technical fault during its first month of operation.

Frustration from business and residential clients is mounting despite PNG Power Buka putting out notices telling people about the load-shedding.

Business houses are claiming losses of thousands of kina as a result of intermittent power supply since Nov 17.

PNG Power Buka has urged clients who own generators to use them until the power supply is fully restored.



22.12.2011

Source: The National


Leaders condemn attacks on tower 


THE Digicel network to Central and South Bougainville has been restored after mobile services to more than 2,000 people was disrupted following the burning of Digicel’s relay tower at Mabiri.

The tower was burnt allegedly by Mabiri disgruntled landowners claiming the company had not paid its land rental.

Autonomous Bougainville Government (ABG) Communication Minister Joseph Nopei and national Minister for Communication Jimmy Miringtoro both

condemned the landowners’ actions.

Nopei urged landowners to look after the infrastructure on their land.

“The region is in

need of communication and information services

and when infrastructure like communication towers are on your land, please appreciate it and look after it,” Nopei said.

Miringtoro said communication towers gave people the advantage

of improved services like mobile networks and people must

help by taking care of these.

“We are willing to help Bougainville bring important services to you, but please

support us by looking after the facilities we build.

“To build a communication tower, costs more than K250,000 of people’s money,” Miring­toro said

“In Bougainville to build such infrastructure the price doubles or triples.

“Please elders, inform your young men and women to protect the services we provide,” he said.



22.12.2011

Source: The National


Governor-general and wife jet into Bougainville for holiday 

By STEPHANIE ELIZAH


GOVERNOR-General Sir Michael Ogio and Lady Esmie arrived to a rousing welcome from a small crowd of supporters, including members of the Autonomous Bougainville Government, at Buka Airport yesterday.

Sir Michael said the trip was not about him but his new wife, who was visiting Bougainville for the first time.

“We are here for our holiday. I have a month’s leave and this is my first leave since taking on the job of the Governor-General,” Sir Michael said.

“The generation of young Bougainvilleans today are the hope for Bougainville, you are the peace of Bougainville.

“You must stay free of all the social ills of this world so you can lead Bougainville into a good future.

“We are a proud people, we are a peace-loving people. We must maintain the dignity we have.”

Bougainville acting president Patrick Nisira said it was an honour to have the PNG governor-general and a son of Bougainville join the people of the autonomous region in

celebrating Christmas.

“You are joining us at a time when we have succeeded in stabilising and maintaining peace in South Bougainville, which is evident in the ceasefire agreement we signed early this month with warring factions in South Bougainville,” Nisira said.

He said as a result, for the first time in six years, the people of Bougainville would be enjoying a peaceful Christmas.

Nisira commended Sir Michael for recognising the O’Neill-Namah government.

“You made a good call to recognise the O’Neill-Namah government because in the little time that their government took office, they had worked closely with the Bougainville government to ensure our constitutional grants of K15 million and special support grant of K100 million was released,” Nisira said.

Sir Michael and Lady Esmie will spend their holiday in Buka town with visits planned for Tinputz, where a customary welcome for Lady Esmie is expected from Sir Michael’s fa­mily.



22.12.2011

Source: The National


Buka court scales down for Xmas 

By STEPHANIE ELIZAH


THE Buka district court has scaled down on its operations during the public service shutdown period from Dec 19 to Jan 9.

Senior provincial ma­gistrate Peter Toliken said this was because the non-availability of ma­gistrate Vincent Linge, who is on leave.

Toliken leaves for Kavieng this week for court circuit duties in New Ireland, leaving magistrate Bruce Tasikul in charge of district court operations.

Toliken said the court registry would be open but Tasikul would only sit on Monday, Wednesday and Friday for the next three weeks.

Toliken advised urgent after hours applications for search warrants, bail and IPOs could be brought before Tasikul at his home in Rangsua, Selau district, North Bougainville.

He said this was a temporary arrangement and would not affect interim protection orders.



22.12.2011

Source: The National


Bougainville queries Yakasa appointment 

 

THE Autonomous Bougainville Government says the Papua New Guinea police hierarchy did not consult it when appointing assistant police commissioner Fred Yakasa to head the Bougainville Police Service.

Yakasa replaces Thomas Eluh who spent the past 18 months establishing impact community policing initiatives that had contributed to peace and reconciliation in Bougainville.

Bougainville acting President Patrick Nisira said the failure to consult the ABG was in breach of the Bougainville Peace Agreement that stipulates that both parties must consult in any matter of good governance, law and order and security.

He said it was crucial for the sake of continuity and stability of Bougainville that the ABG was included in any decisions to appoint senior personnel from the national government to serve in Bougainville.

“The national government should exercise caution. There should be no more appointments as it will lead to greater instability. What is at stake here is peace,” Nisira said.

He said Eluh had worked well in the region and through his own efforts had won the respect of the people of Bougainville.

He said removing Eluh was not in the best interests of Bougainville.



22.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Record budget gets the nod


PARLIAMENT yesterday passed the O’Neill-Namah government’s record K10.5 billion 2012 Budget on voices.

Handed down on December 6, 2011, it took this long for Parliament to debate and pass it due to the current political crisis.

Elated Finance and Treasury Minister Don Polye said this was his first billion kina budget to be handed down, also making it a historical high for the country and 13 percent higher than lasy year’s Somare Abal Government.

New Ireland Governor Sir Julius Chan said during debate the amount was historical compared with his own historic “smallest budget” of around K400 million when he presented the country’s first budget at Independence in 1975.

Members of the O’Neill-Namah government heaped praise on the budget saying it was responsive to the needs of the people and directed to ensuring that the benefits of the strong economic growth were shared more fairly among the people.

“The measure of any government is the wellbeing of its people and the wellbeing of our people is best measured by the opportunities that government provides to them. 

“Opportunities to empower them live comfortably and enjoyably,” Mr Polye said.

“Opportunities for work, to raise a family, to educate our children, to live without fear of poverty or disease or from any form of intimidation or threat and to know that our children will be born into a society of hope where they can have a real chance of a good and rewarding life”.

Mr Polye said this was the challenge for the O’Neill-Namah Government, for PNG and its people.

Mr Polye said the next election is about quality, unselfish and genuine leadership.

The government saw itself as bringing real generational change to the leadership of PNG.

“It is about facilitating and enabling generational change in leadership, where the wiser and elderly Statesmen and women will fall back from frontline to play advisory roles while allowing the younger and vibrant leaders to take up the frontline leadership roles in PNG,” Mr Polye said.

Education received the largest funding of K649 million which will pay for free tuition education including K300 million from the 2011 Supplementary Budget and K47 million for education infrastructure development.

“Free education is of little value if the quality of education is not the best. We must ensure that any qualification from our educational institutions are at least as good as any similar qualification from any other nation.

“We must properly resource our education system to expand the opportunities for technical and further education, to provide those real world skills and qualifications, trade skills, small business skills and as a result real world jobs for Papua New Guineans,” he said.

Mr Polye said the allocation was 18.5 per cent of the total recurrent and development budgets which was a substantial 30 per cent above the 2011 budget education appropriation. He also reiterated the lifting of the income tax free threshold from K7000 to K10,000 for low income earners which was “designed to put more money into the pockets of those who need it most”.

Earlier Mr Polye said among key considerations during formation and design of the budget was the extraordinary growth of 58 percent in revenue over the last three years.

He said the challenge was to “use what we have well and honestly as we do not have money to waste or be stolen through corruption.”

Other key features in the budget include the projected total tax revenue at K8.5 billion in 2012 from personal income tax, company taxes and excise collections.

For non-tax revenue, a total of K520.1 million is expected while mining and petroleum dividends are expected at K188 million, Bank PNG K15 million and Fisheries K5 million.

Mr Polye also emphasised another key aspect was the creation of the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF), honouring of commitments during the LBSA and UBSA negotiations for landowners, maintaining key infrastructure including the Highlands Highway, airports and seaports.



22.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


GG goes home

By Fabian Gatana


GOVERNOR- General Sir Michael Ogio touched down in Buka yesterday to begin his first official scheduled annual four week leave from office.

In the company of Lady Esmie, Sir Michael disembarked to the sounds of bamboo band playing in his honour and was welcomed by the Autonomous Bougainville Government vice president Patrick Nisira and members of ABG.

Sir Michael made it known that his coming to Bougainville was purely for holiday reasons as he is entitled to four weeks of leave from office. In his Christmas message to the people of Bougainville he encouraged young Bougainvilleans to maintain the dignity of all Bougainvilleans as peace-loving people and bring peace and harmony in the region.

“Young Bougainvilleans of today you are the hope of Bougainville - we are already old – your generation should work towards bringing peace and harmony into the community,” said Sir Michael. 

Mr Nisira also thanked the Sir Michael for recognising and swearing in the O’Neill-Namah Government into Parliament because this Government, he said, was the first to take serious interest in the affairs of Bougainville.



22.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Age limit set for PM . . .


Parliament yesterday put an end to the age limit for Prime Ministership in PNG.

If you are past the age of 72, you cannot be Prime Minister. You have to retire.

The O’Neill-Namah government yesterday amended the National Executive Council Act to prevent a Member of Parliament from becoming or remaining as Prime Minister when he or she turns 72 years of age.

Parliament voted 68 – 3 to pass the new amendment which needed only a majority vote of 55.

The three that voted against were; Governor for New Ireland Sir Julius Chan, Governor Western province Dr Bob Danaya and MP for Wewak Open Dr Moses Manwau while NCD Governor Powes Pakop, Minister for Works Francis Awesa, Governor for Chimbu Fr John Garia, Minister for Mining Byron Chan and Governor for Northern Province Suckling Tamanabae walked out of the chamber before the vote was taken.

The new law comes into operation on and from August 1, 2011. Prime Minister Peter O’Neill when tabling the new proposed amendments, informed Parliament that the amendment is made by adding after Section 6 to the PM and NEC Act, Section 6A as ‘The Age Limit of Prime Minister’.

Mr O’Neill explained that this amendment does not restrict any person above the age of 72 from being elected as a member of Parliament but only restricts any person from the age of 72 and above from becoming a PM.

However, this di not go down well with Governor for New Ireland Province Sir Julius Chan, who asked: “Who among you that is 30 or 40, whose going to challenge me? Who are you to retire my people’s choice? We are taking away the rights of the young, the youths and the old and it is the people who will make the choice. “I stand here with a challenge to you young people. I am as good as you are. It’s not about Sir Michael Somare, it’s not about me, it’s about you. I think this law is a wrong law...I want to refer this to the Constitutional Committee otherwise I will have to determine my future,” Sir Julius said.

“I object that law in totality. I ask the PM to withdraw the law and rethink it. I ask and I want to refer this to the Constitutional laws. This is a very serious matter. You are depriving my people’s choice, you are depriving your people’s choice. You may have the numbers but you have not proven yourself,” he said. Governor for Milne Bay John Luke Critin and Minister for Housing Ken Fairweather both raised different point of orders supporting the bill.



22.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


ABG shipping services slack

By TRAVERTZ MABONE


SHIPPING services delivering basic goods and services to islands in the Autonomous Region of Bougainville have been described as unreliable. 

This concern was raised by islanders that the shipping services had never fully addressed their needs by the people responsible which had caused them to suffer due to the poor and unreliable schedule of the shipping industry on Bougainville. 

Mortlock islanders and people from the Tasman Atolls heavily depend on shipping and at times have waited for more than six to eight months for a ships, unlike Nissan, Fead and the Carterets. 

These concerns were raised by islanders of the Mortlock and Tasman through a spokesperson Edmond Teppuri. 

It was expressed that waiting up to such extended periods of time for service and basic goods delivery are a major setback to the livelihood of the islanders as the atolls offer not as much as one would expect. 

They have stated that ships are schedule to go to Nissan, Fead and Carterets on a regular basis while to the Mortlocks and Tasman there are always complaints of the lack of fuel for sailing to those atolls. 

This has been happening during the time of Sankamap1 and 2, and also now whereby the Bougainville Atolls which have taken over the Sankamap1 and two routes.

“We now challenge the management of Bougainville Atolls to draw up firm schedule that can equally serve all the atolls and not to draw schedule that will only serve other atolls and despise the other two atolls,” they said. The islanders also questioned “When will these shipping problems for Mortlocks and Tasman end and if the government will ever rescue all our problems in 2012 and beyond?

“It’s about time we come out of our shells and share our hard lives and experiences with everybody in the Region,” they said. 

The islanders also raised another point that education is another area that has been affected by poor transportation. 

They also added that “Our children and our primary school teachers have missed out in the past years on teachers’ in-services and their Christmas holidays. 

That is why no teachers from mainland Bougainville or other provinces are not willing to go out and teach on our islands.” 

They also revealed that their grade 8 students this year were not given the chance to sit their grade 8 examination due to no arrangement for any ship go out to Mortlocks and Tasman.

They claimed that this was not the first time that their grade 8 students were not given the opportunity to sit for the grade 8 examination.

They were quite disappointed with the people responsible because they failed to perform their duties. 

And now they face the dilemma of their students missing out on high school spaces simply because they never had their exams.

They have pleaded that if there was money available, the authorities make sure that the exam papers reach every primary school who have grade 8 students.

It is now unclear when it is scheduled to go to the forgotten atolls of Mortlock and Tasman while Christmas looms this weekend.  

 

 

21.12.2011

Source: SBS World News


Commonwealth may be asked to intervene

 

 

 

21.12.2011

Source: Radio New Zealand International


PNG parliament passes budget


The Papua New Guinea parliament has passed the budget following weeks of delays due to the political impasse in which two rival groups have claimed to be the legitimate government.

The impasse now appears settled after Peter O’Neill this week consolidated his claim to the prime ministership, being recognised by the Governor-General, the Speaker of parliament, the police commissioner, the Defence Force and the public service.

His rival, Sir Michael Somare, still claims to be the legitimate leader but lacks public support and the numbers to challenge Peter O’Neill successfully in parliament.

Meanwhile, the O’Neill administration passed its budget, the nation’s largest ever, which includes substantial spending increases for health and education.

Earlier, a senior member of the O’Neill cabinet, Bart Philemon, said they would complete other key legislation as well.

“We have already put [through] the first and second reading of the Sovereign Wealth Fund. The only other major legislation is the 22 women’s seat one, [for] which parliament failed to get the required number of 73.”

Bart Philemon.

The O’Neill administration has also passed an amendment to the Prime Minister’s Act which restricts the age limit of a Prime Minister to 72.

Parliament has been adjourned until January 17th.



21.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


PNG Catholic Bishops want Somare to step down


Papua New Guinea's influential Catholic Church is the latest group to call on Sir Michael to resign.

The veteran politician, as you've just heard, continues to insist that he is the legal leader of the country, with the backing of a ruling from the Supreme Court.

But prime minister Peter O'Neill says he is backed by a majority of MPs in parliament, the military, the police, the Governor-General and the public service.

The Archbishop of Port Moresby, John Ribat, says the Catholic Bishops Conference have asked Sir Michael to stand down in his own interests and those of the country.


Presenter:Bruce Hill

Speaker:Archbishop John Ribat, president, Catholic Bishops Conference of PNG 

 

Archbishop John Ribat

 

  Listen here !  



RIBAT: Our minds at this time would be to call on the prime minister, Sir Michael, to retire, to consider his health, he just came from a very big operation and right after the operation he did not have the time to recuperate, he just went straight into the situation we are in now. And in all respect for him as a leader and now as a person who've conditioned by his health, very sick now at this time, we are calling on him to resign and to do it very well because while all this is going on we uphold him as a leader of the nation, prime minister, because of course he's been reinstated by the highest law of the nation, the Supreme Court. And that is very good, it looks very good to all of us and because that's the constitution, he's reinstated through the judiciary. For him to be able to accept it and resign while all these tensions and turmoil developing and so on, I believe it will be a good thing for him because he will go out gracefully and in a way people will hold him with that respect and remember him as the father of the nation.


HILL: By saying this is the church taking sides politically, or do you see this as just a neutral suggestion for the good of the whole country?


RIBAT: We are not taking sides, we are seeing it as a neutral position for the whole country. We are seeing it as a position that is neutral and it is good for the whole country and taking into account that Sir Michael has done his best over the years until today. And now this time he's very handicapped by his health and also I think it is time for him to give space to new upcoming leaders. And really for him our calling is actually on a neutral ground, calling on him to consider this very gracefully, not to take it as an insult or whatever, but as a way to really see him go out respectfully and in a way that we hold him with high regard in that way.


HILL: Sir Michael still firmly insists that he is the legal prime minister. Do you think it's likely that he is going to listen to your advice that he should resign?


RIBAT: He is still, and of course by law, he is still the legal prime minister, no one can take that away from him. But the thing is considering on the other hand most of the parliament members, those who were with him have left to join the other side. And really there is great support for Peter O'Neill, then the support for the prime minister himself. So for myself, for my fathers, how can you bring this together to a peaceful end when the other party is insisting that we are the majority and also Sir Michael's is the minority group? How do you see this coming to a peaceful end? Now this will only make it more difficult. And so for Sir Michael to be able to see and knowing that he's the prime minister of the nation, the parliament is seeing it very differently and they're moving away from his party. And the sensible thing to do here for this to happen is for him to resign graciously in the way that I said that the nation will see him doing this for the good of the nation as the Catholic Church is asking him to do.


HILL: Many other people have asked him to resign, he hasn't paid attention to them. Do you think that he will pay attention to the church though?


RIBAT: Maybe this time I believe he will be able to consider it because we have spoken, the Catholic bishops and I have spoken openly about this. This is the first time we have mentioned it openly to the nation and to him, and that is why now he is calling me to go and discuss this further.



21.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


PNG parliament passes budget, debates seats for women


While Sir Michael Somare was claiming he was the legitimate Prime Minister the government of rival prime minister, Peter O'Neill was getting on with governing.


The budget was passed by parliament today and debate was restarted on a change to Organic Law to allow the creation of 22 seats in Parliament reserved for women.



Presenter:Bruce Hill

Speaker:Firmin Nanol, Radio Australia's PNG reporter 


  Listen here !  



21.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Somare insists he's still PM saying resignation calls are insulting


The constitutional crisis in Papua New Guinea is far from over.

Sir Michael Somare is still insisting that he is the rightful, Supreme Court-appointed prime minister of what he admits is a minority government.

In a mainly incoherent statement to the media in Port Moresby Sir Michael says call for him to resign are an insult to the voters that elected him.

He accused the government of rival prime minister Peter O'Neill of intimidating the Governor General, of having no respect for the constitution, and using their majority in parliament to justify their behaviour.

In this edited version of his address voices can be heard in the background prompting Sir Michael when he appears to lose track of his argument.


Speaker:Sir Michael Somare, former PNG Prime Minister 

 

  Listen here !  

 

 

21.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia News - TV


Church urges Somare to end leadership fight


The Catholic Archbishop of Papua New Guinea is calling on the former prime minister to resign from politics and ensure there is no repeat of last week's political tension.

Archbishop John Ribat says while the Catholic Church recognises that the Supreme Court ruled Sir Michael Somare be reinstated, it wants him to end the fight to get back into office. 

"In all respect to him, we want him to resign," Archbishop Ribat said.

 

 

Sir Michael remains insistent that he is the country's rightful prime minister in charge of a minority government. 

During a press conference this week, he accused Mr O' Neil of intimidating the governor-general, and disrespecting the constitution.

"The minority government does not want to see the country being led by members of parliament, that sheer numbers hijack the process in parliament house and trample over our constitution," Sir Michael said.

"The simple notion that the majority rule justifies behaviour is detrimental in its simplicity."

On Tuesday, Mr O'Neill claimed victory in ending the political stand-off with the former prime minister.

He said while the Supreme Court ruled Sir Michael should be reinstated as the country's leader, parliament sees it differently. 

"Parliament is not answerable to the Supreme Court. That must be clearly understood."

 

 

 

 

21.12.2011

Source:Radio New Dawn on Bougainville


GG visits Buka

By Aloysius Laukai


Despite the many issues affecting PNG,Governor General SIR MICHAEL OGIO is arriving in Buka to a small welcome ceremony at the BUKA AIRPORT.

 

 

Pictured are members of HAMARAHA POPSCO INTERCHURCH YOUTH members pose for this AL PIcture.

They performed the welcome ceremony.

 

 

 

 

21.12.2011

Source: Radio New Dawn on Bougainville


ABG COMENTS ON YAKASA APPOINTMENT


AUTONOMOUS Bougainville Government (ABG) says the PNG police hierarchy did not consult them in appointing Assistant Police Commissioner to Bougainville Fred Yakasa to head the Bougainville Police Service (BPS) in the region.


Yakasa’s appointment replaces former ACP Thomas Eluh who spent the last year and half, establishing impact community policing initiatives that has contributed to peace and reconciliation in Bougainville.


Bougainville acting president Patrick Nisira said the failure to consult ABG was in breach of the Bougainville Peace Agreement that stipulates that both parties must consult in any matters of good governance, law and order and security.


He said it was crucial for the sake of continuity and stability of Bougainville, that ABG is included in any decisions to appoint senior personnel from the national government to serve in Bougainville.


Nisira said Eluh had worked well in the region and through his own efforts, had won the respect of the people of Bougainville.


He added that removing Eluh from his former post was not in the best interest of the autonomous region of Bougainville.

 

 

 

21.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia News


O'Neill declares PNG leadership crisis over


Papua New Guinea prime minister Peter O'Neill says he is in total control of the country, and the dispute with Sir Michael Somare is over.

Sir Michael is still insisting he is the legal prime minister, basing his claim of a ruling from the Supreme Court.

But Mr O'Neill says he has the backing of a majority in Parliament and the Governor-General, and the government and people have acknowledged that.


Presenter:Bruce Hill

Speaker:Peter O'Neill, prime minister, Papua New Guinea 


O'NEILL: We are in total control of the affairs of the country. Public service mission has now fallen in line with the governments' wish and governments' directions. The Defence Force and the police are under our control. Normalcy has returned to the critical structure of the country and we are in control.


HILL: What about Sir Michael Somare and his supporters, I think he's got about 40 MPs on his side, he is still claiming that he is the prime minister and he says he's backed up by the authority of the Supreme Court in that?


O'NEILL: In fact he's got only 32 members of parliament who are with him at present, and that is compared to our 75. Now when you look at it as I've stated on many occasions, the courts in this country have got no powers to order the parliament to install a prime minister. Sir Michael continues to have minority numbers on the floor of parliament. Parliament has not mandated him to run the country. Only the Supreme Court or the courts of our country can only make references back to parliament to correct itself. Now we have taken note of the court orders, we have accepted the court orders in parliament, we have debated on it and we have disposed of it. We now have introduced legislation to correct the process, and the process is that any person owning the office of the Prime Minister who is away for an extended period of time, over three months, in fact automatically vacates that office. In line with that the parliament has taken note that there has been a vacancy and a new Prime Minister has been elected. So now this has been recognised by all sectors of the community, almost 90 per cent of our people support that. In fact the public servants are now fully behind, and the Governor General yesterday admitted to the fact that he was wrongly advised by people who had no right to advise him, and as a result he now admits that we have been duly sworn in and we are now in total control of the country.


HILL: So is there still basically a clash between these two principles of control of parliament and rule of law? Is the Supreme Court falling into line though? Will you have to go back to the Supreme Court to get them to somehow publicly acknowledge this?


O'NEILL: Parliament is not answerable to the Supreme Court, that must be clearly understood. If anybody feels aggrieved by any decision parliament has taken, of course they have every right to go to court for an interpretation. Again Somare and his camp have got every right to go and exercise their constitutional right and go to court if they feel aggrieved that they can seek an interpretation, which the court will interpret and report back to parliament, and parliament will continue to correct itself.


HILL: The people who supported Sir Michael Somare apparently in good faith adhering to this principle of rule of law, is anything bad going to happen to them as a result of them supporting Sir Michael Somare, or do you understand their reasons for doing what they did?


O'NEILL: Nobody is operating outside the rule of law. That influences our government, we are subject to the constitution of our country, acts of parliament that we introduce on the floor of parliament, and I want to state to everybody that the country despite the crisis has been able to operate in a very orderly manner, our citizens have gone about with their lives in an orderly manner, there has been no riots, there's been peaceful protests supporting our government in many cities throughout the country, but that is a constitutional right. So all in all I think Papua New Guineans have expressed great maturity in ensuring that our country's democracy prevails.


HILL: How is this eventually resolved, just basically through people acknowledging you as prime minister, because there were some talks I understand between the Attorney General for Sir Michael Somare, Sir Arnold Amet, and Dr Alan Marat, your Attorney General? Did anything come of those peace talks or did it not just go anywhere?


O'NEILL: That did not go anywhere because of the fact that they depended entirely on the court order the Supreme Court has ordered. When we look back you must realise that the proceedings of the Supreme Court were under extreme controversy where the Chief Justice despite the person who chaired the tribunal of the Supreme Court, despite very serious conflicts of interest refused to step down. Now under those circumstances even the decision of the Supreme Court was not a unanimous decision, it was just by majority of three to two. So given those circumstances, parliament rightly took note of those and acted by changing the appropriate acts of parliament to ensure that there is stability in the political structure of our country.


HILL: Sir Michael Somare is the father of PNG, took the country to independence, a very long and distinguished career, is this really the way that his political career should be brought to an end though on this note?


O'NEILL: Well this is not by choice, Sir Michael Somare has done this to himself. This country belongs to seven million people, we acknowledge his contribution to the country. We have great respect for the contributions that he has made, but he clearly knows that he's not healthy, he has had extreme health issues, he's not capable of managing the affairs of the country, he should have done the right thing that his family and himself announced that he was retiring and he would retire from politics. Now he's been discharged from the hospital he just wants to walk back into the job using the court order as the basis on which to do so. He does not have the public support, he does not have parliament's support, and certainly he does not have the business community and international community's support. So it is quite obvious the writing is on the wall. He needs to retire gracefully with dignity and the respect that he deserves.


HILL: One of the very significant aspects of this whole crisis has been what many are calling a very mature and measured response by the ordinary people of PNG, there was calm, no one took their disagreements to the streets, the military stayed in the barracks, wouldn't be drawn into things, public servants stayed at their posts and did their jobs without picking sides. Were you surprised by this response or not?


O'NEILL: No we have been appealing to everybody in the country that we must respect the rule of law, we must allow parliament to do its job, we must allow the mandated leaders, which are their representatives on the floor of parliament to continue to manage these issues. Now Somare and his camp has not been attending parliament, they are trying to run a so-called minority government under court order outside of parliament, not responsible to anybody. Now these changes have happened because of massive corruption and massive mismanagement of public funds, and lack of attention to people's needs. As a result of that the people's desires have been to change. So we know that we have got the public support and we know that public support is for the good of the country.


HILL: Are you going to let Sir Michael Somare continue to pretend to be prime minister if as you say you're in control, or are you going to just simply ignore him, what?


O'NEILL: Well he knows he's lost any opportunity for him to become prime minister. He's no longer a member of parliament, he cannot conduct himself out there as if he's a prime minister, when we all know that prime ministers are only elected by parliament and only members of parliament can be prime ministers. So I'm sorry he's singing his last song, but let him see how he plays that out.


HILL: What lessons are there for PNG in this crisis? How can we prevent this kind of thing happening again in the future?


O'NEILL: We are now doing legislative reforms on the floor so that we don't know allow this kind of nonsense to reoccur in the future. We are changing the prime minister ?? act to make sure that if a prime minister falls ill automatic invoking of a prohibition which will allow two medical doctors to carry out an assessment, whether he's still mentally sound to carry out that function of the prime minister or not. And secondly, we are trying to do also limits to the age that if you're well over 72, which is the same as the judges in this country, that persons who are over 72 years of age should not continue to hold the office of the prime minister. This is a stressful job and a fit and a healthy person should hold the office and managing the affairs of seven million people in this country.

 

 

21.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


‘Respect Supreme Court ruling’


MEMBERS of the ABG House of Representatives have called on PNG parliamentarians to uphold the country’s constitution and respect the Supreme Court’s decision which reinstated Sir Michael Somare as Prime Minister.

In a joint statement released by Member for Hagogohe Robert Hamal, Member for Tsitalato Cosmas Sohia, and the newly elected Member for the Tonsu Constituency, Joel Banam, the leaders urged the O’Neill-Namah faction to put the Constitution above parliamentary process and personal interests.

They said the Constitution is the only guarantee to unity, peace and prosperity for over six million people of PNG and has effectively provided the basis of a united Papua New Guinea over the past thirty three years of our country’s independence.

They said that it was not a question of a corrupt government regime, the popularity of a government regime or parliamentary procedures and processes, but the supremacy of the Constitution. 

The moment the constitution loses its supremacy nothing can guarantee the safety and unity of our people.

The warned that “if the current impasse between the two groups of parliamentarians is not resolved in accordance with the Constitution, it is highly likely that Bougainvilleans call for sovereignty of our homeland will be reignited.” 

Speaking on behalf of the Buka leadership, Mr Joel Banam said, “We are deeply concerned about the events that are taking place in PNG right now. We do not feel secure. If the Constitution were to lose its supremacy, it is obvious to us that successful implementation of the Bougainville Peace Agreement is in jeopardy.” 

“We are reviewing our position on Bougainville’s independence - we are prepared to unilaterally declare Bougainville independent for the third time, this time as one united people of Bougainville,” Mr Banam said. “History has taught us that in the event that the supremacy of a country’s constitution is made subservient to the whims of greed, fear and power, one might as well kiss goodbye to the principles of democracy. 

Whether our PNG parliamentarians acknowledge it or not the fact remains: “Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. We are witnessing this very fact to-day.”

“The suspension of our respectable and dignified leader, His Excellency Grand Chief Sir Michael Ogio is a classical demonstration of greed, fear and (an unhealthy desire for) power at play,” said Mr Banam. 

“We want to make it succinctly clear to the Bougainville members of the PNG Parliament who were and are party to the suspension of Michael Ogio, especially the Member for North Bougainville, you have dug your own political grave.” However on Monday, Parliament reinstated Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio who later that day installed Peter O’Neill as Prime Minister of PNG.



21.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Buka youth respond to HIV/AIDS

By ALEX MUNME


A KOMUNITI Tingim Aids (KTA) Youth Forum was held last week at the Hahela conference centre in Buka, Autonomous Region of Bougainville.

Care International through its Komuniti Tingim Aids project, works with youths through a Peer Education Program in 15 communities of Buka and Tinputz Districts. The forum was held so that the youths could showcase what they have learnt and to disseminate vital health information to their peers and community members. The forum was also aimed at playing an active role in responding to youth vulnerability to HIV and STI.

With the theme” Fostering Positive Changes in Communities through Youth Involvement the showcase of KTA’s Peer Educators had the opportunity to present their ideas and recommendations to stakeholders.

Many top level ABG leaders were unable to attend but those present had the chance to find out the challenges the youth had to overcome in carrying out their roles in the program.

The forum was supported by donor, Sanap Wantaim AusAID.



21.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Budget to be passed

By PETER KORUGL 


Parliament-elect Prime Minister Peter O’Neill last night gave his assurance that the 2012 National Budget will be passed by Parliament today.

“The people’s budget will be passed tomorrow I can give you that assurance,” Mr O’Neill told the Post-Courier.

The K10.5 billion budget brought down by the O’Neill Government on December 6 focuses on the social sector, with emphasis on education, law and order and infrastructure.

Mr O’Neill said: “For the first time, this budget is a balanced and fair budget, all provinces and districts are given their fair share of the money, and we are putting more money into the pockets of our people.

“The budget is aimed at lowering the cost of living for the people and improving their welfare. We are giving income tax relief to people by lifting the tax-free threshold from K7000 to K10,000. This means all who earn up to K10,000 will not pay any tax to the Government.

“Our free education policy will also put more money into the pockets of our people. With more money to spend, we anticipate that people will use that to improve their lives.”

He said the Opposition should be in Parliament to debate this important document but this was not possible because they did not have anything positive to contribute.

Mr O’Neill said the Somare regime had been in office for nine long years that it had forgotten how to act like an Opposition.

However, at a press conference yesterday, Madang MP, Sir Arnold Amet said the Somare group could not go to Parliament because of the seating arrangement.

Sir Arnold said they can only go if Mr O’Neill was to give way for Sir Michael Somare to resume his seat as Prime Minister.

Sir Michael yesterday maintained that he was still Prime Minister and informed the media that his group would proceed court challenge against the swearing in of the O’Neill Government. While Sir Michael and his team were having their press conference at Ela Beach Hotel, across town, the Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio was swearing in the last of the O’Neill cabinet ministers.

Minister for Environment and Conservation, Thompson Harokaqve concluded the swearing in of the cabinet. He was away at Durban, South Africa, attending the Climate Change conference and was not present for the swearing in. At Waigani, it was business as usual as the public servants went to work, following the pledges by their bosses to work with the O’Neill Government.



21.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Budget to be passed


By PETER KORUGL 


Parliament-elect Prime Minister Peter O’Neill last night gave his assurance that the 2012 National Budget will be passed by Parliament today.

“The people’s budget will be passed tomorrow I can give you that assurance,” Mr O’Neill told the Post-Courier.

The K10.5 billion budget brought down by the O’Neill Government on December 6 focuses on the social sector, with emphasis on education, law and order and infrastructure.

Mr O’Neill said: “For the first time, this budget is a balanced and fair budget, all provinces and districts are given their fair share of the money, and we are putting more money into the pockets of our people.

“The budget is aimed at lowering the cost of living for the people and improving their welfare. We are giving income tax relief to people by lifting the tax-free threshold from K7000 to K10,000. This means all who earn up to K10,000 will not pay any tax to the Government.

“Our free education policy will also put more money into the pockets of our people. With more money to spend, we anticipate that people will use that to improve their lives.”

He said the Opposition should be in Parliament to debate this important document but this was not possible because they did not have anything positive to contribute.

Mr O’Neill said the Somare regime had been in office for nine long years that it had forgotten how to act like an Opposition.

However, at a press conference yesterday, Madang MP, Sir Arnold Amet said the Somare group could not go to Parliament because of the seating arrangement.

Sir Arnold said they can only go if Mr O’Neill was to give way for Sir Michael Somare to resume his seat as Prime Minister.

Sir Michael yesterday maintained that he was still Prime Minister and informed the media that his group would proceed court challenge against the swearing in of the O’Neill Government. While Sir Michael and his team were having their press conference at Ela Beach Hotel, across town, the Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio was swearing in the last of the O’Neill cabinet ministers.

Minister for Environment and Conservation, Thompson Harokaqve concluded the swearing in of the cabinet. He was away at Durban, South Africa, attending the Climate Change conference and was not present for the swearing in. At Waigani, it was business as usual as the public servants went to work, following the pledges by their bosses to work with the O’Neill Government.



21.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Someone else is in my seat: Chief

By STAFF REPORTERS


REINSTATED Prime Minister, Sir Michael Somare’s, group says he has no qualms about attending Parliament except that “somebody else” is occupying his seat illegally.

And the Somare side is insisting if the seat is vacated they will attend despite being in the minority numerically.

Southern Highlands Governor, Anderson Agiru: “Said the people’s Constitution had spoken abundantly the December 12 in declaring Sir Michael the legitimate Prime Minister, but the O’Neill group continued to put up “road blocks” preventing his entry.

Mr Agiru said this was through the O’Neill group’s continuous amending of subordinate legislation to remain in power.

“In our Constitution of democracy, the Constitution is supreme not the Parliament.

“Section 11 of the Constitution makes it explicitly clear and in Section 99 of our Constitution it creates the three arms of the Government, including Parliament.

“Therefore the Parliament is a creature of the Constitution of PNG,” Mr Agir said.

He said every member of Parliament is a legislator and they need to read and understand the Constitution, the very instrument that created this country which was adopted on August 16, 1974.

is Mr Agiru said numbers on the floor did not supersede the Constitution of which the Supreme Court had already ruled reinstating Sir Michael.

Mr Agiru said Sir Michael’s record re-elections into Parliament were not “at the barrel of a gun” but during fair elections.

He called on the O’Neill group not to hold Parliament “under captivity” but respect the rule of law, honour the Constitution and not to form road blocks or culdesach and let him rule for the next three months.

“I call on my brother member of parliament on the side to let common sense prevail and respect the Constitution and lead our people as intended by the Constitution, the very law we have taken by oath in office to protect.

We are all elected leaders. We all serve the same people therefore I invite my brothers to come and carve our future together with the greates craftsman of our times Sir Michael Somare.

Mr Agiru was speaking during a news conference together with Sir Michael and his group in which Sir Michael said no one except the East Sepik people had the right to ask him to step down from Parliament.

Sir Michael said there was a Constitution to abide by and he was waiting for that opportunity to enter Parliament.

Enga Governor, Peter Ipatas, said the whole affair was also due to young politicians in Parliament not respecting the rule of law and the Constitution and what Sir Michael stood for.



21.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


PNG's political crisis may not be over


Despite the apparent strength of Peter O'Neill's position not everyone believes the political crisis is over.


Presenter: Simon Santow

Speaker: Jon Fraenkel, Australian National University

 

  Listen here !   

 

 

21.12.2011

Source: The National


PM blasts Sir Michael’s regime 


Prime Minister Peter O’Neill has lashed out at the Somare regime, saying it has treated the country as if it was a family business for the past nine years.

He told people yesterday in Port Moresby, that the country had remained “unchanged” since independence and goods and services had not reached people in rural areas.

He said politicians and other white collar criminals had stolen millions from the public purse and had bettered their own lives while the people suffered.

O’Neill said at “the end of the tunnel there is a light” referring to his government and its effort to fight corruption.

He said his government had four months left before the issuing of writs on April 27 and would ensure the people’s interests were protected.

He thanked the people through their 75 MPs who elected him as the prime minister saying a family could not run the country.

He said parliament should not come under the influence of a few people and be used as a “rubber stamp”.

O’Neill said since independence, governments had been formed and dissolved in parliament and not on streets or at hotels.



21.12.2011

Source: The National


Sir Michael’s faction slams GG’s decision 

By ISAAC NICHOLAS


MEMBERS of parliament loyal to Grand Chief Sir Michael Somare have refused to accept the decision by Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio to recognise Peter O’Neill as prime minister.

They maintained that they were the legitimate government restored by the Supreme Court.

Sir Michael told a media conference that there was now a “legal and constitutional nightmare”.

He claimed that MPs who had chosen to remain with him had demonstrated their recognition of the Constitution as being supreme.

“My minority government does not want to see this country being led by members of parliament that use sheer numbers to hijack processes in parliament and trample all over our Constitution,’’ he said.

“The simple notion that the majority rule justifies their behaviour is detrimental in its simplicity. The significance of desecrating our Constitution over the past couple of days is far reaching.

“I call on Papua New Guineans to recognise the leadership style that has crept into one of our arms of government – parliament.

“The O’Neill regime has shown PNG what it will do to remain in power.

“The string of violations to the Constitution and the use of their numbers on the floor of parliament are indicative of what their approach to governance will be in the future.

 “The pattern of intimidation used at the highest level – Government House – leaves my government speechless.

“We are not trying to protect ourselves. We are responsible leaders. Mark my word, the majority of those MPs will not come back after the 2012 general election.”

Madang MP Sir Arnold Amet said after the Supreme Court restored Sir Michael as prime minister, the speaker should have asked Peter O’Neill to vacate the seat and allow Sir Michael and his government to take up their seats in parliament.

“So long as Speaker Jeffery Nape continues to create a roadblock for the Somare government to take its rightful place on the floor of parliament, Sir Michael cannot go and sit in opposition or the middle bench,” Sir Arnold said.

Meanwhile, Sir Michael said MPs who called for his resignation should show respect.

“The call for me by certain leaders to resign is an insult to the voters of East Sepik province who elected me in the 2007 general election,” Sir Michael said.

“I have represented my people in parliament for more than 40 years and the loose talk by senior MPs at this critical time is disrespectful and cheap.

“They tried to remove me unlawfully in parliament but failed and now they are calling for me to resign,” he said.

 

 

 

21.12.2011

Source: The National


Buka hospital needs service upgrade 


LONG-time Buka town resident and owner of Toyana Trading, Greg Wong says the people of Bougainville need to work together in raising the quality of service at Buka General Hospital.

He said this last Friday when donating K18,000 worth of equipment to doctors Joseph Vilosi, Barnabas Matanu, nur­ses association executives and hospital chief executive officer Dr Cyril Imako.

Wong said when the quality of service provided by the hospital improved, there would be no reason for people who could afford outside medical care to seek help elsewhere.

Wong said areas that needed improvement included recruitment of more specialist doctors, availability of special life saving equipment for complex operations and spacious ward facilities with more beds for patients.

“We have some of the smartest people in the country and they have been drafted out to other countries when they should be working here, helping our people.

“But because we are not paying them enough, they have to look for better opportunities.”

He said it was in the best interest of the Bougainville people to look after the hospital, which catered for referrals from North, Central and South Bougainville.

Wong said the responsibility not only lay with the Department of Health and Buka General Hospital but with the Autonomous Bougainville Government, business and local communities.

He hoped the donation of mostly child care medical equipment including infant feeding tubes and mobile pulse oximeters would help the hospital improve its quality of care to the people of Bougainville.

Wong and his wife Patricia donated the life-saving equipment on behalf of donors, Peter Tsiamalili and New Zealand Police.

 

 

 

21.12.2011

Source: Radio New Zealand International


PNG’s O’Neill tells Somare to "retire gracefully"


Peter O’Neill has been recognised as PNG’s Prime Minister by the Govenor-General, the speaker of parliament, the police commissioner, Defence Force and the public service.

Mr O’Neill declared victory in the standoff, which has seen two competing prime ministers, after the governor general declared him the legitimate head of government.

Mr O’Neill says normality has returned and he had control of the country, while Sir Michael Somare has no mandate to rule, lacks public support and the numbers to challenge him successfully in parliament.

He says Sir Michael needs to retire gracefully.

Mr O’Neill says he will be making legislative changes to ensure clear provisions are in place should a prime minister fall ill and also so that a person could not continue as leader after 72, the retirement age for judges in PNG.

But Sir Michael Somare says the intimidation used by the rival Peter O’Neill group leaves his group speechless.

He says the way they’ve persuaded the public service to ignore a Supreme Court ruling is breathtaking.



21.12.2011

Source: Radio New Dawn on Bougainville


Arms destruction committee


Whilst Bougainville is yet to find ways to contain all weapons, Siwai District has designed a model in which their exfighters will finaly despose their weapons.

A weapons dissarmament team was formed recently in the district to address this issue and to prepare for a weapons destruction summit that will be held in the new year.

The model if successful can be used in other districts.

The committee is comprised of representatives of all sectors of the community including COE reps.Women,Youth,Police,chiefs District Administrator,UN rep and veterans.

Pictured are members of the committee taken in Siwai recently.

 

 

 

21.12.2011

Source: Radio New Dawn on Bougainville


ABG ON

BY ALOYSIUS LAUKAI


The ABG parliament is sitting this afternoon and would be rising for the budget session.

This sessipn was supposed to be the budget session however, they will wait for the national government budget before the ABG can table the 2012 ABG BUDGET.

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


O'Neill declares PNG leadership crisis over


Papua New Guinea prime minister Peter O'Neill says he is in total control of the country, and the dispute with Sir Michael Somare is over.

Sir Michael is still insisting he is the legal prime minister, basing his claim of a ruling from the Supreme Court.

But Mr O'Neill says he has the backing of a majority in Parliament and the Governor-General, and the government and people have acknowledged that.


Presenter:Bruce Hill

Speaker:Peter O'Neill, prime minister, Papua New Guinea 

 

  Listen here !  

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


May still be a role for Supreme Court in PNG impasse


Constitutional specialist, Dr Tony Regan from the Australian National University says the disopute in PNG is not really settled.

Dr Reagan says there could still be a role for the Supreme Court to play in the battle of strength between the two prime ministers, Peter O'Neill and Sir Michael Somare.



Presenter:Bruce Hill

Speaker:Dr Tony Regan, constitutional specialist, Australian National University 

 

  Listen here !  

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Somare refusing to give up his quest to be PM


Former PNG prime minister Sir Michael Somare is still declaring his right to the leadership of government.

He told reporters at his base in a beachside hotel in Port Moresby that he was the legitimate prime minister.


Presenter:Bruce Hill

Speaker:Firmin Nanol, Radio Australia PNG reporter 

 

  Listen here !  

 

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: SBS Australia


PNG's PM ONeill speaks to SBS 



 

 

20.12.2011

Source: SBS Australia


 

PNG stand-off continues

 

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia News -TV


O'Neill reveals plan to end PM dispute


 

PNG's Prime Minister Peter O'Neill says he intends to introduce legislative changes forcing PMs to retire at 72.

The political crisis appears to have eased with Mr O'Neill securing the support of the governor-general, most MPs, the public service, the police and the defence force.

However, his rival 75-year-old Sir Michael Somare said he's determined to be returned as prime minister.

Mr O'Neill has told Pacific Beat's Bruce Hill that won't be possible when the legislative changes are in place.

PNG's governor-general has met Peter O'Neill and his supporters, prompting speculation the leadership crisis is closer to being resolved.

In Parliament, Mr O'Neill announced that last week's suspension of Governor-General, Sir Michael Ogio had been lifted. 

The speaker, Geoffrey Nape said Sir Michael Ogio had written a letter apologising for swearing in ministers loyal to the former prime minister, Sir Michael Somare last week. 

Mr O'Neill and his supporters travelled to Government House on Monday afternoon to meet with the head of state. 

A box of champagne was also taken inside. 

Mr O'Neill said the meeting was a courtesy call to reconcile with the governor-general. 



20.12.2011

Source: Radio New Zealand International


Somare says O’Neill team desecrates PNG constitution


Sir Michael Somare, who leads one of the two factions purporting to be the government of Papua New Guinea, says the intimidation used by the rival Peter O’Neill group leaves his group speechless.

He says the way they’ve persuaded the public service to ignore a Supreme Court ruling is breathtaking.

In an open letter calling on the people to go about their normal business while the politicians resolve the mess, Sir Michael says the demand he resign from parliament is an insult.

He says his minority government does not want to see PNG being led by MPs that use sheer numbers to hijack processes in parliament and trample all over the constitution.

Sir Michael says the significance of the desecration of the constitution over the past couple of days is far reaching.

He says the string of constitutional violations committed by the O’Neill group, and their use of numbers on the floor of parliament show what their approach to governance will be in the future.

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Changes ‘new to PNG ’: O’Neill 


PARLIAMENT-elect Prime Minister Peter O’Neill has described the events which unfolded in the last few days as a change in the political culture and tradition in our democratic country.

Mr O’Neill, while thanking the Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio for recognising his election on the floor of Parliament and his invitation to the Government House yesterday, also thanked the GG for his humility and courage to allow Parliament to remain supreme.

He said the GG acknowledged that there was a change to the Prime Minister and National Executive Council Act and that the Parliament endorsed the court decision before my election as PM on December 9.

“This is a new political chapter and Papua new Guineans have shown maturity by allowing political issues to deal with itself. The public service machinery is stable and working but we need to work together,” Mr O’Neill said.

“I also pay special respect to our senior leaders for standing united. That was a new political era, an era which together with young leaders…they have stood firm together to allow Parliament remain supreme in our country,” he said.

Mr O’Neill also thanked police for keeping law and order throughout the country. He said Government would be at work immediately to pass important legislations and the Opposition must come into the Parliament to support these legislations which were important for PNG rather than fighting for survival that would not take them anywhere.

Mr O’Neill said Sir Michael Somare was a respected leader, one of the founding fathers of PNG and must retire with dignity and not allow other leaders to push him to remain for their own interest. 

“Parliament has shown its supremacy that it is not subject to other arms of Government. Parliament is where governments are made and changed. And Sir Michael (GG) has acted in the best interest of the country after being through duress,” he said.



20.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Laws in place to revovery fraud money

By PORENI UMAU


PAPUA New Guinea as a country has the necessary laws in place for the police and the Office of the Public Prosecutor to recover fraud money and proceeds of any financially motivated crime.

Public Prosecutor Pondros Kaluwin said this in response to a statement made by the United Nations resident co-ordinator David McLachlan-Karr last Wednesday in this paper.

Mr Kaluwin said that proceeds of crime could be recovered by his office under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2005 citing that this legislation was passed by Parliament and came into force well before PNG ratified the UN Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC) in 2007. 

He said that his office has already undertaken proceeds of crime recovery action in restraining properties namely moneys in bank accounts and real properties. 

He said that in one case, monies totalling approximately K1.268 million were recovered and put into the government’s consolidated revenue fund. 

He said that all these cases involved proceeds of corruption and fraud which were offences under the Criminal Code. 

He said that while he agreed with Mr McLachlan –Karr that the ratification of UNCAC was the right step forward for PNG, he said that the approach to asset recovery under UNCAC was not new to PNG. 

Mr Kaluwin said that The Proceeds of Crime Act was in force before PNG ratified UNCAC. He said that the relevant law was in place, but the challenge was to allocate sufficient resources to the Financial Intelligence Unit in the National Fraud and Anti Corruption Directorate and the Office of the Public Prosecutor. 


ESBC: Is this law the reason for Sir Michael Somare's desperate fight to become re-instated as Prime Minister? Hopefully this very law will be applied for the entire Somare family and friends as well.



20.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Somare: I am still PM

By GORETHY KENNETH


GRAND Chief Sir Michael Somare yesterday maintained that he is the prime minister as he was reinstated by the Supreme Court.

“I’ve been reinstated by the Courts, I am following the law and that’s it and I’ve been sworn in as the Prime Minister by the Governor General. There is only one Cabinet and one Prime Minister and I am the one,” Sir Michael said.

In an interview on Radio Australia’s Pacific Beat, Sir Michael said the supreme court judgement last week reinstating him in office still stands.

“The supreme court has taken that decision and installed my government back in the office,” he said. 

“(The) Supreme Court has taken its decision... and we are just trying to get our politics sorted out here.”

“I am still the Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea because the Supreme Court has taken its decision to restore my government.

“We know for the fact that the Supreme Court has taken its decision, five man bench and we are just trying to get our politics here. We are trying to make an attempt to talk to O’Neill but we have had no response.

“My understanding is that once the Supreme Court has taken the decision, they’ll have to wait…any judges who sit on the National Court will have to know that the question is in the Supreme Court. I personally think that the Supreme Court will be able to take the decision on.

“We have a constitutional government here, the executive government, the parliament and the Supreme Court all of them come under the Constitution. The Constitution is quite clear and O’Neill and his men are clear on the Constitution of this country. WE are merely taking the decision that far. We know the constitution is supreme. Parliament can take legislation but the Supreme Court has made their decision and everything they (O’Neill) have done is illegal.

“Numbers in parliament is irrelevant. We have a constitution that is supreme, the constitution has spoken and we are only waiting for that decision. We want the decision to be taken by the Supreme Court. We have laws here in PNG which quite clearly govern this country,” Sir Michael said.



20.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


G-G recognises O’Neill as PM

By PORENI UMAU


IT is now official — Peter O’Neill is Papua New Guinea’s Prime Minister.

His recognition and swearing in at Government House yesterday – after a change of heart by the Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio – hopefully closing a dark chapter in the political life of our country. It also, barred court-re-instated minority Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare going back to court, unshackling the country from the confusion of the past week created by the stalemate of two claimants to the Prime Minister’s seat – Mr O’Neill, who was elected by Parliament, and Sir Michael, who was reinstated by the Supreme Court.

Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio yesterday said that following further advice, he had concluded that his earlier decision to swear in the Somare regime a week ago was wrong.

Grand Chief Sir Michael Somare yesterday maintained that he is the legitimate Prime Minister

“I’ve been reinstated by the Courts, I am following the law and that’s it and I’ve been sworn in as the Prime Minister by the Governor-General. There is only one Cabinet and one Prime Minister and I am the one,” Sir Michael said.

However, the Governor-General acknowledged that he had no reserved powers and can only act on advice from parliament through the Speaker on the appointment of the prime minister. He said that parliament was supreme and it was only parliament that can decide who is prime minister.

Sir Michael said he now accepted that he cannot take advice from the State Solicitor, the Legislative Counsel or any other officer of the State.

Sir Michael said that in any event, the advice he did receive was flawed and did not take into account parliament’s decision to remove Grand Chief Sir Michael Somare as East Sepik MP on December 9, 2011.

He said that he did not take into account parliament’s amendments to the Prime Minister and the National Executive Council Act, which dismissed Sir Michael as PM.

He said that he now recognises parliament’s election of Mr O’Neill as prime minister.

The GG said that Mr O’Neill was correctly sworn in by the Acting Governor General Jeffrey Nape and called on all MPs and the people throughout the country to understand the untenable situation he had been placed in.

“It is now time for the MPs to join together on the floor of parliament and let normal democratic processes take their course,” he said.

He said that the most important thing that could happen now was for reconciliation to take place on the floor of parliament and for the business of the nation to resume.

Sir Michael also said that as per his suspension by parliament on December 14, 2011 and the subsequent lifting of the same yesterday, he accepted the process and proceedings undertaken to restore him as the GG of PNG.



20.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


O’Neill bid valid: Yalo

By TODAGIA KELOLA


PARLIAMENTARY supremacy must reign because the Supreme Court’s decision has now been overtaken by Parliament’s action.

That’s the view of former acting Judge, Nemo Yalo, when commenting on the current political impasse that is now going into its second week

Mr Yalo said on December 9, 2011 the Supreme Court by 3:2 majority judgment reinstated the Somare-Abal Government into office. 

Subsequently Parliament amended the Prime Minister and National Executive Council Act 2002 (the Act) to declare a vacancy in the office of the Prime Minister. Peter O’Neill was elected into office. 

“Under the circumstance, who should be obeyed, is it the Supreme Court or the Parliament? I offer my views here without the benefit of reading a copy of the judgment or the amended legislation. My attempts to obtain these documents have been fruitless.”

He said the amended PM and NEC 2002 Act allowed the Parliament’s action - election of O’Neill as the PM valid and in force.

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: Islands Business


Peter O'Neill recognised as PNG prime minister 


Papua New Guinea's political crisis appears to have ended, with the nation's civil service, armed forces and newly restored governor-general all lining up behind Prime Minister Peter O'Neill.  

 

PORT MORESBY, PNG (AAP) ----- Papua New Guinea's political crisis appears to have ended, with the nation's civil service, armed forces and newly restored governor-general all lining up behind Prime Minister Peter O'Neill. But Sir Michael Somare, the man who was last week ordered to be restored to government by the Supreme Court, remains defiant, saying O'Neill's overwhelming numbers in parliament do not matter. Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio sent a letter to parliament on Monday apologising for signing in the ministry of Sir Michael Somare on Wednesday morning, citing bad legal advice that led him to the decision. “Any decision to swear in the Somare government in law is wrong and invalid,” the letter said. “The advice I received was wrong. “I recognise the election of Peter O'Neill as prime minister.” Shortly after the letter was read, Sir Michael Ogio was reinstated and Speaker Jeffery Nape gave up the role of acting governor-general he took on last week to swear in the O'Neill government as Somare told the country from government offices he was in charge. That is something the 75-year-old former prime minister is insisting could still be true. “Numbers in Parliament is irrelevant,” he told Radio Australia on Monday. “When we have a constitution that's supreme, constitution has spoken and we are waiting for the decision. “We want a decision to be taken by the Supreme Court.” O'Neill, who has promised his people free education and greater participation of women in parliament, was equally firm, telling reporters that PNG had made history. “Parliament is the place where we make governments and where we change governments,” he said. “We must pay tribute to all Papua New Guineans. They have shown restraint and maturity beyond the years that we have been independent. “Now that the crisis is over, I urge all parties to work together so that we can prepare for the fair and free elections in 2012.” The 3-2 Supreme Court decision on Monday of last week to reinstate Sir Michael became invalid the same day, when parliament voted on retroactive laws to end his career. Sir Michael was PNG's first prime minister and its longest serving leader after nine straight years in the top job between 2002 and March 2011. The sense that the crisis is over has existed since Sunday, when O'Neill announced police had seized government offices and locked out the 20 or so MPs who support Somare. By Monday morning the public service and the armed forces were behind O'Neill. In his first public comments about Sir Michael's attempts to get the military to intervene in the political standoff, Brigadier General Francis Agwi said on Monday that the conditions did not exist to justify military action. At 3am on Friday morning, Sir Michael and his cabinet had ordered the PNG defence force into action, but the request was denied by General Agwi, a Somare appointee. The defence force chief said the army had a contingency plan in place, but the situation in Moresby was not one of “lawlessness”. 

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - 24H dans le Pacifique


PNG : de la lumière au bout du tunnel


Indice révélateur, c’est avec une caisse de champagne que Peter O’Neill, l’un des deux Premiers ministres, et ses partisans se sont rendus à la Maison du Gouvernement pour rencontrer le chef de l’État, le Gouverneur général, Sir Michael Ogio.

Rappelons les faits. La semaine dernière, la Cour suprême a décidé de réinstaller Sir Michael Somare dans ses fonctions de Premier ministre. Elle a jugé inconstitutionnelle l’élection de Peter O’Neill, élu Premier ministre par la majorité des députés en août dernier, alors que Sir Michael, Premier ministre d’alors, se faisait opérer du cœur à Singapour.

Peter O’Neill n’accepte pas la décision de la Cour Suprême mais Sir Michael constitue son propre gouvernement et le Gouverneur général assermente les 19 ministres nommés par Sir Michael.

Peter O’Neill a alors décidé de suspendre le Gouverneur général, Sir Michael Ogio, de ses fonctions pour ensuite le remplacer par le Président du Parlement, Geoffrey Nape.

Hier après-midi, M. O’Neill a indiqué que Sir Michael Ogio a été rétabli dans ses fonctions et que le Gouverneur général s’est excusé dans une lettre d’avoir assermenté les 19 ministres de Sir Michael Somare.

Peter O’Neill et le Gouverneur général se sont donc réconciliés. Peter O’Neill détient la majorité au Parlement et bénéficie du soutien de la rue, de la police et de la fonction publique.

Si la crise semble en fin de course, Sir Michael Somare n’a pas dit son dernier mot, veut ressaisir la justice mais semble de plus en plus isolé et s’énerve quand on lui pose des questions : « Les chiffres au Parlement ne veulent rien dire, c’est la Constitution qui prime. Avec 40 sièges nous ne pourrons rien faire. Mais prenez vos distances, rapportez les faits de notre pays. Pour l’amour de Dieu soyez conscient de ce que vous faites. »

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: The National


GG approval makes O’Neill legitimate PM 

By JEFFREY ELAPA


PETER O’Neill is the legitimate Prime Minister – after he was officially recognised by Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio yesterday.

Sir Michael revoked a decision he made last week to recognise Sir Michael Somare as prime minister following the Supreme Court ruling restoring him to that position.

He said the decision was based on bad advice from the state solicitor and the first legislative counsel.

Parliament in turn lifted it is decision to suspend Ogio as governor-general.

He had written to the speaker of parliament confirming that he recognised O’Neill as prime minister.

He added that the swearing-in of O’Neill’s cabinet by the Speaker Jeffrey Nape last week was legitimate.

On Dec 12, parliament passed the Prime Minister and the National Executive Council amendment Bill, which disqualified Somare as MP.

It meant he could not become prime minister.

On Dec 13, a day after the Supreme Court declared Somare as the legitimate prime minister, the governor-general declared Somare as the legitimate prime minister and swore him in.

However, parliament using its numerical strength moved a motion of confidence in O’Neill confirming him as prime minister.

The unchallenged parliament’s decision superseded the supreme court decision and recognised O’Neill as the PM.

Ogio said following advice, he had come to the conclusion that his decision to swear in the Somare faction was wrong.

He acknowledged that he had no reserve powers and that he could only act on advice of parliament through the speaker on the appointment of a prime minister.

“Parliament is supreme and it alone can act on advice from the parliament through the speaker on the appointment of a prime minister,” he said.

“It is now time for members of parliament to join together on the floor of parliament and let normal democratic processes take their course.”

He said the most important thing was for reconciliation to take place in parliament.

O’Neill said the nation had acted maturely and thanked everyone for keeping the peace through out the political wrangling since Dec 9.



20.12.2011

Source: The National


‘K23 million for community colleges missing’ 


THE K23 million allocated for the community college concept by the government of Sir Michael Somare is missing, Treasurer and Finance Minister Don Polye said.

Polye was responding to questions by the member for Markham Koni Iguan who wanted to know if the K23 million allocated to the initiative was safe and if colleges had been established.

Polye said he did not know where the money had been held or where it had been diverted.

Meanwhile, he also maintained that K70 million RESI funds parked in a trust account for more than two years would be distributed equally among the disadvantaged districts.

Moresby South MP Dame Carol Kidu had asked why the government had decided to use the K70 million as political funds and paid only to 69 MPs.



20.12.2011

Source: The National


Sir Michael blamed for NA’s downfall 


SIR Michael Somare must take the blame for the fall from grace of the National Alliance party and the political crisis, Enga province branch president Paul Kurai says.

Kurai, who fought hard to win four seats in his province in the 2007 general election, said Sir Michael listened to the wrong advice from political friends.

He said it resulted in the downfall of the National Alliance-led government and the split

of its members.

He said if Sir Michael had appointed the right people to run the government while he went to Singapore for medical treatment, such problems would not have happened.

He said if Sir Michael had given the deputy prime minister’s post to Don Polye when he went to Singapore the party would still be intact and they would still be in government.

He said Sir Michael made the wrong decision in giving the deputy prime minister’s post to Wabag MP Sam Abal with the intention of taking it back later and giving it to his son.

Kurai said that plan backfired on the “father of the nation”.

Kurai said the party, as an institution, took some time to build but greed and political in-fighting were causing it problems.

He said he had trust and confidence in Polye as a parliamentary leader to lead the party into the national election

next year.

He said the challenge was now with party executives throughout the country to work with Polye to win more seats and form the next government.

Kurai said he respected Sir Michael as a father of the nation and former party leader.

But he said Sir Michael was getting old and with his health problems and the political pressure, “he must resign from politics”.

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


PNG Governor General backs O'Neill government


Papua New Guinea's leadership crisis appears all but over after the Governor-General switched allegiances and recognized Peter O'Neill as Prime Minister.

Mr O'Neill now has the support of the head of state, the public service and most of the population.

His rival Sir Michael Somare maintains he's the legitimate leader but there seems to be little he can do except go back to court.


Presenter: Liam Fox 

Speakers: Peter O'Neill, PNG politician; Sir Michael Somare, PNG politician

 

  Listen here !  

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: Radio New Zealand International


PNG’s Somare vows to return to court


Papua New Guinea’s political crisis appears to have ended, with the nation’s civil service, armed forces and newly restored governor-general all lining up behind Prime Minister Peter O’Neill.

The Governor-General, Sir Michael Ogio, sent a letter to parliament yesterday apologising for signing in the ministry of Sir Michael Somare on Wednesday morning, citing bad legal advice that led him to the decision.

The letter said that any decision to swear in the Somare government in law is wrong and invalid.

Peter O’Neill welcomed the Governor General’s change of heart.

“I thank the Governor General for the humility that he has shown and the courage he has shown for the best interest of the country.”

But Sir Michael Somare, the man who was last week ordered to be restored to government by the Supreme Court, remains defiant, saying Mr O’Neill’s overwhelming numbers in parliament do not matter.

“I’ve been sworn as a prime minister, there is only one cabinet and one prime minister.”

Sir Michael Somare says he will go back to the courts.

The courts in Papua New Guinea are now closed for the holidays and are due to reopen again in February.

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: Radio New Zealand International


PNG’s GG suspension lifting weakens Somare bid


Peter O’Neill and his administration tightened their grip on control of government in Papua New Guinea after parliament lifted the suspension of the Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio.

Mr O’Neill and his majority parliament grouping lifted the suspension after the Governor-General admitted reinstating Sir Michael Somare as prime minister last Wednesday was based on flawed advice.

Johnny Blades reports.

“The reinstatement of the Governor General comes a week since the Supreme Court ruling that the August election of Peter O’Neill was illegal sparked a standoff over which group was government. With the Governor-General now following the head of the Public Service and Police Chief in recognising Peter O’Neill as Prime Minister, Sir Michael Somare appears to have lost most of his significant support bases. Sir Michael is refusing to back down from his claim to be Prime Minister and insists that the constitution he helped write as PNG gained independence in 1975 must rule supreme. However while Sir Michael has been barely seen in public since the impasse began, Peter O’Neill has been confidently asserting control of public institutions. He described the Governor-general’s confirmation of his Prime Ministership as the perfect Christmas present for the nation.”

 

 

20.12.2011

Source: PNG Attitude

PNG’s trial of twos ended in a very Melanesian way

BY KEITH JACKSON

 

Belden Namah, Deputy PM; Peter O'Neill PM and the Governor-General Michael Ogio share a toast at Government House.WHEN, ON FRIDAY MORNING Michael Somare and his cabal attempted - in what seemed a foolish and desperate act - to engage the Army in his dispute with the O’Neill government, and failed, the game was as good as over.

 

Similarly it was over when the Police made it clear they remained loyal to their Commissioner and to Peter O’Neill.

Likewise it was over when the people did not rise in the streets and villages and settlements.

And when the public servants yawned and said ‘let’s go on holidays’.

And it was certainly well and truly over yesterday when the Governor-General backflipped and decided that, after all, he was an O’Neill man.

At no time during this dispute, which should have been resolved in and by parliament, did Sir Michael appear in the people’s house.  The Grand Chief squibbed it.

His leaving of politics does great shame to his soubriquet of “Father of the Nation”.  This was no way for an elder statesman to behave.

Even as late as yesterday, Sir Michael was clinging to the idea that, somehow, his cause was not lost.  But it was truly lost, and never to be found.

This unusual constitutional and political crisis has now resolved itself (although, one may suppose, there will be repercussions to come) in a distinctly Melanesian way.

There was little full frontal confrontation (Peter O’Neill's unsuccessful attempt to reach the Governor-General being an exception, as he and fellow ministers jostled their way through police ranks).  Instead there was a soft overlay of Melanesian mellowness (and even indifference) placed over the contest of wills, which, in such circumstances, would usually favour the status quo.

The Somare forces' increasingly agitated attempts to light the blue touch paper of public and institutional revolt against the O’Neill government proved hapless – abjectly so as, at best, only a couple of dozen police joined Sir Michael and, temporarily, a Governor-General who expressed confusion before making a bad call.

So the crisis, the trial of twos, has ended peacefully, and we must all thank our personal gods for that.

If this was an example of the Melanesian way, and I think it may have been, I like it. 

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: ESBC Research


Lucky hit on Google:

 

Self appointed "Grand Chief" Sir Michael Somare

stars as Messiah! 

 

 

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - 24H dans le Pacifique

 

PNG: ni O’Neill ni Somare n’acceptent de baisser les armes

L'un des deux hommes qui revendiquent le poste de Premier ministre en Papouasie Nouvelle-Guinée, Peter O'Neill, interviewé sur l'ABC, la chaîne de télé publique australienne, vendredi soir. (ABC)

 

L'un des deux hommes qui revendiquent le poste de Premier ministre en Papouasie Nouvelle-Guinée, Peter O'Neill, interviewé sur l'ABC, la chaîne de télé publique australienne, vendredi soir. (ABC)

L’épopée rocambolesque des deux Premiers ministres se poursuit en Papouasie Nouvelle-Guinée. Lundi matin Peter O’Neill siégeait au Parlement avec ses partisans. Le message est clair: «nous conduisons les affaires de la nation».

 

Au programme: le vote du budget et de la loi créant 22 sièges réservés pour les femmes au Parlement.

Autre symbole important: l’occupation de Morauta Haus, la résidence du Premier ministre.

Peter O’Neill, en conférence de presse vendredi:
«Mon gouvernement a déjà pris le contrôle de toutes les institutions d’Etat. Morauta Haus est désormais bouclée, seuls moi-même, le Premier ministre, le Ministre de la Fonction publique, qui a un bureau dans le bâtiment, et les employés auront accès à Morauta Haus. Aucune autre personne ne pourra rentrer dans la résidence du Premier ministre.»
Mais vendredi dernier, son occupation symbolique de Morauta Haus, résidence du Premier ministre, a fait long feu. Quelques minutes plus tard, son rival Michael Somare tenait une conférence de presse dans le même bâtiment.
Depuis lundi, Michael Somare a fait peu d’apparitions publiques au regard de l’occupation systématique du terrain politique par Peter O’Neill, qui a multiplié les conférences de presse, et siégé en permanence au Parlement.

Reste que même dans le camp O’Neill, tout le monde n’a pas fait son choix. Le service de presse du Premier ministre refuse de prendre parti et promet de diffuser les communiqués de Michael Somare, comme ceux de Peter O’Neill.
Vendredi dernier, le clan Somare a tenté de mobiliser l’armée dans les rues de Port-Moresby. Une tentative qui a outré Peter O’Neill:
«L’appel à la mobilisation de l’armée était inutile. Il n’y a pas d’émeutes dans les rues. Ce n’est qu’une manoeuvre d’intimidation pour prendre le pouvoir armes au poing.»
Pour l’heure donc, aucun vainqueur dans ce duel de Premiers ministres, mais Peter O’Neill a déjà clairement gagné une bataille: celle de la communication.

C.L.

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: World News Australia


Almost game over for PNG's Somare

 

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: Papua New Guinea Blogs


O'NEILL IS PRIME MINISTER !

 

 

Namah and O'Neill sworn in as Legitimate Government  

 

Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio has recognised Peter O'Neill as the legitimate Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea.

In a surprising twist of events today, Sir Michael wrote a letter to O'Neill, which was read to Parlaiment today, saying how apologetic he was.  He said both sides must reconcile as soon as possible for the good of the country.

Following that, the O'Neill Cabinet quickly lifted its suspension of Sir Michael as Governor-General.  

O'Neill and his Cabinet are now at Government House meeting with Sir Michael.

 

Reconciliation amongst Sir Michael Ogio, Peter O'Neill and supporters

 

Chief Secretary Manasupe Zurenuoc says he recognises Peter O'Neill as the legitimate prime minister of Papua New Guinea and not Sir Michael Somare.  Zurenuoc, who has met both O'Neill and Sir Michael, said while the Supreme Court has restored Sir Michael as prime minister, he did not have the numbers to rule.

"We accept the fact that the Supreme Court has restored Sir Michael Somare as Prime Minister," he said.

"However, in our system of government, the majority rules.  "Despite the court restoring Sir Michael, he is not in control of the government." Zurenuoc today had an urgent meeting with all his department secretaries regarding the current political impasse in PNG.  "I told them to get on with the job of running government," he said. 


 

19.12.2011

Source: Papua New Guinea Blogs

 

Reinstated: Ogio is Governor General again!


Ogio has been reinstated as GG by the O’Neill led Government. He is now swearing in the O’Neil-Namah Cabinet. It’s all wine pouring and smiles at Government House. 

Earlier, Yumi FM reports that Michael Ogio has written a letter to Parliament apologizing for swearing in the Somare faction. Parliament has responded by lifting his suspension

In other developments the Armed Robbery Response Unit (ARRU) set up by Fred Yakasa had surrendered arms and submitted to Toeam Kulunga on Firday. This was the police unit which responded and carried our orders from Fred Yakasa. 

These policemen stood guard on all State properties in the city of Port Moresby including the Government House where there was a stand-off between politicians and the police. When ARRU surrendered to Kulunga, Fred Yakasa saw it coming that he will be arrested soon and charged with the offence of Mutiny and for issuing illegal orders. 

 Hence, he had no way to go to so went to the National Court and obtained Court Orders "restraining police from arresting him for leading a group of armed policemen to block the road to Government House.." 


The case will be coming back to the National Court on Friday, 23rd December, 2011 for arguments on whether the interim orders obtained by Yakasa can be confirmed as substantive and further extended.

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: Radio New Zealand International


Suspension of PNG Governor-General lifted, O’Neill recognised as PM


The suspension of Papua New Guinea’s Governor General Sir Michael Ogio has been lifted as the group backing Peter O’Neill as Prime Minister consolidated its claim to be government.

The O’Neill grouping, which makes up the majority of the country’s MPs, lifted the suspension today in parliament.

The Governor General was suspended last week after refusing to swear in Peter O’Neill again following the Supreme Court ruling that had reinstated Sir Michael Somare as Prime Minister and sparked an unprecedented political standoff.

However during today’s sitting of parliament, the Speaker, Jeffrey Nape, said Sir Michael Ogio wrote a letter stating his swearing in of Somare’s ministers last week was wrong.

The O’Neill camp decamped to Government House this afternoon after parliament had met in what a spokesman called a "courtesy call".

The Governor-General has now followed the head of the Public Service and Police Chief in recognising Peter O’Neill as Prime Minister.

Meanwhile, Sir Michael Somare’s group has indicated he has no intention of backing down from his claim to the Prime Ministership.

 

 

 

A spokesperson for the Somare faction, Betha Somare (picture), says any forced or negotiated resignation by Sir Michael would mean condoning the violations of the constitution as ruled by the Supreme Court.

“He’s the person who is the father of our constitution, he’s the person who is the father of our nation. If he gives in to people who have made on illegal action after another since the second of August, where are we going to be with our constitution?”

Meanwhile, Betha Somare describes the resignation of Sam Abal as Sir Michael Somare’s deputy as an honourable move to leave space open for the opposing side to work with the Somare administration.

 

Betha Somare

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Somare loses ground as support grows for O'Neill


Another day has passed with two men claiming to be the Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea.

There's no end to the constitutional crisis sparked last Monday with the Supreme Court found the government of Peter O'Neill was not legitimate and ordered the re-instatement of Sir Michael Somare.

Today there was another strong indication of the way the power struggle is going.

The nation's top bureaucrat has told department heads to deal with O'Neill ministers only because as he explained majority rules in PNG and Mr O'Neill has control of Parliament.


Presenter:Bruce Hill

Speaker:Firmin Nanol, Radio Australia PNG reporter 

 

  Listen here !  

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Somare says constitution guarantees he'll win struggle


One of the claimants to the prime ministership in PNG, Sir Michael Somare says the constitution will decide his leadership struggle with Peter O'Neill.

The political impasse in PNG continues, with Sir Michael and Mr O'Neill still claiming the prime ministership

Last week the Supreme Court reinstated Sir Michael as prime minister, four months after Peter O'Neill was voted in by MPs to replace an absent Sir Michael.

But the governor general has since said he may have received improper advice on the reinstatement.

Observers say Mr O'Neill has the support of a large number of the public, as well as the parliament.

But Sir Michael says that's irrelevant.


Presenter:Bruce Hill

Speaker:Sir Michael Somare, PNG prime minister 

 

  Listen here !  

 

 

HILL: Well joining us live now on Pacific Beat from Port Moresby is grand chief Sir Michael Somare. Sir Michael we heard earlier in the program the Chief Secretary to government says the public service is going to recognise Peter O'Neill as the Prime Minister, the police apparently now don't support you, the army wouldn't come out when you asked them, is this whole thing slipping away from you, are you losing this fight to retain the prime ministership?

 

SOMARE: I personally don't think so, they have just ensured another court to be able to interpret that they're the legal government. Now the Supreme Court has taken that decision and installed my government back in the office. Now they are doing everything under the sun and they even went to parliament to get the NEC act, so that the NEC act can be nullified by court. But we know for a fact that the court won't be able to do that, the Supreme Court has taken its decision, five-man Supreme Court and we are just trying to get our politics sorted out here. And our politics means that we have to talk to the party leaders, coalition leaders, and we're trying to make an attempt. We even made an attempt to talk to Peter O'Neill, but so far we haven't gotten any response. We just heard a while ago that they have tried to go back to the National Court, I think they went to the court this morning, and we will find out from the courts when they take a decision, we'll then find out. But my understanding is that once the Supreme Court everything is under contempt at the moment, once the Supreme Court has taken the decision they'll have to wait. Any judge who sits on the National Court will have to know that the question of in the Supreme Court, and I personally don't think that the Supreme Court will be able to take a decision on, because they have to sort out our problem first.

 

HILL: Well Sir Michael while we've actually been on air in the last couple of minutes, we've just heard that Peter O'Neill is taking his cabinet to Government House, we presume to be officially sworn in. So you're talking about court cases but it seems that the government seems to be moving further and further away from you and more towards Peter O'Neill?

 

SOMARE: Under our laws we have a constitutional government here, and executive arm of the government, the parliament, Supreme Court, all of them are under the constitution. What we have done is we've merely followed the constitution, and the constitution is quite clear and Mr O'Neill and the rest of them are quite clear on the constitution of this country, we are merely taking the matter that far. We know the constitution is supreme, parliament can make legislation but the Supreme Court when it interpreted my installation they made a decision that everything they have done was illegal. Second of August when O'Neill was sworn in the proper process of parliamentary standing orders ...

 

HILL: But Sir Michael your own Attorney General Sir Arnold Amet has acknowledged that you don't have the numbers in parliament to be prime minister, even though legally, now you're clinging obviously to the Supreme Court and saying the rule of law. Peter O'Neill is saying parliamentary supremacy. But even if you were recognised as the Prime Minister you would immediately be rolled in a vote of no confidence that Peter O'Neill would win, so the question is even if you won this legally, you'd only be prime minister for about half a day before parliament voted you out, so why are you doing this?

 

SOMARE: Well I think let's get it straight, if parliament goes and gets a no confidence vote you know that we've already passed 15 months, we've only got six months before a general election. Automatically parliament will dissolve itself. I think that's the fear in the mind, they don't know that, but this is what is going to happen. And we go it'll mean my government will still be in government when we go to parliament. They're trying to play around with it, to go to elections, still trying to play around with the budget, time for budget two weeks ago, we should have passed the budget. And this alone, our people are not stupid, I think our people know and there a lot of people sophisticated enough to understand this. And I think our guys in parliament are just doing what they are doing, we are going to allow it, I am sitting back and allowing the court to take its decision.

 

HILL: But Sir Michael you don't have the numbers in parliament, parliament reflects...

 

SOMARE: I doesn't matter my friend, numbers in parliament is irrelevant when we have a constitution which is supreme, the constitution has spoken and we are waiting for that decision. We want the decision to be taken by the Supreme Court, which is already in our favour. But we have to wait and see because so many cases have been put up front. O'Neill and his people every second day they go to Government House, want to remove the Governor General, they have not succeeded, and this morning they went again to do the same. And now they're taking the next lot to do exactly the same. They tried to go to Buckingham Palace to get Her Majesty to intervene, but Her Majesty is well aware we have a constitutional monarchy, we have a parliament which is recognised. But our constitution speaks supreme.

 

HILL: But Sir Michael if you don't command the support of the elected members of parliament, how can you hope to remain prime minister, regardless of what the Supreme Court says?

 

SOMARE: My friend you've got it all. This is the problem you see, most of us are now aware of what's in our country. You are looking at it from the Australian context, majority in parliament. You can have a majority but you have the Supreme Court who took the decision and we are waiting for our opportunity to do that. They have gone again and tried to put the Speaker up again as the Governor General, they have been rejected. And as I said they keep trying and we're just waiting our time and we're talking to all the coalition leaders, everybody's keeping patient and we're waiting. We don't have the numbers, we've got only 14 members, 14 members will not be able to pass anything. But in our context, in Papua New Guinea context we realise I'm protecting the constitution of this country because I am also responsible for writing it, alright, and my job is to protect that constitution. And there is no legal pathway for them to access the prime minister's post.

 

HILL: Even if as you're suggesting ... 

 

SOMARE: Sorry just a moment, let me finish, 12 months has gone any prime minister who is trying to contest an election will become null and void and the present prime minister who is in the office will take us to the election. The period for elections has already lapsed. Writs are going to be issued in two or three months time and that will end the squabble that we have had. So what we are doing is we are merely following the laws of this country which governs our parliament, our public servants, our police, our military, everybody.

 

HILL: But Sir Michael you're talking about the legalities in the Supreme Court in the terms of the regalities(?) of power, not even worrying about the legalities. But the reality is your rival Peter O'Neill and his cabinet are at Government House even as we speak, we assume being sworn in. The police aren't listening to you, the army isn't listening to you, now the public service isn't listening to you. It seems like it's pretty much, your chances of getting back in are getting more remote by the minute?

 

SOMARE: Look I've said to you we cannot interfere, I cannot interfere, and you as a journalist cannot interfere and meddle with our politics here. And all we want to say to you is that keep your business as a journalist and report the facts that exist within our country. So God sake know what you people are doing and stop meddling. So much of your reports have muddled the minds of everybody in Australia. We're know we're quite comfortable, streets are not in chaos, everybody is going to the market, normal course of everything is in civility. Our people are civilised, people understand, it's just the politicians who are fighting, and we will overcome the problem.

 

HILL: How do you think that this will eventually be resolved, do you think that you will be reinstated as prime minister and if so, how long will you be prime minister for?

 

SOMARE: Well I am saying to you my friend I am following the law and that's it.

 

HILL: Do you have any idea of what you want to achieve?

 

SOMARE: I've been reinstated by the court my friend, and I'm sworn in as the prime minister, there is only one cabinet and one prime minister. This is where some of you in Australian journalism seem to forget, we have laws here in our country which quite clearly governs our being in the country, and I think your questions are very good questions, but I am saying to you I will stay as the prime minister and we are looking for the way in which we can solve that problem. I don't think you should be carried away what Mr O'Neill and the others are doing. We are merely following the law, they're trying to go and amend the law so that the law goes on their side, which is too late anyway, thank you.

 

HILL: Ok thank you very much indeed, that was Sir Michael Somare, live on Pacific Beat from Port Moresby.

 

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


PNG bureaucrats desert Somare in favour of O'Neill


Papua New Guinea's top bureaucrat says the public service recognises Peter O'Neill as the country's legitimate Prime Minister.

Chief Secretary Manusupe Zurenuoc says he met both Peter O'Neill and Sir Michael Somare before making his decision on who to follow. 

He says the majority rules in PNG and Mr O'Neill has the control of Cabinet and Parliament while Sir Michael does not.


Speaker:Manusupe Zurenuoc, PNG Chief Secretary 

 

  Listen here !  

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Prime Minister O'Neill and his Cabinet at PNG Government House


Another day has passed with two men claiming to be the Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea.

Late in the day Peter O'Neill and his cabinet went to Government House, reportedly to be sworn in, after the Governor General, Sir Michael Ogio, reportedly told parliament he's been given the wrong legal advice when he swore in Sir Michael Somare last week.


Presenter:Bruce Hill

Speaker:Firmin Nanol, Radio Australia PNG reporter 

 

  Listen here !

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - TV


PNG moves closer to political resolution


PNG's Sir Michael Somare speaks exclusively on his struggle for power.

Liam Fox, Campbell Cooney

 


PNG's governor-general has met Peter O'Neill and his supporters, prompting speculation the leadership crisis is closer to being resolved.

In Parliament, Mr O'Neill announced that last week's suspension of Governor-General, Sir Michael Ogio had been lifted. 

The speaker, Geoffrey Nape said Sir Michael Ogio had written a letter apologising for swearing at ministers loyal to the former prime minister, Sir Michael Somare last week. 

Mr O'Neill and his supporters travelled to Government House on Monday afternoon to meet with the head of state. 


A box of champagne was also taken inside: Namah, O'Neill and Ogio renconcile. 


Mr O'Neill said the meeting was a courtesy call to reconcile with the governor-general. 

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - TV


PNG public servants told to follow O'Neill

 

 

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: ESBC


Can Papua New Guineans trust a family like this ?

by Axel G. Sturm

 

Watch here the public statement of "Baby Grand Chief" Arthur Somare made on June 28th, 2011. It concerns his father's , former Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare's, future. Shortly after such a statement the PNG parliament was obliged to act! It accomplished its duty and elected Peter O'Neill as new Prime Minister.

 

Sir Michael's later change of opinion is a malicious game with the destiny and the hopes of a whole country. It is probably also the evidence of mental disorder. Sir Michael's behaviour is not acceptable at all for a leader of a nation in development with all its problems. PNG needs and deserves better statemen than those volatile individuals from the Somare Clan! Peter O'Neill was sworn in as Prime Minister almost 6 weeks later - time enough for the Somare family to cancel former decisions. It even seems to be that the Somare family tries to weaken PNG's young democracy to build up authoritarian regime. 

 

 

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


SOMARE HASN'T GIVE UP ON HIS OLD GAME 

 

PM O’Neill has invited PM Somare to come to Parliament and sort out the political situation. But the wily old fox, knows he does not have the numbers yet so does not respond to the young buck. Instead he waits and plays the game he has played so successfully for 40 years. He knows the venal nature of our politicians, he knows how to manipulate them, he knows they are self-serving and not true nation builders . They may act smart but they are putty in his hands . The Engan Governor, probably feeling he has been too much on the outer of the O’Neill camp, or maybe he has something he knows will be hidden on the other side, is the first to jump ship. Score one to the wily old fox . And so it starts? But, haven’t we had enough of this nonsense? Don’t the people really deserve better?

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Chief hands over firearm


 

Community Auxiliary Police (CAP) NCO Leo Basi (right) handing over a rifle and ammunition, which were handed over by a chief in the Kunua Constituency last month, to acting police station commander Sergeant Emmart Tsimes at Buka Police Station. Sergeant Tsimes commended the chief for being responsible and also thanked Mr Basi for ensuring the firearm and ammunition were secured and brought to the Police Station for safe keeping. Sergeant Tsimes said that Bougainvilleans should be more responsible especially with this coming festive period to ensure that we all enjoy a peaceful and trouble-free Christmas and New Year not only from firearms but from unacceptable activities that would endanger and cause fear to all that want to enjoy this Christmas and New Year period.



19.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Eluh calls for restraint

By ALEX MUNME


BOUGAINVILLE police chief, ACP Thomas Eluh has called on all Bougainvilleans to refrain from taking risks during this festive season but celebrate Christmas and New Year with common sense.

He urged Bougainvilleans to celebrate the festive season in its true meaning by attending church services and to reflect on the birth of Jesus Christ.

He said the festive season must also be spent to reflect on the past and to learn from our mistakes so that we can improve in the next year.

He further said Bougainville is a special case and we have come through difficult times trying to restore peace.

The police chief said every Bougainvillean, man, woman and child must take every responsibility to take the Christmas message in order to enjoy and find peace in this festive season. He said people in this region should strive for a peaceful Christmas and New Year celebrations and also confirm that there will be a liquor ban during the peak holiday period. Police operations will monitor the liquor ban throughout the region in the south, central and north. 

There will be traffic road blocks to control the sales of liquor during the period as liquor is the cause of most crimes and deaths.

Meanwhile, Mr Eluh has warned all Bougainville police to remain committed to their duty and not take sides in what he called the “Port Moresby Tug of War.”

He cautioned police and also all law abiding citizens to observe and learn from the political crisis but refrain from participating. He said Bougainville Police must be intact and not to take sides in this time of Political instability at the national level. Anyone seen, heard or participate in the current situation will be severely dealt with.



19.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


PNGDF is neutral


The PNG Defence Force remains neutral but it is monitoring the political squabble for power between Sir Michael Somare and Peter O’Neill which has run into its second week.

High ranking Defence Force officers informed Post-Courier that the PNGDF did not support either Mr O’Neill or Sir Michael but the army was concerned about what is happening and is monitoring the situation closely.

Concerned officers of the army informed Post-Courier that the army callout instruction was issued by one of the two groups but the army remained firm that a callout was only warranted when the political situation deteriorated, leading to violence.

“The army belongs to the people of Papua New Guinea. Why should it be used by politicians to serve their own ends,” a senior officer said, adding that the command in the PNGDF was monitoring the situation.

While Murray Baracks was pondering what it should do, the decision by the Somare cabinet to allocate K30 million to fund a call-out of PNG Defence Force soldiers, and fund police operations and the deployment of CIS officers was revoked yesterday.

Parliament–elected Prime Minister Peter O’Neill said all the decisions made in the last few days by the deposed minority regime of Grand Chief Sir Michael Somare were illegal decisions and were revoked.

Mr O’Neill said from the K30m allocated by the Somare faction to fund the security operations, PNGDF callout was allocated K10m, police K10 million, CIS K5 million and payment for lawyers K5m.

“We have revoked the illegal decision by the deposed Somare government. 

“Sir Michael Somare and his deposed government had no authority to hold illegal cabinet meetings and make illegal cabinet decisions.

“The decision instructing all heads of departments, State Enterprises, Provincial Administrators and all public servants to respond to their directions is illegal,” Mr O’Neill said.

“We have revoked the illegal and desperate decision by the fallen regime to call out the PNGDF to help police address law and order problems in Port Moresby and to provide security and protection of key government institutions and residents of VIPs for a period of three months starting from December 15.

“This is an illegal decision by a deposed government that no longer has legal standing after December 12,” Mr O’Neill said.

Mr O’Neill said similarly, his Government revoked the illegal direction of the deposed Somare-Government giving drafting instructions to the First Legislative Counsel to legitimise their illegal decisions.

He said the deposed Somare-Government had been trying to legitimise their existence by alluding to the Supreme Court ruling on matters and events specifically referred to as having occurred between August 2 and September 6, 2011. “Parliament has moved on beyond September 6 and has made retrospective legislative decisions that only Parliament can make to correct itself, legitimise its actions and certify its decisions,’’ he said. As such, he said he was the legitimate PM.



19.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Locks to Morauta Haus changed

By GORETH KENNETH


PARLIAMENT-elect Prime Minister Peter O’Neill and his Ministers changed all the locks to the 4th and 5th Floor of Morauta Haus — the building and the floors that accommodate the National Executive Council.

Mr O’Neill confirmed his men did lock up the building but could not elaborate on the latter. He also advised they had done that, saying that they had taken control of all the Government buildings because his was the “legitimate” Government and Somare had the rogue one.

The Post-Courier spoke to the building management officials at the Morauta Haus who said that locks were changed over the weekend and the idea of changing the locks was to stop Somare and his Cabinet from operating there. The Post-Courier was also told that changes to the NEC Secretariat was done over the weekend but could not disclose details until the Gazettal was done. 

Last night Enga Governor Peter Ipatas decried the manner in which the NEC was being treated and said this was uncalled for.

He said that this had never happened in the history of PNG and NEC and appealed for the O’Neill-Namah regime to uphold the laws of this country, especially the Constitution that many MPs had run to for cover during their election disputes.

“This is the first time this has happened to NEC. We have to respect that office – the office that leaders of this country make decisions in. They can’t be a law unto themselves. We are legislative, but we can’t interpret the law,” Mr Ipatas said.

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


O’Neill declares end of political crisis

By Eoin Blackwell, AAP Papua New Guinea Correspondent


PORT MORESBY: One of the men with a claim on Papua New Guinea’s prime ministership, Peter O’Neill, has declared the week-long political crisis over.

At a press conference on Sunday at Morauta House, the home of government offices in Port Moresby, Mr O’Neill said rival Sir Michael Somare and his more than 20 supporters will be locked out of government buildings.

However, Mr O’Neill has invited the Somare camp, minus Sir Michael, back to parliament to debate legislation to enable more women to run for parliament at the next election as well as to debate the O’Neill government budget.

“(Sir Michael) has a constitutional right to express himself, so there is no expectation for him to yield, but we will maintain the business of running the country,” he told reporters.

“The government is now in control.

“There is a clear direction now that this building will be in lockdown and only accessible to the prime minister, myself, and the public servants and ministers who have offices.”

Sir Michael and his government were returned to power by a 3-2 ruling of the Supreme Court on Monday, just over four months after the majority of parliament voted to dump the nine-year-old government of Australia’s closest neighbour.

On Friday, first O’Neill and then Sir Michael declared from the same government offices that they were in control of government.

Sir Michael immediately declared Fred Yakasa to be commissioner of police, creating a power play between O’Neill’s police chief Tom Kulunga that saw armed guards loyal to Somare guarding Government House on Monday night and Tuesday.

There were tense scenes at the residence, in which Mr O’Neill and his supporters burst through the police barricade and demanded to see Sir Michael Ogio.

On Friday police commissioner Tom Kulunga declared he was in control of the police force. 

He welcomed back into the fold (but also temporarily disarmed) 20 Armed Robbery Unit officers who had been taking orders from Mr Yakasa.



19.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Grand Chief maintains he is PM

By GORETHY KENNETH


GRAND Chief Sir Michael Somare has maintained that he is leading the legitimate Government which was reinstated by the Special Supreme Court Reference two weeks ago.

He maintains that the Constitution is supreme and all three arms of government, Parliament, the Judiciary and the executive Government must operate within the confines of the law.

Sir Michael, in detailing the reasons why his government was the legitimate has given a rundown, based on the Supreme Court Ruling on December 12, 2011 where a five-men bench led by Chief Justice Sir Salamo Injia, deputy CJ Gibbs Salika, Justices Nicholas Kirriwom, Bernard Sakora and Les Gavara-Nanu presented their judgments – 3-2 in favour of the East Sepik Provincial Government specifically Sir Michael.

A motion was moved on August 02, because of a matter surrounding the health of Grand Chief Sir Michael Somare and Peter O’Neill became the Prime Minister after they voted Sir Michael out based on his medical conditions in Singapore. The East Sepik Provincial Government took the matter to court basically on the validity of O’Neill’s appointment as PM and whether there was a vacancy in office. 

“Chief Justice Sir Salamo Injia in concluding as the chairman of the bench on December stated that “pursuant to section 19 of the constitution, an opinion given by this court on the interpretation and application of a provision of constitutional law is binding. It is in the inherent power of this court to give orders in the nature of declaratory orders or injunctions to give effect to its opinion. This power has been exercised in many instances and other constitutional cases coming under its original jurisdiction I consider this case to be an appropriate case in which that power can be exercised.

“The court orders that: 

1.Sir Michael Somare was not lawfully removed from Office as Prime Minister by Parliament on August 2 2011

2.Peter O’Neill was not lawfully appointed as Prime Minister by Parliament on August 2 2011

3.The National Court has exclusive jurisdiction as to whether the seat of a member has become vacant

4.The Speakers decision of September 6 2011 to declare that Sir Michael had lost his seat was in breach of Constitution ss 104(2)(d) s 135 and ss28 and 29 of the Organic Law on National and Local Level Government Elections.

5.Sir Michael is not a person of unsound mind within the meaning of s 103(3)(b)of the constitution and the Public Health Act

6.Sir Michael Somare is restored to office as Prime Minister forthwith.“Now that the Supreme Court has ruled that the O’Neill-Namah regime was illegal, we all as elected representatives should uphold the Constitution,” Sir Michael said.“Sadly the O’Neill-Namah regime used Parliament to grandstand and confuse the people of PNG,” Sir Michael said. 

“My Government has waited patiently since 2 August for an interpretation to be made by the Supreme Court on the legitimacy of the O’Neill-Namah regime. 

“My government cannot just stand by and allow for these continuous illegal actions to be condoned,” Sir Michael said. We all have a duty and that is to uphold our Constitution. Parliament is not Supreme, the Constitution is Supreme.”



19.12.2011

Source: Post-Courier


Abal ready to step down for the sake of people


MEMBER for Wabag Sam Abal has called for dialogue and is prepared to let go the Deputy Prime Minister’s position he is holding in the Somare regime.

In an interview with the Post-Courier at his Konedobu residence yesterday, Mr Abal said his decision is for the sake of the people and the country as it would be careless for national leaders of this beautiful country, if they do not consider certain sacrifices on either side.

“The time has come for us leaders to humble ourselves and put God and Papua New Guinea first because there is a danger of unrest unless all political leaders immediately come to a dialogue and break-free this political impasse now facing the country. 

“The country cannot have two Governor Generals, two Police Commissioners, two ministers and two departmental heads. This immediately creates factions so I thought time has come before anything escalates,” Mr Abal said.

Mr Abal said, “I am prepared to let got the deputy position and for a Ministry, and allow for Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare to be free to consider ways and means to engage with the other side”.

Asked if a grand coalition by the two regimes would be a possiblity, an ideal idea to put an end to this political deadlock, Mr Abal said, “Yes, that’s what I am saying. That’s the only way forward and I have discussed this with my people of Wabag and they have accepted to help the nation. I have spoken to Sir Michael of my decision.”

“I have also discussed with church leaders for them to assist in facilitating the dialogue prayerfully.

“I hope my fellow MPs can make a firm commitment of the same to ensure that the current staff off does not continue. With the future of PNG looking brighter than ever this is a dark mark in our nation’s short history,” he said.

Mr Abal said the current political situation in PNG has never happened before and requires us all to make certain considerations, including revolutionary ways to bring a peaceful solution - yes our elections may be shaky at times and our parliament sessions aggressive. 

“However justice, unity and democracy have always prevailed in this God fearing land. On our side we feel that the Constitution is supreme.

“I am sure the other side will agree and come together for us all to defend the Constitution I make the plea to Mr O’Neill and other leaders to graciously come forward and engage with Sir Michael,” Mr Abal said. 

 

 

 

19.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat



PNG still has two self-described prime ministers

 

Confusion still reigns in Papua New Guinea as the country's political stalemate enters its second week.

Both Peter O'Neill and Sir Michael Somare continue to claim they are the country's legitimate Prime Minister.

But Mr O'Neill appears to be gaining the upper hand and has declared the crisis over.


Presenter: Liam Fox 

Speakers: Peter O'Neill, PNG politician

 

  Listen here  !  

 

 

LIAM FOX: Neither side is backing down but Peter O'Neill is winning the public relations battle. He says his government is getting down to business.


PETER O'NEILL: The government has now taken full control of all the government institutions and government business. 


LIAM FOX: But he hasn't quite taken full control. Last Friday Mr O'Neill and his MPs staged a symbolic occupation of Morauta House, the building that's home to the prime minister's department.


He said it was evidence that the leadership uncertainty was over.


But the occupation only lasted a few minutes and an hour later his rival Sir Michael Somare held his own press conference in the same building.


Mr O'Neill says that won't be happening again.


PETER O'NEILL: There's a clear direction now. This building will be in lockdown, only accessible to the prime minister, myself and the public service minister who has got an office in this office and only the workers of this office. There will be no other public will be allowed to come into this office.


LIAM FOX: But even within his own office there's still confusion as to just who is the boss.


A message from the PM's media unit said they'd be sending out press releases from both sides because they're neutral until the situation is sorted out.


Mr O'Neill says his MPs will be back in parliament sitting in the government benches just as they were all last week. He wants to pass next year's budget and other laws such as the legislation to create 22 seats in parliament just for women.


Mr O'Neill also says his cabinet has revoked what he says are illegal decisions by his opponents.


Among them was the controversial and potentially inflammatory attempt by the Somare camp to order the PNG defence force onto the streets of Port Moresby.


PETER O'NEILL: That call-out was unnecessary. There is no social unrest in the country. It was designed to announce the political ambitions for grab of power by barrel of gun and intimidation. 


LIAM FOX: Sir Michael has largely kept out of the public eye since last Monday when the Supreme Court ordered the frail 75-year-old be reinstated as prime minister.


But Peter O'Neill has been a constant presence in parliament, has held numerous press conferences and looks like a prime minister.


He says the crisis is over and this was his response to an Australian journalist who asked if he could go home now.


PETER O'NEILL: I can assure you that Somare has got minority numbers on the floor of parliament and he has got no chance of ruling the country. So you can go home and have an early Christmas. 


LIAM FOX: While most of the people the ABC has spoken to over the last week want to see Mr O'Neill in the prime minister's office, few would agree the deadlock is over.




19.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia News


PNG rivals both claim power

 

 

Papua New Guinea's parliament was resuming on Monday, despite no clear resolution to the country's political crisis. 

 

Peter O'Neill says his government has taken control of the police and state offices.

But Sir Michael Somare maintains he is still the Prime Minister.

Mr O'Neill says the crisis is over and the role of primeministership is his.

Earlier he said: "This clear direction now - this building will be in lockdown, only accessible to the Prime Minister (myself) and the Public Services Minister, who's got an office in this office, and only the workers of this office. 

"No other members of the public will be allowed to come into this office."

Mr O'Neill seemed likely to rally 75 members of parliament for a sitting, but needs 83 for an absolute majority. 

ABC Radio Australia has increased its shortwave broadcasts to Papua New Guinea to help inform people about developments in the PNG political crisis.

Between 0930 and 1700 Port Moresby time, an extra frequency, 17750 kHz, will be added to the broadcast services for PNG.

 

 

 

 

18.12.2011

Source: Radio New Zealand International


PNG’s parliament resumes amid tension


Papua New Guinea’s parliament resumes today, amid the crisis which still sees 2 men claiming to be Prime Minister.

Peter O’Neill has declared that his government, backed by 75 MPs, has seized control of official offices as well as the police hierarchy.

His rival, Sir Michael Somare, maintains he is the Prime Minister, and has issued court documents seeking for his candidate to be named the police commissioner.

Mr O’Neill’s parliament today hopes to pass several key pieces of legislation, including next year’s budget, and the law to create 22 women-only seats before next year’s election.

However, that law can only be passed with 83 votes in the house, meaning Sir Michael’s camp will have to be in parliament to support it.

 

 

 

18.12.2011

Source: The Australian


Judge steps in to protect PNG police chief after claims his actions 'border on treason'

by: Rowan Callick in Port Moresby 

 

Police loyal to Michael Somare at Parliament House. 

 

A PAPUA New Guinea judge has handed down an order protecting a police chief appointed by Sir Michael Somare, amid a continuing stalemate over who is leading the country. 

The order comes after Peter O'Neill, who has refused to accept a ruling reinstating Sir Michael Somare prime minister in his place, declared on Friday that PNG police were “united and under my command”.

Mr O'Neill has a groundswell of support among MPs and both he and his rival Sir Michael have appointed rival officials during the standoff over Papua New Guinea's leadership.

In the latest twist in the saga, Justice Cathy Davani yesterday handed down a restraining order ruling that Fred Yakasa, the police chief appointed by Sir Michael, and the officers who have supported him, should not face harassment.

Mr O'Neill's appointee as police chief, Tom Kulunga, declared on Friday that police were behind him.

 ...The armed robbery response unit, which last week backed Mr Yakasa, handed over their vehicles and firearms to Mr Kulunga, who remains in charge at the PNG police headquarters.

Mr Yakasa has since gone to ground, and Mr O'Neill has said that any disciplinary measures or criminal charges are matters for Mr Kulunga and his force.

But he described Mr Yakasa's conduct as “bordering on treason.”

However, Mr Yakasa's lawyer David Dataona said yesterday that Mr Yakasa's “substantive relief” from intimidation from the present prevailing commanders of the police, would be “to have the court declare him the lawful commissioner”.

The restraining order protecting Mr Yakasa underlines the yawning gap between the courts - which have said Sir Michael and his cabinet are the true government - and the parliament, of which 75 of the 109 MPs now back Mr O'Neill.

Arnold Amet, the former chief justice who is the Attorney-General in the Somare cabinet, told The Australian yesterday that he has held two meetings with Allan Marat, his counterpart with Mr O'Neill's cabinet, in an attempt to find common ground.

He urged examining international mediation possibly through the Commonwealth, which has an arbitration service, and could consider the sides' rival claims to be PNG's true government.

He also said that if the parliamentary majority that supports Mr O'Neill could revoke its rescinding of Sir Michael's membership of parliament - on the grounds of his absence during his five months of medical treatment in Singapore this year - then the Somare supporters might return to parliament.

Then, if a motion of no confidence in Sir Michael as prime minister succeeded, the parliament would be dissolved and the country would move as swiftly as possible to its next national election, due anyway in mid-2012.

Sir Arnold said that “resourcing is a major issue, and so is passing a budget” for 2012 which the parliament has not yet done, but which is set to take place on Tuesday.

But he admitted that the dilemma would remain, if an early election were called, as to “who maintains the government until the election is over” and a new government is chosen.

Both sides remain determined to control the levers of government during the run-up to an election, perceived to provide a key advantage at the poll. And the O'Neill government is eager to order investigations into the conduct of the Somare government.

Mr O'Neill has promised to introduce an independent commission against corruption in the next, final session of this parliament.

He said that “the police have taken control of the situation in Port Moresby, the chief secretary has taken control of the public service your government has now taken control of all government premises.

“We are now managing the issues that have disrupted us over the last three or four days.”

So there was little room, Mr O'Neill told The Australian Online, for compromise solutions or grand coalitions, as PNG civil society groups have urged. “Governments can't be formed outside parliament,” he said.

He said that the finance secretary he had appointed, Steven Gibson, was now back in charge at the departmental headquarters, despite the attempt by Sir Michael to re-appoint Gabriel Yer, the secretary whom Mr O'Neill said he had sacked over corruption charges.

Mr O'Neill claims widespread support around the country beyond Port Moresby, with peaceful demonstrations backing his government held in Goroka, Lae and Mount Hagen.

He said that Michael Ogio had been properly sacked as governor-general by parliament, for “swearing in a government led by someone, Michael Somare, who is not even entitled to be prime minister because he is no longer a parliamentarian”.

He said that “Mr Ogio lied that he was involved in a process of mediation, then instead sneaked the Somare ministers into government house and swore them in.

“He is newly married, and I wish him an extended honeymoon.”

Despite the tough tone, Mr O'Neill said he is also aware of the opening of conversations between the two sides' attorneys-general.

However, Mr O'Neill insisted: “We now have the full support of the disciplined forces, and of the general population, and a strong mandate on the floor of parliament.”

But many members of the public remain worried by the events of the week.

A group of blue-uniformed women, the El Kadosh movement, climbed Independence Hill overlooking the parliament to pray - said leader Alurigo Ravusira - “for God to intervene to save our nation.”

 

 

 

18.12.2011

Source: Canberra Times


PNG's fate goes back to court

ILYA GRIDNEFF


PORT MORESBY: Papua New Guinea's political future now rests in the court that sparked a week of crisis. 

The rival camps of Peter O'Neill and Sir Michael Somare still claim their man as prime minister presiding over a legitimate government. 

Mr O'Neill has a groundswell of popular support and 74 MPs backing him and his government. 

But Sir Michael, 75, known as the ''father of the nation'', is relying on last Monday's 3-2 Supreme Court ruling reinstating him as prime minister on the grounds that Mr O'Neill's August 2 ascendancy was unconstitutional. 

This latest attempt to seize power involves Mr O'Neill using the ''slip rule'' option, which allows Supreme Court rulings to be revisited in ''exceptional cases''. 

''It was filed on Thursday and we will be in court on Monday to discuss potentially a seven-man bench rather than the previous five-man bench,'' an adviser to Mr O'Neill said. 

Mr O'Neill is also applying for a restraining order to prevent Sir Michael performing government duties. ''It's still a stalemate, PNG has double of everything, but hopefully the courts can read the public mood.'' 

Power has all but slipped from Sir Michael, who failed in a desperate early morning bid on Friday to recruit the Defence Force after his choice for police commissioner, Fred Yakasa, could not provide the muscle needed to break the deadlock with Mr O'Neill. 

 

 

 

17.12.2011

Source: Al Jazeera - English


Statement PNG Prime Minister Peter O'Neill

 

 

 

 

17.12.2011

Source: ESBC Research


The Verdict.


Download here the controversial verdict that caused the constitutinal crises as   

 

 

  1.3 MB  !

 

 

 

17.12.2011

Source: Sydney Morning Herald


'Coup' ends PNG political crisis

by Ilya Gridneff 

 

Peter O'Neill has taken control of Papua New Guinea in what rival Sir Michael Somare supporters described as a ''coup''.

 

Power has all but slipped from Sir Michael, who, it emerged yesterday, made a desperate late-night bid for help from the PNG defence force after his senior police figure, Fred Yakasa, could not provide the muscle needed to break the five-day deadlock with Mr O'Neill.


The struggle appears all but over with Mr O'Neill yesterday afternoon holding a triumphant news conference in Morauta House, the official building for the prime minister's office, after Sir Michael and his supporters were evicted.

 

 

Sir Michael supporter MP Philemon Embel, a minister in Somare's cabinet, shares a joke and laugh with Peter O'Neill's deputy prime minister Beldan Namah outside government offices today. Photo: Ilya Gridneff

 

 

Mr O'Neill and 74 other MPs - who claim to be PNG's government after they suspended Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio on Wednesday and elevated the Speaker to swear in Mr O'Neill - made the short drive from Parliament House to consolidate their legitimacy.


Mr O'Neill said he had control of the public service, the Parliament, the police, the defence force and now the official government office, which Sir Michael had been occupying since Monday. ''There is only one government and I am the Prime Minister of PNG,'' he said.


Yesterday afternoon Mr O'Neill's Police Commissioner, Thomas Kalunga, said police loyal to Sir Michael had come back under his command.


''The last thing we want is violence,'' he said.


Mr Kalunga told reporters he had met Fred Yakasa, Sir Michael's appointed police commissioner, and said both wanted to stay out of politics.


On Thursday, Mr O'Neill had ordered Mr Kalunga to ''take control of government assets'', meaning the various key venues Sir Michael's supporters were using while maintaining that they were the legitimate government.


Sir Michael, who until a news conference last night had not been seen in public since Wednesday, still maintains he is the legitimate leader. His supporters were jeered and heckled by Mr O'Neill's government members but despite the talk of a coup and the heavy police presence, it quickly became a very Pacific affair as both sides eventually exchanged hugs, laughs and handshakes.


But an angry James Marape, Sir Michael's education minister, one of the first Sir Michael supporters to leave Morauta House, told the local and international media huddled outside the offices:


''Today there has been a hijack by the legislature.


''It is a coup, a political coup. On December 12 the Supreme Court said Sir Michael should be prime minister.''


When asked if Sir Michael was still in PNG, Mr Marape said: ''I don't know.''


PNG's only female MP, Dame Carol Kidu, said she was ''worried by this dangerous precedent''.


More worrying was Sir Michael's desperate late-night attempt to bring in PNG's army upon learning he no longer had police support.


Mr Marape said the Somare camp did make a request but would not elaborate on the details.


PNG and Australian government sources told The Saturday Age that Sir Michael wanted the army to be placed on a call order that meant it could be deployed at his request.


But Sir Michael was rebuked by defence force chiefs, who have remained neutral the entire five days of political turmoil.


The impasse started on Monday, when the country's highest court ruled Sir Michael must be reinstated as prime minister despite Mr O'Neill taking the job in an internal coup in August.


The O'Neill faction maintains that Sir Michael forfeited his position in Parliament because of his long absence when recuperating from heart surgery in a Singapore hospital.

 

 

 

17.12.2011

Source: ABC Radio Australia - TV

 
Peter O'Neill's Statement

 
First in-depth interview of Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Peter O'Neill since the outbreak of the constitutional crises in December 2011.

 

 

 

 

17.12.2011
Source: THE CONVERSATION
 
http://theconversation.edu.au/explainer-political-crisis-in-papua-new-guinea-4796 

Explainer:

political crisis in Papua New Guinea

 
 

 
Michael Somare (right) and his deputy Sam Abal claim to be rightful leaders of PNG. AAP/Eoin Blackwell

Papua New Guinea has been gripped by political turmoil for almost a week now. Two men – Michale Somare and Peter O'Neil – are currently claiming to be the rightful prime minister of the nation. Both have set up their own cabinets, and both answer to a different governor-general and police commissioner.

It was reported this morning that O'Neil had managed to wrest power from Somare in the form of a coup, and that the crisis was essentially over. But reports from Port Moresby suggest the contrary – that Somare still claims legitimacy. It continues to be unclear how the stand-off can readily be resolved. So far violence has been avoided, but a continuing impasse could turn at any stage.

Constitutional lawyer and former Papua New Guinea resident Anthony Regan has been monitoring the political imbroglio as it has unfolded this week, corresponding with sources in Port Moresby. He explains below some key aspects of how such an unprecedented crisis came to pass for Australia’s closest neighbour.


How is it possible that the country now has parallel government structures – two prime ministers, cabinets, two governors-general, and police commissioners?

 

To understand how this situation has occurred, some background is required. Papua New Guinea national politics revolves round key personalities and patronage, with political parties of limited significance, and party ideologies and policies even less. Control of government is critical to dispensation of patronage. As a result, from independence in 1975, PNG saw high levels of instability in government, with members of Parliament often swapping sides. Constitutional limits on “party-hopping” were instituted in 2002, Michael Somare and his National Alliance Party (NA) being the main beneficiaries. Somare, in particular, was able to hold office as prime minister from 2002 until August 2011. Late in 2010, the PNG Supreme Court ruled key aspects of the limits unconstitutional. Always adroit, Somare clung to power, despite several moves to oust him.

In late March, an ailing 75 year old Somare went to Singapore for major heart surgery, leaving another MP, Sam Abal, as acting prime minister. Complications saw him remain there until September. His condition seemed grave, on 28th June his son Arthur (also an MP) announced a Somare family decision that his father had retired. It was, however, a decision about which the PM later said he had not been consulted. In any event, there was a high degree of uncertainty about how to deal with the situation. Moves were made to follow complex constitutionally mandated procedures to have Somare declared unable to be PM, on medical grounds, but the process was difficult.

On 2 August, leader of the opposition, Belden Namah, unexpectedly moved a motion in parliament to declare the PM’s office vacant. Despite the absence of a constitutional basis for such a step, the speaker allowed the motion. Some 48 members of the government voted in support of the opposition, including about half of Somare’s NA members. The then Minister for Finance and Treasury was elected PM. The move was attacked as unconstitutional by many observers, and challenged in a succession of court cases culminating in a Supreme Court decision handed down on 12 December.

The court’s decision declared unconstitutional both Somare’s removal as PM and Parliament’s decision to declare his seat empty, and ordered Somare’s restoration. On the same day, however, parliament passed an amendment to the Prime Minister and National Executive Council Act law retrospectively validating the acts of the Parliament in removing Somare as PM. There were 72 votes in favour.

Somare sought action from the governor-general to swear in his cabinet. After hesitation, the governor-general honoured the Supreme Court orders, and the swearing in occurred on 13 December. In response, parliament (O’Neil’s support there remaining solid) directed the governor-general to swear in O’Neil. When the governor-general failed to do so, the O’Neil Cabinet suspended him. Under the PNG constitution, suspension results in the speaker becoming acting governor-general. O’Neil was then sworn in again as PM by the acting governor-general.

Both Somare and O’Neil claim a constitutional basis for being PM, one under a Supreme Court order, the other under the December 12 Act of Parliament, a law which the Supreme Court has not yet considered. As each PM has appointed their own ministers, there are parallel cabinets. While Somare recognises the authority of the governor-general, O’Neil instead recognises the actinggovernor-general.

As for the two Police Commissioners, the O’Neil government had previously appointed Mr. Toami Kulunga to that office. When the constitutional crisis erupted on Monday 12 December, Mr. Fred Yakasa, a senior officer reported to be disgruntled with his being appointed police commander in Bougainville, emerged as head of a police unit apparently supporting Somare. On 13 December, Somare announced that Kulunga had been dismissed from office and replaced by Yakasa.

 

Who are the key players?

 

Peter O’Neil, 46, is leader of the People’s National Congress Party. His surname is that of his Australian father, while his mother is from Southern Highlands in PNG. An accountant, with a background in real estate and management, he represents a seat in the Southern Highlands Province, being first elected in 2002.

Grand Chief Sir Michael Somare, 75, entered the colonial legislature in 1968, with a background in teaching and radio journalism. Representing an East Sepik seat, he headed the first “indigenous” government pre-independence (1972-75) and was then prime minister from 1975-80, 1982-85, and 2002-11.

Sir Michael Ogio was MP for North Bougainville when appointed governor-general in January 2011 through a vote of the PNG parliament (the formal appointment being made by the Queen, as head of state, acting on and in accordance with the decision of the parliament).

Jeffery Nape was first elected speaker of the PNG Parliament in 2004. Far from being impartial, he had a record of highly partisan rulings that helped the Somare government retain power. In entertaining the motion to declare the PM’s seat vacant in August 2002, Nape caught the acting PM, Sam Abal, by surprise.

 

What are their claims to legitimacy?

 

Somare not only claims legitimacy under the Supreme Court decision ruling his removal from office as unconstitutional, and directing his restoration as PM, but also claims to be supporting and restoring the constitutional order disrupted by the unconstitutional acts that saw O’Neil become PM.

By contrast, O’Neil relies on two main arguments. The first concerns the December 12 amendment to the Prime Minister and National Executive Council Act, which was not considered by the Supreme Court in making its ruling of the same day. Under the PNG Constitution, legislation is valid unless ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. He argues that in the absence of such a ruling, the legislation should be followed, and he should hold office. His second argument involves a principle of ‘parliamentary supremacy’, to the effect that the PM should be the person supported by the majority of MPs.

In relation to O’Neil’s arguments, however, two significant points arise. First, with over 70 MPs currently supporting him, O’Neil can argue that Somare would face grave practical difficulties in governing. However, Somare could answer that argument by saying that once in office, PNG experience would suggest that his level of support may well rise. Second, there would be a strong possibility that a Supreme Court challenge would see the amending law ruled unconstitutional, for example on the basis that it indirectly amends the constitutional requirements for appointment and removal of the PM, without any constitutional basis for doing so.

 

How does the PNG Constitution allow such a situation to occur?

 

The PNG Constitution is one of the longest and most detailed in the world, in its detail seeking to avoid problems that sometimes arise in Westminster and other parliamentary systems. The situation here has not arisen because of inherent faults in the constitution. Rather, the problem lies in the intensity of competition for office in the PNG political and constitutional systems, and because the decision on resolving the competing claims for constitutional legitimacy between Somare and O’Neil was made by the wrong authority, one not empowered or equipped to make such a decision.

In effect, the governor-general was called upon to resolve the conflict. But as a ceremonial office, with none of the “reserve powers” of, say, the Australian Governor-General, he was ill-prepared for such a role. In a situation where O’Neil’s primary claim to constitutional legitimacy rests on the validity of the amending Act of 12th December, it should have been the Supreme Court that ruled on that issue. In doing so, the Court could also rule on his claims about the principle of parliamentary supremacy in relation to appointment of the PM. By making a decision to recognise Somare, without resolving the alternative claim to legitimacy, the impasse has intensified. Unfortunately, the intensity may become so great that not even a constitutional ruling of the kind suggested will be acceptable as a way of resolving it.

 

The stand-off has remained nonviolent, can this continue?

 

The impasse is causing serious tensions not only within and between government institutions, but also in PNG society. There have been previous grave crises in PNG that have caused similar difficulties. In general they have been resolved without significant violence. In particular, the security forces (police and army) have generally exercised restraint. Further, while there have sometimes been popular demonstrations, the limited violence arising from them has mostly involved opportunistic elements damaging and stealing from retail stores.

It is difficult to say whether or not the current tensions will escalate into violence. There have been shots fired by police outside the governor-general’s residence on Monday 12th, though no one was hurt. While there are tensions within the police force, they have so far been contained. The Papua New Guinea Defence Force (the army) has been in lockdown so far, with senior officers indicating that in a situation of doubt about the location of ultimate civilian authority, the army must avoid becoming involved. In relation to community action, so far there have been just a few small demonstrations in favour of O’Neil.

On the other hand, the longer the situation remains unresolved, the more risk there may be of heightened tensions, and dangers of pressures building for action, either by security force elements or groups in society.

 

What should Australia’s role be in this conflict?

 

Australia has limited scope to play any significant role beyond offering wise counsel to key actors on all sides to take moderate positions. Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd has good relations with both Somare and O’Neil. The Australian High Commission in Port Moresby is in good communication with both of them, as well as with many of their key advisers and supporters. Through such links, Australia can have considerable influence.

Beyond such action, it must be remembered that there are also resentments in PNG about Australia’s role as colonial authority, and as an aid donor often critical of trends there. If Australia were to apply too much pressure, or act in ways seen as interference in domestic affairs, its ability to influence through wise counsel could be lost.

 

How do you see this ending?

 

It is difficult to see how the situation can readily be resolved, because both sides seem to be increasingly taking a “winner-takes-all” stance. Possibilities for compromise seem few. However, there are moderates and cool heads on both sides. There are ongoing contacts between some opposing individuals. The same is true of opposing groups in the police. There are also many influential figures and groups in “civil society” (churches, NGOs and others) that are voices for moderation. It is in large part because of such factors that PNG’s political and constitutional systems have previously demonstrated great resilience.

If the impasse cannot be resolved quickly, there would be possibilities of beneficial outcomes from more intense diplomatic efforts, perhaps involving a group of countries from the region.

 

  

17.12.2011
Source: Radio New Zealand International


PNG’s O’Neill claims to have taken control of situation


The Papua New Guinea government led by Peter O’Neill has occupied Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare’s office, forcing him out of the building.

PNG has been in the grip of a political deadlock since Monday with both Mr O’Neill and Sir Michael claiming to be prime minister.

This was triggered by a Supreme Court decision to reinstate Sir Michael as the prime minister.

The unprecedented situation has prompted extra police to be flown into the capital Port Moresby to help ensure law and order.

Sir Michael has refused to step down and issued a statement, calling Mr O’Neill’s actions illegal in a country which now has two rival prime ministers and two governor-generals.

Sir Michael has not been seen in public since Wednesday and his grip on power may be slipping, with his ejection from Morauta House and 20 heavily armed police loyal to his leadership deserting him on Friday.

The capital is reported to be quiet, with residents and businesses carrying on as normal.

Mr O’Neill says he is pleased to announce that the police have taken control of the situation in Port Moresby.

Mr O’Neill, backed by 75 MPs, told reporters outside Morauta House that by occupying the building he ended any uncertainty over who was in control.

 

  

17.12.2011
Source: PNG Attitude       
BREAKING NEWS ! 


Events of this week strengthened the democracy
BY KEITH JACKSON


BARRING A MAJOR MIRACLE the Somare era has reached its end and the O'Neill era has been legitimised.

Peter O'Neill says he and his cabinet have taken control of Papua New Guinea because the disciplined forces of Police and Army remained loyal to the parliament and understood their roles in society.

In a week of irredeemably bad news, this is the good news.

A functioning democracy needs this.  Papua New Guinea has it.  Demonstrably.

When Peter O'Neill, backed by 75 members of parliament, moved into Marauta Haus  on Friday afternoon, it ended any uncertainty over who controls PNG.

The move came the Somare camp issued a futile order at 3am on Friday for the military to intervene.  The military had more discipline and more sense.

James Marabe, education minister under Sir Michael, emerged from government offices and told reporters Somare's cabinet had issued the order. "We did make a request," he said.

"There is only one government in this country," Peter O’Neill said. "There is only one government mandated by the people through its parliament.

On the ABC last night, Peter O’Neill suggested he may take a hard line on the 20 police officers who had been taking orders from Somare's nominee for police commissioner, Fred Yakasa.

He also said Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio will be dismissed from office.

This has been a difficult week for PNG, but there are powerful elements that should give all of us comfort and every Papua New Guinean great satisfaction:

  • Parliament remained supreme.
  • The police and army performed their proper roles.
  • The populace stayed calm.
  • The press exercised its proper imperatives.
  • The social media came into its own.
  • The democracy is intact.
  • The right guy won. 

 

 

17.12.2012
Source: Sydney Morning Herald


Double trouble in PNG  

by Ilya Gridneff

 


As two big men - Sir Michael Somare and Peter O'Neill - vied for supremacy this week in Papua New Guinea, the earth literally shook. An earthquake measuring 7.1 rattled the windows of Parliament House just after an MP told the floor PNG was ''cursed''.

It was a contest that began in the courts, played out on the floor of the nation's parliament - with the unprecedented spectacle of a country ostensibly under the control of two prime ministers, two cabinets, two governors-general, two police chiefs, and two finance secretaries - and culminated yesterday in what was being claimed as a bloodless coup with O'Neill asserting victory last night.

The current crisis has been fuelled by a looming national election in a country galvanised by the prospect of a $16 billion liquefied natural gas (LNG) project - and exacerbated by the chest-beating bravado of the region's Big Man politics (where big talk and political preening frequently trump policy debate). All up, an incendiary combination of ego, power and money.

But behind this week's constitutional schism lies a deeper clash between the twin forces of tradition and modernity - a clash personified in the opposing forces of the old man Somare, and O'Neill, the new blood who claims to be the voice of progress.
The country was plunged into crisis on Monday when the Supreme Court ordered that Somare be reinstated as prime minister after the parliament had declared his position vacant in early August, while he was in Singapore recovering from heart surgery, and voted in O'Neill.

In extraordinary scenes, the ailing Somare, 76, was restored as prime minister on Wednesday by Governor-General Michael Ogio, who also swore in Somare's 19-member cabinet at Government House. O'Neill, with the backing of about 50 MPs, promptly responded by having the Governor-General sacked on the floor of parliament, then elevating Speaker Jeffrey Nape to the job of acting Governor-General. Nape then swore in O'Neill as Prime Minister, enabling O'Neill's backers to sack Somare's new ministers and replaced them with their own.

By yesterday afternoon, power appeared to have been wrested from Somare, after his senior police figure could not provide the muscle needed to break the five-day deadlock and the PNG Defence Force refused to intervene. Somare and his supporters were evicted from Morauta Haus, the official building for the prime minister's office.

''There is only one government and I am the prime minister of PNG,'' O'Neill said.

The resource-rich land of a 1000 tribes and 800 unique languages has run a boom and bust trajectory ever since gaining independence from Australia in September 16, 1975. It is said that then Australian prime minister Gough Whitlam shed a tear as the Australian flag was lowered and PNG's new vibrant flag of red, yellow and black and a bird of paradise soaring to great things was hoisted at Port Moresby's Government House. This week Government House became the setting for an epic struggle for the country's future.

Somare, the father of the nation, has long been PNG's most revered and dominant political figure. He has led the country four times as prime minister. In the nine years leading up to this year, he presided over a near decade of economic growth and relative political stability. It was the Somare Old Man brand that managed to keep the government together. The respect and admiration from other ministers meant he was able to unify the factions.

But the weary ''Old Man'' as he is affectionately known has increasingly been seen as a spent force. Earlier this year he was in a coma and had three heart operations. There was a constant stream of fake emails and text messages suggesting he had died. But even before the surgery, his speeches were incoherent and he often dozed off at state functions or in parliament.

And by then he had already eroded much of his public goodwill, partly through failing to keep a lid on corruption, and partly through his refusal to move aside gracefully to make way for a younger generation.

Jenny Howard-Jones, the Lowy Institute's Melanesia Program director, says Somare's lack of any secession plan helped fuel today's unprecedented political crisis. ''The secession struggle within his own party and the numerous corruption allegations of those around him has made it difficult to convince the PNG people he is fit to rule,'' she says. ''It is perceived he has dug in for himself, not the good of the country. His best option was to step aside gracefully for the nation and hand it over for the younger generation.''

It was in July last year that things started to come unstuck for Somare in the same Supreme Court in which his quest for power culminated this week. The court overturned constitutional laws that prevented PNG's numerous coalition parties from splitting and making new governments. (It had been common in the past for MPs to regularly switch allegiance.)

Following the 2010 ruling, there were three failed attempts by the opposition to topple the Somare-led government via votes of no confidence. But Speaker Jeffrey Nape was instrumental in all the no-confidence motions failing. He allowed long parliamentary adjournments, denied the opposition the ability to move the motion or most brazenly did not call for a division to count how many voted in favour of the motion.

This sparked fiery scenes in that July parliament session, peaking with Somare crossing the floor and needing to be restrained by his son Arthur, the then public enterprises minister, while shouting in pidgin he was going to kill opposition MP Sam Basil.

But the die had been cast. Internal rumblings within Somare's National Alliance party, split along ethnic lines with Highland region MPs wanting one of their own in the top job, grew. Somare and his East Sepik supporters were being mocked as the ''Sepik Mafia'', taunts reinforced by the fact top-level posts in the police, defence force and public service were being filled by men from that province.

In April this year, when Somare was suspended from office for two weeks over failing to lodge financial statements, the power vacuum grew. Then he became sick and spent close to four months in hospital. On August 2, Peter O'Neill launched his successful leadership move.

In contrast to Somare, O'Neill, 46, and his supporters have managed to present themselves as a viable alternative, a new way, despite being pretty much the same faces as under Somare.

Since being elevated to the top job, O'Neill, of mixed Australian and Highlander stock, has begun a process of reform designed to make the government more accountable and inclusive, and to begin to tackle the endemic corruption that effectively entrenches disadvantage in a country where 85 per cent of the population are subsistence farmers and most live on less than $2 a day. This includes the recent introduction of a bill reserving 22 seats for women in parliament, and scrutiny of irregular deals involving state-owned entities such as Air Niu Guinea, many of which effectively operate more as fiefdoms than business operations.

O'Neill argues he has a clear mandate for change - a 72-seat majority in the 109-seat parliament - and claims to represent PNG's disaffected grassroots groups angry at the failure of the country's ample resources wealth to filter through to them.

Certainly he appears to have widespread support. In local newspapers, on radio talkback and via the numerous internet forums, Facebook, Twitter and blog pages, PNG's people are demanding reforms.

And by the end of the week, it seemed that O'Neill might have the chance to deliver them. While the situation in PNG remains uncertain, by late yesterday - and with O'Neill seemingly in control of the public service, the parliament, the police and the defence force - Somare appeared to have lost his grip.

With national elections looming next year, it is a critical win for O'Neill.

Australian National University Professor Tony Regan, a constitutional lawyer who has spent 17 years in PNG, points out that whoever has control of government will have access to wealth, power and resources critical to entrenching themselves in the lead-up to the elections.

The stakes become even higher when you take into account the $16 billion ExxonMobil-led LNG project that some claim will help to rejuvenate the country. Already PNG is awash with LNG-related cash that has fuelled a building boom of hotels, apartments and houses. Container ships laden with new cars from Japan flow in frequently.

But despite such prosperity on the ground, there has so far been little translation of this wealth through to the country's poor. PNG's urban elite profits while systemic corruption, incompetence and PNG's kleptocracy paralyses any chance of improving conditions for those known as the ''grassroots''.

Observers and citizens are increasingly cynical about the promises of a resources-led panacea for the country's ills. They have been here before. In the '80s, BHP's Ok Tedi copper mine ended in environmental disaster. In the '90s, Bougainville Copper Australia's massive goldmine ended in a secessionist civil war. Now it's the Texans and their talk of making PNG rich beyond its wildest dreams.

Some experts fear next year's elections are going to be the bloodiest ever considering such hype.

Paul Barker, director the Institute of National Affairs think tank, says LNG has raised usual disagreements to much more worrying levels of violence. ''Although Treasury has consistently highlighted that revenue expectations from LNG are widely exaggerated, there is a perception that it will provide untold wealth,'' he says.

''This has helped fuel strong aspirations to have access or some control over expected benefits, including through local and national political office.''

The ANU's Ron May says there is a potential for rioting as PNG people get fed up with the political game playing.

But it would be a mistake to interpret the week's ructions as a forerunner to some sort of local version of this year's Arab Spring or London riots. Despite widespread dissatisfaction with the country's endemic law and order problems, a broken health and education system and dilapidated infrastructure, PNG's latest flashpoint seems unlikely to trigger a mass movement for change.

Instead - and despite the growing anger among the country's young - the entrenched networks of obligations and loyalties have so far worked to keep the nation in a habitual holding pattern.

Whether O'Neill manages to bring meaningful change remains to be seen.

 

 

16.11.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia News


Somare says he won't back down


Papua New Guinea's elder statesman Sir Michael Somare is refusing to step down amidst a political crisis over the leadership of the country.

His rival Peter O'Neill said on Friday afternoon his government's occupation of the prime minister's department should end uncertainty over the legitimacy of his government.

On Friday afternoon Mr O'Neill and 74 other MPs made the short drive from Parliament House to Murata House, which is home to the prime minister's department.

Mr O'Neill says this symbolic move should end any uncertainty that he is PNG's legitimate prime minister.

But Sir Michael is standing by his claim to be PNG's prime minister.

The O'Neill Government claims Sir Michael attempted overnight to call out the defence force onto Port Moresby's streets.

 


16.11.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia News


Liam Fox reports from Port Moresby :

 

 


 

 

 

16.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


PNG crisis coming to an end


A leading member of the O'Neill faction in Papua New Guinea says the constitutional crisis could be settled by Monday.

Dr Alan Marat, the attorney general in the government of Peter O'Neill says progress is being made after he held talks with Sir Arnold Amet , a senior member of the somare faction.


Presenter:Bruce Hill
Speaker:Dr Alan Marat, attorney general in the PNG government of Peter O'Neill


  Listen here ! 


 

 

16.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


PNG back to normal by Monday - Marat


A Pacific Beat interview was front page news in The National, one of two daily newpapers in Papua New Guinea.

It also caused a ripple across Twitter and Face Book as it's contents were seized upon by social media.

Yesterday's interview featured rival attorneys-general Sir Arnold Amet, in the Somare government and Dr Alan Marat, attorney-general in the government of Peter O'Neill

The two leading politicians agreed on Pacific Beat to bring their factions together for talks to try to end the constitutional deadlock.


Presenter:Bruce Hill
Speaker:Dr Alan Marat, attorney-general in the government of Peter O'Neill


  Listen here ! 


 

 

16.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Moves to end political crisis before weekend


There's been no meeting of minds in Papua New Guinea as the political impasse looks set to continue into next week....

The crisis began on Monday when the Supreme Court ruled that the government of Prime Minister Peter O'Neill was not legitimate and Sir Michael Somare should be re-instated as prime minister.

That produced the stand off which is continuing today with neither side appearing to give ground.

 

Presenter:Bruce Hill
Speaker:Firmin Nanol, Radio Australia PNG reporter


  Listen here ! 


 

 

16.12.2011
Source: Post-Courier


Chief’s call on scrap metals
By PETERSON TSERAHA


A CHIEF in Central Bougainville has called on scrap metal companies operating in Central Bougainville to be fair in their dealings and trade.
Amos Obe, representing the chiefs of Central Bougainville, has boldly questioned the scrap metal companies operating in Panguna, Arawa, and Loloho to explain how their benefits are shared.
And are they following Government regulations? How much do they pay in tax to the Autonomous Bougainville Government? And who are the real owners of the companies?

 

Scrap metal shipping in Loloho


“What does the rest of Bougainville get out from scrap metal exports when everyone suffered the war caused by Panguna mine?” Mr Obe has questioned. “A lot of people have died and for goodness sake Panguna is still covered in blood, North and South Bougainville are now saying we central Bougainvilleans are greedy and unfair because central Bougainvilleans haven’t fought the Bougainville crisis ourselves,’’ he said.
Mr Obe also said they had to take into account that even Papua New Guineans have died in the crisis. “I understand there is already a benefit policy for scrap metal with the commerce division in Buka so why aren’t the scrap metal companies complying with it?” Mr Obe asked.
Mr Obe said Bougainvilleans had to be mindfull about referendum and what was the plan for referendum, and when things were being done one sided?
“They can all say scrap metal is creating employment for youths and ex combatants, and that customs and quarantine have been paid, but what about the others?” Mr Obe said. “South Bougainvilleans, especially the ones from Siwai and Nagovis are all scattered in Buka looking for jobs while some of us are enjoying what everybody has suffered for,” he said.
“We are not saying we are against it to be more diplomatic, but explain how the money received will be shared among other ex-combatants.” Mr Obe said.
He also said one thing for sure was that some metals were not scrap but were very genuine metals and the type of price buyers were buying these metals for was not the appropriate price.

 

 

16.12.2011
Source: Radio New Zealand International


PNG’s police chief says no rift in the force after he welcomes back rebels


Papua New Guinea’s police chief has welcomed back a group of officers, who had been blockading Government House at the behest of one of the country’s rival prime ministers, Sir Michael Somare.

Police Commissioner Tom Kulunga addressed about 20 officers, members of PNG’s heavily armed Robbery Response Unit, in a small ceremony at police headquarters in Port Moresby.

 

Police Commissioner Tom Kulunga (center) among his officers

 

The unit had blockaded Government House on Tuesday, trying to prevent Mr O’Neill from meeting Governor-General Sir Michael Ogio to be sworn in and guarding the house in anticipation of Sir Michael Somare’s arrival.

Mr Kulunga says it is not a police issue - it’s a matter between two political groups.

He says there is no problem in the police organisation.

Mr Kulunga says the officers hadn’t breached the police code of ethics.

He says the officers’ guns would be stored in a police lock-up and returned to them later, but he did not specify a time.

 


16.12.2011
Source: Post-Courier


Somare camp target House
Attempts to shut water, power supply to bring out O’Neill team


THE court re-instated Somare Government allegedly tried every trick in the book to lock out the populist O’Neill-Namah Government by ordering that all public utilities available to them be shut down.
This included attempting to cut water and electricity to Parliament but it now appears the public servants sworn on oath to serve the country have had enough over the last couple of days and could not be swayed by the order from Madang Regional MP and Somare appointed Attorney General Sir Arnold Amet.
The service providers simply refused to cut the power and shut the water supply to the peoples’ house, Markham MP Koni Iguan said yesterday, because the people’s house had no debts outstanding to both organisations.
Citing a letter from Sir Arnold Amet, dated December 12, Mr Iguan said the Somare regime tried to shut down the institution which runs the country by resorting to devious means which amounted to ‘sabotage’.
In his letter to his fellow MP Patrick Pruaitch, and copied to Mr Tony Koiri, CEO of PNG Power Ltd, and Mr Billy Imar, MD of Eda Ranu Ltd, and the MD of IPBC, the Attorney General and Minister for Public Enterprise in the Somare led minority government, Sir Arnold said: “I seek your instructions for the shutdown of power and water services to Parliament House.”
It seems the request fell on deaf ears as Acting Chief Executive Officer of PNG Power Limited, Lawrence Solomon gave an outright ‘no’ to the directive from Mr Pruaitch because the “current political turmoil does not amount to an emergency to warrant PPL to shutdown power services to Parliament House”.
Parliament is where all MPs are supposed to congregate to represent all the people of PNG and the O’Neill Government was in charge on Monday, Mr Iguan said.
Parliament re-elected Prime Minister Peter O’Neill on Monday and his 70 MPs have been holding court there for the past week and Mr Iguan said that ‘shutting down the power and water is denying the people of PNG their voice’.
Sir Michael, the court reinstated PM, has 37 members and a 21 member cabinet who was sworn in by now suspended GG Sir Michael Ogio on Wednesday, while the Parliament appointed PM O’Neill holds an absolute majority.
As a result, it has become difficult for Sir Michael to govern given the lack of numbers, a situation that has not gone down well with public servants, unions and ordinary people.
Mr Iguan said the directions given by Sir Arnold were illegal and further demonstrated the desperation of the Somare regime in trying to squeeze the life out of a ‘popular people’s government’.
Mr Iguan said Sir Michael was the man who agreed on the building of Parliament Haus in his Sepik mythology and to cut off the power and water was like cutting of the ‘supply of sago and sepik wara’ to the men in the house.

 

 

16.12.2011
Source: Post-Courier


Public sentiment with O’Neill
By HAIVETA KIVIA


THE majority of Papua New Guineans wants to see Peter O’Neill remain as Prime Minister and that his Government sees out this term of the National Parliament.
If the street surveys carried out by Post-Courier, phone calls to radio talkback shows and reports from our opposition paper are bench marks to go by, then the majority of people in the country wants to see the back of Somare regime. In Lae and Morobe province, 50 percent of the people interviewed want Peter O’Neil to remains as the Prime Minister, while 30 percent called for parliament to be dissolved and fresh elections called and 20 per cent chose Somare as their preferred PM. In Rabaul, 80 per cent of the people interviewed wanted O’Neill to remain, 10 percent called for parliament to be dissolved and 10 percent backed the Somare Government.
Buko Esi, a resident at Hanta Compound in Lae, said if Sir Michael Somare had control over his young ministers and his son Arthur when he was in Government then we wouldn’t in a situation like this.
Mr Esi said they had a forum in the compound yesterday and many residents there expressed that they were very happy to see the backside of the Somare-Abal regime when O’Neil- Namah was voted in by parliament.
“This was deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court but we the people think the court did not have the best interest of PNG at heart when it made its decision,” he said. He said what Grand Chief Sir Michael Somare stood for when he led the country to independence in 1975 had all gone to the dogs when he allowed young ministers in his Government of nine years to systematically abuse the trust and misused millions of kina.

  

 

16.12.2011
Source: Post-Courier


O’Neill loved by people ...
By John Pangkatana


PAPUA New Guinea’s Parliament appointed Prime Minister Peter O’Neill is truly the “peoples” choice.
With his 75-man strong parliamentary members in tow, the Member for Ialibu Pangia is now riding a wave of popularity more that ever before.
Yesterday, in a humbling show accompanied by Deputy Prime Minister Belden Namah, he braved the midday heat to receive a petition from prominent NGO leader Noel Anjo before a boisterous crowd of over 1000 people at Waigani yesterday.
‘O’Neill, O’Neil, O’Neill…’ the strong crowd shouted as they hung onto every word he said.
Mr O’Neill re-assured the people that 72 members stand undivided during this time because they feel they have been undermined for too long.
“They must be able to talk without fear or favour. Ol in no wari long ministry, ol i wari long ol laif blong ol man na meri blong Papua New Guinea (They are not worried about ministries, they are more worried about the people’s livelihood),” he said.
He said it is a time for a thorough clean-up of all the corruption that has been allowed to breed in our society.
“Opis blong Praim Minista i no blong wanpela man (The office of the Prime Minister does not belong to one person),” he said.
“Em taim blong Grand Chief long malolo (It’s time for the Grand Chief to take a break),” he said.
This brought on a huge cheer.
“Gavana Jeneral em tu giamanim mi na pipol blong Papua New Guinea (The Governor-General was not truthful to me and the people of Papua New Guinea),” he added.
“Em tu ating mas malolo tu, mi understand em nupela marit tu (He should also take a break as well, I understand he’s also a newly-wed).” Mr ONeill said.
This brought on a much bigger applause from a mixture of people from public servants to the general public.
Mr O’Neill said he was grateful to hear that there was no division within the police hierarchy and thanked the PNG Defence Force for playing a backstage role as well in this heightened scenario that has brought about a sense of instability.
He also clarified that Mr Tom Kulunga is the rightfully appointed Police Commissioner, dispelling any thoughts otherwise. “He has earned the position rightfully,” he added.
“We cannot change the Government by the barrel of the gun…it’s only through the corridors of parliament that we will prevail,” he said.

 

 


16.12.2011
Source: Post-Courier


PNG ranks ahead of UK, Aust, NZ


PNG ranked 35th for Internet download speeds ahead of UK, Australia and New Zealand
Telikom PNG encouraged by Net Index Internet Speed Rankings Ookla, a global leader in broadband testing and web-based network diagnostics, has ranked Papua New Guinea’s Internet speeds at 35th for downloading, and 41st for uploading, placing it ahead of countries such as the UK, Australia and New Zealand. A total of 172 countries are tracked by Ookla.
According to Ookla’s net index the results were obtained by analysing test data between 11th November, 2011 and 10th December, 2011 from 2, 232 unique IP addresses (Internet Protocol addresses) taken in the country.
The speed test by Ookla is based on upload and downloads speed of individual users in various countries with Net Index providing averages and details around consumer broadband upload and download speeds. The Net index is available on the following websites
http://www.netindex.com/download/allcountries/ and http://www.netindex.com/upload/allcountries/.
Telikom PNG’s Chief Executive Officer, Peter Loko, welcomed the rankings stating that “Telikom PNG, as the country’s Internet Gateway Service Provider, is encouraged by Ookla’s independent findings that confirm efforts to improve Internet service delivery into PNG were paying dividends”.
“Telikom PNG will continue to expand its Internet infrastructure to connect more urban and rural communities to the Internet as we can make a real difference to the lives of our people”.
“Telikom recently completed installation of its 3G Wireless Internet Services in Pomio district, East New Britain and Buin, within the Autonomous Region of Bougainville, which will enable these rural communities to enjoy faster Internet at speeds offered by Telikom,” Mr Loko remarked.
He added apart from the 3G wireless network expansion, Telikom is also rolling out its fibre optic network that will enable faster wired broadband services around the country.
Ookla’s Net Index enlightens the Internet community by anonymously analysing and compiling massive data sets of information for purposes of benchmarking Internet quality.
From the download index ranking, United States was ranked 33rd with speeds of 12.3Mbps, PNG ranked 35th at 11.7Mbps, UK ranked 37th at 11.48Mbps, Australia ranked 48th with speed of 9.0Mbps while New Zealand ranked 50th with speeds of 8.81Mbps.

 

 

16.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia - 24H dans le Pacifique


La crise persiste en Papouasie Nouvelle-Guinée


Au centre de cette crise, la décision de la Cour suprême de réinstaller Sir Michael Somare dans ses fonctions de Premier ministre. Elle a jugé inconstitutionnelle l’élection de Peter O’Neill, l’actuel Premier ministre, par la majorité des députés en août dernier, alors que Sir Michael, Premier ministre d’alors, se faisait opérer du cœur à Singapour. Peter O’Neill n’accepte pas la décision de la Cour Suprême et Sir Michael a constitué son propre gouvernement.
Le pays se retrouve avec 2 gouvernements, 2 forces de police et deux Gardes des Sceaux qui ont accepté de débattre du problème sur Radio Australie.
Pour Sir Arnold Amet, Garde des Sceaux du clan de Sir Michael Somare, un vote au Parlement pourrait aider à résoudre la crise. Une condition toutefois : « Mais en premier, Peter O’Neill doit reconnaître et respecter la décision de la Cour Suprême qui a réinstallé Sir Michael Somare au poste de Premier ministre et réinstallé son gouvernement. »
Le Garde des Sceaux de la faction de Peter O’Neill, Allan Marat semble être prêt au dialogue : « Je suis prêt à en parler au Premier ministre et même au Président du Parlement pour voir s’ils sont disposés à sortir des tranchées et à rencontrer Sir Michael Somare et Arnold Amet pour discuter des nombreuses possibilités qui nous permettraient de sortir de cette impasse malheureuse avec une solution acceptable. »
En attendant, personne n’est sorti de l’impasse. La police loyale à Sir Michael Somare bloque l’accès à la Maison du Gouvernement et les dirigeants religieux du pays ont lancé un appel à l’unité nationale et les députés de Peter O’Neill campent au Parlement depuis lundi.

 

 

16.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Social media the news leader in PNG during political standoff


During this week's political turmoil, many Papua New Guineans have relied on twitter and facebook to keep up with the rapidly unfolding situation.

Recent events show how PNG's growing blogosphere, mounting number of facebook users and tweeters are bringing the nation together in new ways. This week, social media users have turned out in force to report and debate the constitutional crisis, in a shift away from traditional media.

Presenter: Geraldine Coutts
Emmanuel Narokobi, editor of PNG's Masalai blog.


  Listen here ! 

 

 

16.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


PNG youth pushing for political change


PNG voters have expressed their dissatisfaction with current politics with recent marches to the governors general residence also on twitter SMS and the wider media.

A recent article from the Sydney based Lowy Institute says the younger generation is fed up with old style politics in Port Moresby. The author Jenny Hayward-Jones says a protracted leadership battle is unlikely to win significant public support.

Presenter: Geraldine Coutts
Jenny Hayward-Jones, Director of The Myer Foundation Melanesia Program at the Lowy Institute


  Listen here ! 

 

 
16.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Business concerns in PNG


PNG's Trade Union Congress has threatened to stage protests across the nation, claiming the current political turmoil is preventing the workforce from delivering services.

But the Chamber of Commerce says the current political situation is not impacting workers. So how is business being affected?

Presenter: Geraldine Coutts
Michael Mayberry, President of the PNG Chamber of Commerce

Business concerns in PNG


PNG's Trade Union Congress has threatened to stage protests across the nation, claiming the current political turmoil is preventing the workforce from delivering services.

But the Chamber of Commerce says the current political situation is not impacting workers. So how is business being affected?


Presenter: Geraldine Coutts
Michael Mayberry, President of the PNG Chamber of Commerce


  Listen here ! 

 


16.12.2011
Source: The National


PNG Power lights up Arawa town
By STEPHANIE ELIZAH


BUSINESSES and residents in Central Bougainville will enjoy a reliable and consistent power supply when PNG Power commissions its generators at Arawa this week.
They have been depending on their own generators to supply power since normalcy returned to the conflict-ravaged township which once had its electri­city supplied by the Bougainville Copper Ltd and managed by the PNG Electricity Commission (Elcom), now PNG Power.
The Arawa PNG Power pro­ject is an Autonomous Bougainville Government project.
It contracted PNG Power as the primary operator and ma­nager of electricity to Ara­wa and surrounding areas of
Central Bougainville.
The project included the installation of three diesel gene­rators, re-construction of infrastructure for the project and re-establishment of the PNG power operating system.
Autonomous Bougainville administration project personnel Ephraim Eminoni said easy pay meters had been installed in a number of homes with more houses and businesses yet to be completed.
Commissioning of the project took place on Tuesday in Arawa with power supplied to the users in the main sections of Arawa town that already have easy pay meters installed, Eminoni said.
A formal launching of the project had been planned for next month.

 

 
16.12.2011
Source: The National


O’Neill seeks order against Sir Michael


PETER O’Neill has asked the court for restraining orders to stop Sir Michael Somare from performing the duties as prime minister.
The case will be heard in the National Court on Monday.
O’Neill’s lawyers filed proceedings in the National Court on Wednesday seeking the restraining order. But due to some minor corrections to the documents, they were re-filed yesterday.
The National Court registry yesterday set Monday afternoon for the hearing.
It would be an inter-parte hearing, court officials said, meaning the lawyers from both sides would make submissions on Monday.

 

 
16.12.2011
Source: The National


We are intact, says Parkop

 
THE 72 MPs loyal to Peter O’Neill say they will not be moved after receiving offers of ministerial positions from the opposite camp.
National Capital District Governor Powes Parkop told parliament their group was intact and would not be tempted by the offers from the group led by Sir Michael Somare.
He said some of the MPs in the group had been assured ministries by the Somare camp but they would “not move an inch”.
He said the 72 members had run away from the old regime and decided to form a government for the people they represented to fight corruption and serve the people.
He said they wanted to fight corruption and make a change in delivering services to the people.
He said they were in parliament to carry out the wishes of the people and not for any individual member or political group.
Meanwhile, he urged the Somare faction to come back to parliament because it was where the collective will and power was exercised.
“We have to solve the issues amicably for the benefit of the people and independent state of PNG,’’ he said.
Meanwhile Anglimp South Waghi MP Jamie Maxton Grahame called on the disputing parties to resolve the issue in the Melanesian way.
He called on the Somare family to ask the Grand Chief to quit as leader because he needed a good rest after his three operations.
“I think he is not capable but a bunch of desperados were using him and those people should try and allow the Grand Chief to rest then using him for their benefit,’’ he said.

 


16.12.2011
Source: The National


Marat: GG was misled
By JEFFREY ELAPA


RABAUL MP Dr Allan Marat claims that a public servant had colluded with the secretary to the attorney-general to issue instructions to Government House this week.
He said the action was illegal.
He said state solicitor Daniel Pakarea colluded with the secretary for the Department of Attorney-General Dr Lawrence Kalinoe to issue instructions to governor-general.
He said they were officers who came under the attorney-general and they, as public servants, did not have any powers to advise the governor- general.
He said matters affecting the court became the responsibility of the state and that the minister advised Government House.
However, he said the governor-general wrongly accepted the advice because he did not receive any advice from the court.
He said only the NEC, parliament and the attorney-general could advise the governor-general.
He said the governor- general had been misled because he had not read section 89 of the Constitution which talked about the functions of the head of state.
He has been confused and therefore wrongly accepted the advice and told lies to the people of PNG and therefore he had been suspended.
Member for Mt Hagen William Duma, another lawyer, said that Governor General had allowed a coup to take place in PNG.
He said the GG also allowed rogue policemen to block Government House and therefore he was not fit to occupy the vice-regal seat.

 


16.12.2011
Source: Radio New Zealand International


Drive for dialogue and mediation to try to solve PNG political crisis


Efforts are being made to establish a dialogue between the two groupings claiming to be the government of Papua New Guinea.

Sir Arnold Amet, the Attorney General in the Sir Michael Somare grouping and his counterpart in the Peter O’Neill camp, Dr Allan Marat, are proposing dialogue and there are signs this could happen.

Sir Arnold says it is possible that international mediators could be sought.

He says Sir Michael Somare yesterday wrote to the leaders of the rival group expressing a willingness to talk.

“I trust that today we can progress that with considerable dignity to avert any confrontation amongst our people and our security and law enforcement agencies, which are the very last things that we would want.”

 


16.12.2011
Source: Radio New Zealand International


PNG commissioner Kulunga appeals for calm whilst cautioning Somare group


One of two men claiming to be Papua New Guinea’s Police Commissioner has cautioned Sir Michael Somare for attempting to interfere with legitimate state institutions.

Tom Kulunga was appointed last month by Peter O’Neill, who is refusing to relinquish the Prime Ministership, despite a supreme court ruling re-instating Sir Michael Somare.

 

Police Commissioner Tom Kulunga

 

Mr Kulunga says the purported appointment of Fred Yakasa to the Commissioner’s post by Sir Michael was unlawful and maliciously plotted to cause disaffection and disunity within the force.

He says the National Executive Council has revoked the appointment.

Mr Kulunga says all policemen and policewomen engaged in the security operations in Port Moresby city and other parts of the country have been instructed to remain neutral and focused while performing their constitutional duties.

He also appealed to ordinary citizens across the country to remain calm and allow common sense and understanding to prevail.

Mr Kulunga says additional police manpower from Lae and Wabag are now in Port Moresby to assist in the maintenance of law and order.

He says police are on heightened alert in the city because of the developments of the last few days and they will continue to set up random road blocks in designated spots and carry out routine patrols within the city.

 


16.12.2011
Source: Radio New Dawn on Bougainville


BEER SALES TAX


WHOLESALERS of beer and cigarettes in Bougainville have been urged to comply with the Autonomous Bougainville Government’s (ABG) beer and cigarette sales tax law that was passed by Bougainville House of Representatives in September.

Bougainville vice president Patrick Nisira urged this when he received today a cheque of K246, 150 as beer sales tax from Jomik Trading Limited.

Jomik is the first company to deliver its tax collected from six containers of beer sold in November alone.

Nisira said the tax collected would boost the autonomous region’s internal revenue of K9 million which is currently not sufficient to fund delivery of goods and services throughout Bougainville.

 


16.12.2011
Source: Radio New Dawn on Bougainville


KONNOU STUDENT TOPS BOUGAINVILLE EDUCATION


A grade eight student from the Konnou constituency of South Bougainville has done her people proud by becoming the highest ranked student of primary education in the Autonomous Region of Bougainville.

Cynthia Mota of Tabago Primary School in Buin topped 140 out of 150 in her grade eight exam results, rising above more than 3000 grade eight students throughout Bougainville.

Mota’s achievement has attracted the attention of the Bougainville Education officials who were surprised that despite coming from a conflict torn area, she was able to persevere with her education.

Konnou constituency of which Tabago primary school is in, has been the focus of peace rehabilitation activities in recent months, following continuous fighting amongst local factions that had resulted in over 60 civilians reported dead.

Basic services including education was constantly disrupted during the conflict which had Bougainville leaders doubtful of the student’s education progress in the area.

Mota’s success has now proven the leaders wrong and has further strengthened the process of peace and reconciliation that is currently in progress among the warring factions.

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: ESBC

 

A "French Kiss" for Sir Michael?

 

  
 Sentenced today: Former French President Jacques ChiracWarning from Paris: PNG's Sir Michael Somare

 
The following can be understood as a strong warning from France to

Sir Michael Somare and his faithful followers:

 

15.12.2011
Source: Radio Australia News


Chirac guilty of graft

 

A judge has declared French former president Jacques Chirac guilty of misusing public funds, in a political graft trial that made history by producing the first conviction of a head of state since Nazi collaborator Marshal Philippe Petain in 1945.

In the absence of the 79-year-old, who ruled from 1995 until 2007, the judge declared Chirac guilty and handed down a suspended two-year jail sentence.

Chirac was tried on charges of diverting public money into phantom jobs for political cronies while he was mayor of Paris between 1977 and 1995, a time when he built a new centre-right Gaullist party that launched his successful presidential bid.

In theory, Chirac, excused from much of the proceedings on the grounds of failing memory, could have been sent to jail for 10 years, the maximum sentence for the charges against him.

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Rival attorneys-general on Pacific Beat agree on possibility of talks


The two rival attorneys-general in Papua New Guinea have agreed to meet in person to try to resolve the country's constitutional crisis.

Sir Arnold Amet, the attorney general in the Sir Michael Somare government discussed the idea with Dr Alan Marat, the attorney general in Peter O'Neill's government on Radio Australia's Pacific Beat program.


Presenter:Bruce Hill
Speaker:

 

Dr Alan Marat

attorney general in Peter O'Neill's government

 

 

Sir Arnold Amet

attorney general in the Sir Michael Somare government

 

 


  Listen here ! 


 

 

15.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Former PM suggests a way out of PNG crisis

 

 

Sir Julius Chan


A former PNG prime minister says both the men claiming the job should let parliament make the final decision.

New Ireland governor and MP Sir Julius Chan says one solution to the impasse would be for Sir Michael Somare to be reinstated as an MP, and for him to come to Parliament, resign, and let the House decide if he of Peter O'Neill should be prime minister.

He says if the crisis isn't resolved, it's possible there could be violence.

Sir Julius insists he is not so much backing Peter O'Neill as he is trying to support the supremacy of Parliament.


Presenter:Bruce Hill
Speaker:Sir Julius Chan, former PNG prime minister


  Listen here ! 

 

 


15.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Little sign of compromise in PNG impasse


The Papua New Guinea political impasse is again the dominating issue of the day.

The crisis has rumbled along since the Supreme Court on Monday ruled that the government of Prime Minister Peter O'Neill was not legitimate and Sir Michael should be re-instated as prime minister.

He's since been sworn in but Mr O'Neill refuses to stand aside

Today hundreds of people demonstrate peacefully outside the PNG Parliament in support of embattled Prime Minister O'Neill while inside his government argued it's legitimacy to an empty chamber.

In another area of Waigani Sir Michael's men are claiming they are in control.


Presenter:Bruce Hill
Speaker:Firmin Nanol, Radio Australia PNG reporter


  Listen here ! 

 

 


15.12.2011
Source: Radio New Zealand International


O’Neill orders police to take control of PNG government offices


Peter O’Neill has ordered up to 150 police to take control of government offices, declaring with the backing of his cabinet that he is in control of the Papua New Guinean government.

At a press conference in parliament today Mr O’Neill revoked a late night order by Sir Michael Somare to reinstate his police commissioner Fred Yakasa.

He says seeking government from the barrel of a gun is unacceptable.

Mr O’Neill says additional police have been flown in from outside Port Moresby.

He says he expects police to carry out their duty should Sir Michael refuse to leave, but stressed there was nothing stopping his minority government from coming to parliament.

Mr O’Neill says they refuse to come to parliament, because they don’t think can run a minority government, which is not acceptable in a democracy.

He says the officers would also seize the finance department, prime minister’s department and government house.

Mr O’Neill says he was not ordering the arrest of Sir Michael or his ministers.

AAP reports that there is a contingent of police loyal to Sir Michael in Port Moresby, however the majority of police have thus far been at pains to remain neutral.

The nation’s military has also remained neutral and largely silent.

Sir Michael had been expected to give a press conference on Thursday morning but it was put off until later in the afternoon without explanation.

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: PNG Attitude


O’Neill deploys police to seize government assets
BY KEITH JACKSON


THE ABC IS REPORTING that there are signs the political deadlock in Papua New Guinea may have entered a dangerous new phase, with extra police being flown into the capital to seize government assets.

Peter O'Neill says extra police have been flown into Port Moresby from around the country to seize government assets and that they have taken control of the government printing office and will also target the finance department, the prime minister's department and government house.

A group of police loyal to Sir Michael has been guarding government house since Monday night.

The existence of two police commissioners must be sorely testing the loyalty of many members of the police force.

It could be expected that if either Mr O’Neill or Sir Michael Somare tries to deploy police in an aggressive posture that conflict may ensue.

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: Radio New Zealand International


O’Neill group in PNG impasse to appeal Supreme Court ruling


The O’Neill grouping in Papua New Guinea’s political impasse says it will today file an appeal against Monday’s Supreme Court ruling that Peter O’Neill’s election as Prime Minister in August was illegal.

Sir Michael Somare’s cabinet was sworn in by Governor-General, Sir Michael Ogio, yesterday while Peter O’Neill used his majority parliamentary support to suspend the Queen’s representative and then had his cabinet sworn-in by his own acting Governor-General, the Speaker Jeffrey Nape.

A member of the O’Neill group, Sir Puka Temu, says Monday’s Court ruling has been rendered invalid by new laws made by parliament about the provisions for declaring the Prime Minister’s seat vacant.

“The parliament has moved ahead of those circumstances under which the Supreme Court made the ruling. And so everybody in the legal fraternity agrees that the ruling, under those previous circumstances, now cannot be legally enforced.”

Sir Puka Temu

 

 

15.12.2011

Source: Radio Australia News - TV

 

Pacific Beat presenter Bruce Hill explains the unecpected turn of events in PNG :

 

 

 

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia News


NGOs try to smoothen PNG's political upheaval


Non-government groups in Papua New Guinea are urging rival political groups to put aside their differences and form a government of national unity.

PNG currently has two rival Prime Ministers, two cabinets, two Governors-General and two police commissioners.

Both Peter O'Neill and Sir Michael Somare insist they are the country's legitimate leader.

The political crisis flared when Mr O'Neill was installed as prime minister while Sir Michael was recovering overseas from a serious illness.

Lawrence Stephens from Transparency International PNG says his main concern is keeping violence at bay.

"Our problems here are that we have uncertainty in the police force," he said.

"We have two police commanders, apparently, we have two prime ministers, apparently. We have public servants who have disciplined force people confused, and we have rebel rousers who would like to use the situation to cause trouble which might work to their advantage".

 

Looming elections


PNG's Institute of National Affairs director, Paul Barker says the need for governmental unity is pressing in the lead-up to next year's election.

"The priority should be to prepare for the elections and give the voters an opportunity to make their own selection," Mr Barker said.

"Maybe some sort of caretaker, unity government until the elections. I mean, the elections are just around the corner".

He says the stalemate is confusing and potentially dangerous, and has called on churches and NGOs to help negotiations between both political players go smoothly

The former head of PNG's defence force, General Jerry Singirok says the country's current commander has made the right decision by staying out of the current political crisis.

"They will wait for the current impasse to be sorted out politically before they do whatever they have been called to".


Deuce


Mr O'Neill was sworn in as prime minister on Wednesday by the man he has designated as the interim governor-general.

He earlier announced he was suspending governor-general Sir Michael Ogio because he had failed to live up to his responsibilities.

Speaker Geoffrey Nape then claimed he was the acting governor-general and swore in Mr O'Neill as the country's prime minister, along with several MPs as ministers.

On the same morning, Michael Ogio - who has been the governor-general since the start of the year - also swore in 19 members of the former PM's, Sir Michael Somae cabinet.


No vacancy


The prime minister's seat was declared vacant in August while Sir Michael was out of the country receiving medical treatment.

Earlier this week, the Supreme Court ruled that his removal from office in August was unlawful and ordered he be reinstated.

But Mr O'Neill maintains he is the country's legitimate leader.

On Tuesday afternoon, he and 60 other MPs broke through a police barricade at government house and demanded to see Sir Michael Ogio.

"We're unarmed and we're the legitimate government," they shouted.

Through his secretary, the governor-general urged the parties to sort out the issue among themselves.


Political upbringing


Sir Michael, 75, has been in politics for almost 50 years, appointed as the country's first prime minister when it became independent in 1975.

He was sidelined by illness earlier this year, travelling to Singapore for heart surgery.

His family announced his resignation in June without consulting Sir Michael, who they said was in intensive care and too ill to discuss his future.

But Sir Michael maintained he was still the country's leader and there had "never been any vacancy in the position of prime minister".

 

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: The National


O’Neill challenges Somare to lead in parliament


IALIBU-Pangia MP Peter O’Neill says Sir Michael Somare and his group should use parliament – and not other institutions  – to determine who governs the country.
O’Neill said no other institution could decide who should rule the country but parliament which was the only supreme authority to decide who became prime minister.
He said everyone must work together so that the crisis did not continue and erode the fabrics of the parliamentary system.
He said there were only four months left before the election and Somare should try to be the prime minister through the parliamentary process.
He said he would accept and respect whatever decision was made in parliament and called on Sir Michael to follow the parliamentary process to become prime minister.

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: The National


UNDP officers meet Bougainville groups 
By STEPHANIE ELIZAH


CIVIL society groups in the Autonomous Region of Bougainville yesterday met with officers from the United Nations Development Programme Energy and Environment and Climate Change programmes.
The meeting offered local stakeholders an opportunity to highlight the work they were doing in the region on environment and conservation.
It provided them the chance to raise issues related to their work and their concerns on climate change.
Some of the key challenges highlighted by the participants included:
l    Collaboration and partnership between civil society groups and Autonomous Bougainville Government;
l    Financial support granted directly to target communities;
l    Establishment of a coordination body like the Bougainville environment conservation and climate change office, whose role would be to establish an efficient network between all civil society groups, ABG and donors; and,
l    Documentation and data collection of what natural resources Bougainville has.
UNDP officer Robert Yen said their visit to Bougainville was in response to local stakeholders wanting to have their programmes supported.
Yen said the UNDP was willing to help
in facilitating partnership development and coordination between the civil society groups and the Autonomous Bougainville Government.
UNDP representatives had earlier this week met with ABG officials and had
identified areas in which all parties could
work together in supporting environmental conservation programmes and climate change issues.
Based on their findings, Yen said they would return next year and focus on working with local stakeholders and the ABG to develop a way forward for all parties.

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: The National


Sir Michael accuses faction of high-level corruption
By JACOB POK


EAST Sepik MP Sir Michael Somare says defiance of the Supreme Court order was corruption at the highest level.
He called on the faction led by Peter O’Neill and Belden Namah to respect the letter and spirit of the Supreme Court order of Dec 12 to ensure the rule of law remained supreme in Papua New Guinea.
Sir Michael said the continuing lack of respect for the Supreme Court order was an aberration of the constitutional history and did not augur well for the future of the country.
“I have never seen such outrageous conduct by duly elected members of parliament,” he said.
“My government was constitutionally formed and elected by the people and was constitutionally restored by the courts, which ruled that it was illegally removed.”
He said the decision and orders had been upheld by the court and his government was constitutionally compliant.
“The rule of law must be respected by all members of the three separate arms of government if we are to remain a true democracy,” he said.
“We survived 36 years within the framework of our Constitution and our parliament is not there to be manipulated by lawless MPs for their own preservation.”
He said one arm of the government was not superior to the next and leaders must act within the confines of the Constitution.
“The action to amend laws for self-preservation worries me as it was not in the best interest of the nation,” he said.
“It is corruption at the highest level.”
He condemned the actions taken by the O’Neill-Namah regime in light of the Dec 12 court decision as highly contemptuous and regrettable.
Madang MP Sir Arnold Amet said legal advice would be sought to prosecute members of the O’Neill-Namah regime and charge them with contempt for defying the Dec 12 Supreme Court ruling.
He said the Constitution was supreme, and not parliament.
“The Constitution and the law are supreme and must be adhered to,” Sir Arnold said.
Nipa-Kutubu MP Philemon Embel said they had advised the speaker of parliament to make room for them to take their “government” seats in parliament.
“Their majority number is irrelevant if they are not abiding by the Constitution and laws of the land,” Embel said.

 

 
15.12.2011
Source: The National


Parliament is cursed, say MPs
By JEFFREY ELAPA


THE National Parliament has been condemned as the “House of Evil” by two members of parliament.
Imbonggu MP Francis Awesa said the house was a Haus Tambaran (house of evil).
He said those who occupied it were under the control of evil.
Finchhafen MP Theo Zurenuoc agreed it was a house of evil.
He said the house was possessed by evil. He told parliament that one Sunday, he came to Parliament House and prayed that he be shown any sign of evil.
He urged the government to build a new Parliament House that would be free of evil.
Kundiawa-Gembogl Tobias Kulang supported the move to relocate parliament so that it was in the heart of the country.
He said its current location in Port Moresby isolated it from the majority of Papua New Guinea citizens.
He said it would be great to relocate parliament to Yonki or Kainantu in the Eastern Highlands because it was the centre of the country.
He said parliament was for the people and should be more accessible to the people and not isolated.

 

 
15.12.2011
Source: The National


Sir Puka: Grand Chief should exit with grace


SIR Puka Temu has called on Sir Michael Somare to resign and leave politics with grace and dignity.
Sir Puka said he was asking Sir Michael to resign because he did not have the support of parliament to continue as prime minister.
“I have the greatest respect, admiration and humility for the Grand Chief as one of the founding fathers of the nation but the political situation is not in his favour anymore,” he said.
He said although the Supreme Court had made its ruling, the O’Neill-Namah government had moved on from when the ruling was made.
“Parliament has exercised its legislative authority to amend the Prime Minister and National Executive Council Act upon which it elected Peter O’Neill as prime minister,’’ he said.
He said parliament has resolved to rescind its decision on the granting of leave of absence to allow the speaker to declare that Sir Michael was no longer a member of parliament.
“It is therefore absolutely illegal for the governor-general to have sworn in the so-called caretaker cabinet under Sir Michael Somare,” he said.
Sir Puka said for Sir Michael to continue as prime minister, he must have control of parliament, table a new budget and have it passed so that government activities and programme could be funded next year.
But he said the way the numbers were stacked in parliament, it would not be possible for a minority government to function.
He said a minority government would only bring more chaos in the period up to the election.
“In view of the present political situation, the respectable thing for Sir Michael to do is to tender his resignation and allow parliament to chart a way forward,” he said.
Sir Puka commended speaker Jeffery Nape on his handling of the crisis.
He said the way the political situation was unfolding each day in PNG was “in unchartered territory” in terms of the Constitution.
“In a situation like this where there is a political stalemate the best thing to do is to leave it to Parliament to decide the outcome.
“In my view parliament is the only authority that can appoint a prime minister,” he said.

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: The National


O’Neill says gaming board a cash cow for few


PETER O’Neill has described the National Gaming Board as corrupt and a “milking cow” for few individuals and family members.
O’Neill said the Somare government had a record of completely disregarding parliamentary processes and laws – the reason for the diversion of funds.
“They think the executive government is more powerful than the government,” O’Neill said.
He said this when responding to questions from Gazelle MP Ma­lakai Tabar on the K15 million promised for the grassroots games in Kokopo next year.
“We are trying to clear the K15 million but cannot do so because of restraining orders by the courts imposed after the former chief executive officer challenged his removal,” he said.
“The former CEO thinks that he is managing private funds for the Somare government and business associates of the government.”
O’Neill said the Somare family was now in control of the computer system of gaming.
“The Gaming Board is one of the most corrupt siphoning off hundreds of millions of kina to friends and family members to buy property in Cairns and holidays in Singapore,’’ he said.
“This kind of madness must stop.
“I don’t know where the judiciary is going.
“This country belongs to the 6.7 million people of PNG and not one family or individual.”
O’Neill said the Somare regime must go because they were creating another Mugabe and dynasty in the Pacific.
He said the Supreme Court must interpret laws and not elect governments.
“The Government House is under siege.
“If you have rogue policemen who cannot get orders from the Police Commissioner than that is a problem,” he said.
“This country is governed through parliament and not through Ela Beach Hotel.”

 


15.12.2011
Source: The National


AROB leader wants policies to remain


A GOVERNMENT minister in the Autonomous Region of Bougainville says government must continue the policies implemented by the O’Neill regime.
Autonomous Bougainville Government minister for local level government, traditional authority and communication Joseph Nopei said he supported what the O’Neill government had started.
Nopei said the policies should not be changed.
“They (Somare regime) have a very short time remaining before the national election so they should just carry on with all that has been established like the implementation of the 2012 national budget,” said Nopei.
He said the O’Neill government had in a short time delivered a lot and had set the foundation for good governance and transparency.
“Also because they are pro-active, they have really worked hard and were not complacent,” he said.
“The good thing about the turn of events is that the O’Neill government still have the numbers to pass any decision in parliament.”

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: The National


Sir Paulias calls for calm 
By JASON GIMA WURI


FORMER governor-general Sir Paulias Matane has called for peace and calm throughout the nation and urged political leaders to uphold Christian principles in solving the current political impasse.
Sir Paulias, who visited The National office to air his concern, said political leaders needed to respect the Constitution and exercise good leadership for the sake of the people.
“The only thing that can sustain peace for everyone through this turn of political events is to exercise Christian principles and values,’’ he said.
“You have the power to maintain peace by exercising forgiveness in this most difficult of times for the nation. We are going into the Christmas and New Year period where we all want to be with family and friends to enjoy the festive season in its true spirit.”
Sir Paulias said the leaders should respect the constitution for the sake of their people in the rural areas.
“As leaders our people need us right now,’’ he said.
“I am a village boy and I have found out that almost 87 percent of the seven million of our people live in the rural areas.
“And there is absolutely no development and services in most rural areas of the country because the leaders are living their lives in the cities.”
Apart from the leaders, Sir Paulias encouraged citizens who were either professionals or retired to go back home to their villages and help their people in whatever fields they were in.
“If I can be the head of state and go back home after my term has expired to help my people in the village then I can’t see anyone else finding
it hard,” he said.
Sir Paulias said he had been receiving so many calls from people wanting him to inform them about the  current political events.
He said they did not know that he was back home in Viviran village, Toma, in East New Britain.
He arrived in Port Moresby from his village on Tuesday to keep a close watch on the current political situation.

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia News - TV


Political stalemate has PNG seeing double


PNG clings to the hopes for peace in the wake of political turmoil.

 

 

 

 

 

 

15.12.2011
Source: ABC Radio Australia - 24H dans le Pacifique


La Papouasie Nouvelle-Guinée voit double


Toujours 2 Premiers ministres, 2 gouvernements et 2 forces de police, un cocktail explosif. L’impasse persiste et les tensions s’accentuent. Peter O’Neill et Sir Michael Somare se disent toujours Premier ministre et personne ne veut lâcher d’un pouce. Mercredi dernier, le Gouverneur Général, Michael Ogio, a suivi la décision de la Cour suprême et a en réinstallé Michael Somare dans ses fonctions de Premier ministre. Elle a jugé inconstitutionnelle l’élection de Peter O’Neill, l’actuel Premier ministre, en août dernier, alors que Michael Somare, Premier ministre d’alors, se faisait opérer du cœur à Singapour. Le Parlement avait sauté sur l’occasion pour déclarer la vacance du pouvoir et élire Peter O’Neill. Pour la Cour Suprême, il n’y avait pas vacance du pouvoir. Le Gouverneur Général a maintenant assermenté 19 ministres dont le nouveau Garde des Sceaux, Sir Arnold Amet, qui estime honteux que des députés de Peter O’Neil continuent d’occuper les sièges du gouvernement au Parlement. Les tensions dans les rues sont palpables, notamment autour de la résidence du Gouverneur général où des partisans de Peter O’Neill se sont rassemblés.

 


15.12.2011
Source: Radio New Zealand International


PNG’s Somare calls on public servants to remain neutral


Papua New Guinea’s re-instated leader Sir Michael Somare is calling on public servants "to remain neutral" and comply with a court order that revoked his ousting, as the political deadlock continues.

In the statement Sir Michael also repeated his earlier statement that the nation’s police commissioner Tom Kulunga had been replaced by Somare appointee Fred Yakasa.

Megan Whelan reports.

“The statement came just hours after more than half of PNG’s 109-member parliament voted to suspend the governor-general and replace him with a stand-in to swear in Peter O’Neill as prime minister. The MPs also voted to appeal to the Supreme Court to review its 3-2 decision to reinstate Sir Michael. In his statement, Sir Michael also sacked treasury department head Stephen Gibson and said cabinet had reinstated Somare appointee Gabriel Yer. The announcement came hours before Papua New Guinea’s religious ministers are due to give a news conference in which they are expected to ask Mr O’Neill and Sir Michael to reach an agreement on the nation’s leadership. The streets of the nation’s sometimes volatile capital, Port Moresby, have so far remained free of political violence. The ministers’ news conference is expected at 10 this morning local time.”

 

 

15.12.2011
Source:: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Transparency International says PM O'Neill acted within the law


In Papua New Guinea, one of the groups trying to ensure peace as the political standoff continues, is the anti-corruption NGO, Transparency International PNG.

The group's chairman Lawrence Stephens says it has legal advice that Peter O'Neill acted lawfully when he passed retrospective legislation this week declaring Sir Michael Somare's seat vacant.


Presenter: Tracee Hutchison
Lawrence Stephens, Transparency International PNG

 

  Listen here !   

 

 

15.12.2011
Source:: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Law expert see no easy solution in PNG


Since the crisis began in PNG, constitutional specialist, Dr Tony Regan from the Australian National University has been closely watching events in Port Moresby where he spent years at the University of PNG and the National Research Institute.


Presenter: Geraldine Coutts
Dr Tony Regan, Australian National University


  Listen here ! 


REGAN: It's very difficult when both sides really feel that there's a huge amount at stake with the elections coming, and in PNG perhaps more than many countries, control of government has a huge impact when you're preparing for elections. And I think on the side of the Somare group there's some uncertainty because he's being critical to that group, getting power and maintaining power they'll be very uncertain what'll happen if his ... is not so good, whether they'll be able to hold together their group as they prepare for the elections next year. So they need to get back into power whilst he's in good health then of course both sides think they've got the constitution on their side.


COUTTS: Well exactly we've been hearing solid arguments from both saying that they do have the constitution on their side, can they both be right?


REGAN: In a sense they both are because on the Somare side they've got a Supreme Court decision that says that he should be reinstated, on the O'Neill side they've legislation with a majority of parliament on Monday which retrospectively fixed up the defects in the appointment of Mr O'Neill as Prime Minister. So each does feel that they've got right on their side. I think the only way that conflict can be resolved is by Supreme Court making a ruling on the legislation that was passed by the parliament on Monday. If that's valid legislation then Mr O'Neill is validly in office, if that's invalid, if it's unconstitutional legislation, then Mr Somare is validly in office. That would be the quickest way to authoritatively resolve the issues. But it may be very difficult for the parties to do that, they're committed, they've already said they're in office.


COUTTS: Well exactly, how independent is the judiciary if one side can say well we don't abide by your rulings, as they've done?


REGAN: Well it's not that one side is not abiding by the ruling, it's that the legislation was passed with it fixed up, which has changed the circumstances which were ruled on by the court. So you'd have to take those changed circumstances of the new legislation back to the court, and then you would get an authoritative ruling. So I think O'Neill's not rejected the court, he's just trying to fix up the problems of the passing law, and until a court under the PNG system and the Australian system, the law passed by the parliament is valid law unless a court rules that it breaches the constitution in some way.


COUTTS: What about the fact as has been claimed that the ability to rule, the ability to give and get advice is probably not open to Sir Michael Somare given his health issues?


REGAN: Well that's a separate issue, the health issue is a separate one. The big problem I think for Somare is that at the moment he doesn't have the numbers in parliament. So even it were to be he's the Prime Minister he doesn't have the numbers, he wouldn't be able to govern, he could find himself in an impossible situation. Say the O'Neill side said alright, you are the Prime Minister, but you don't have the numbers we'll block you, Somare would be in an impossible situation. There would have to be an early election. Papua New Guinea's not really ready for an early election. I think as a result of all of these kinds of considerations the kinds of solutions that Paul Barker and others have made in the earlier part of your presentation, are really the best way to go. There needs to be some sort of compromise, some sort of coming together of the groups.


COUTTS: And how likely is that given the history and the traditions of the leaders, and in fact the leaders have caused the problems themselves and the people are fed up with it and have been making that point for some time?


REGAN: It's very difficult to see how there can be a compromise at this stage. But PNG's shown remarkable ability in the past to find ways, unexpected ways out of very difficult situations. You remember the Sandline situation in 1997, when it appeared that the army was split, different groups were trying to force the Chan government to resign and it looked like the PNG state was going to fall apart. People on both sides had good sense and it was able to be resolved. There's a great deal of effort going on in PNG at the moment to encourage leaders on both sides to put the interests of the country ahead of the interests of any individual or particular group. There's emails and text messages being sent by church groups and NGOs to leaders on all sides. I'm sure that the international community having lots of discussions with individual leaders, and the hope's got to be that that kind of pressure prevails.


COUTTS: Well what you're saying I think Dr this morning is that Peter O'Neill is probably the rightful owner of the job as PM?


REGAN: I would think that just at the moment that there's an argument for both sides, and that the simplest way out is to go back to the Supreme Court and resolve that. I wouldn't like to speculate who's got the strongest case...


COUTTS: But they've already been to court once and the court said Sir Michael Somare is rightfully the PM, so they go back to court again and get a different judgement?


REGAN: Yes if that's what happens. If the legal facts have changed, and that is what's happened, parliament's passed another law to change the situation on that ruling. There's no possibility really of parliament keeping on passing laws, that's one law that says ...what was wrong in August. If the court were to rule on that and say that that's valid, that clarifies it. If it's invalid it clarified it the other way. This isn't a particularly unusual thing. So it's not a matter of the O'Neill side rejected what the court said, it's a matter of saying well we've now fixed this up and you can then ask the court is that valid?


COUTTS: And is Peter O'Neill likely to take it back to court?


REGAN: I don't know, I have no idea what they're planning to do, that would be my suggestion of one way of getting out of the situation we're in. The danger now is that people won't be willing to do that, that everybody's digging themselves in too deep.


COUTTS: Well how much longer can this go on, because the situation's volatile, there are troops and police on the streets in numbers now, how much longer can this go on? It's a bit of a Noah's Ark, we've got two Governors Generals, two PMs, two police commissioners?


REGAN: I don't know, one would hope that it doesn't go on longer at all. It's not just PNG, any country which finds itself in a situation like this very, very difficult to manage. It does put a great deal of strain on the whole system.


COUTTS: Well it points to the fact that there are probably holes in the constitution anyway, what needs to be stitched up so this cannot happen again?


REGAN: There's no constitutional system in the world that doesn't have some holes in it. You can pass amendment after amendment, the PNG constitution is one of the longest, one of the most detailed in the world. It's got all sorts of things in it which are far better than say the Australian constitution. For example the reserve powers of the Governor General that were there in 1975, not really properly understood before that, that enabled the Governor General to dismiss Mr Whitlam. Well the PNG constitution doesn't give any reserve powers to the Governor General, it tries to avoid that sort of problem, and yet it ended up in this situation with the Governor General having to make the kind of choice he would have had to make if he had reserve powers. Really the issue should have gone to the court, not to the Governor General. So it's the way or manage a constitution that causes problems rather than the constitution itself.

 

  

15.12.2011
Source:: ABC Radio Australia - Pacific Beat


Constitutional crisis continues in PNG


As Papua New Guinea's political deadlock enters its third day there's no indication that a breakthrough is imminent.

Both Sir Michael Somare and Peter O'Neill have only hardened their claims to the country's Prime Ministership. Non-government groups are warning the situation is becoming dangerous and say the politicians need to out aside their differences.


Presenter: Papua New Guinea correspondent Liam Fox reports

 

  Listen here !   

 

Liam Fox reporting from PNG


PNG now has two prime ministers, two cabinets, two police commissioners and two governors-general.
PNG Prime Minister Peter O'Neill
Deposed Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare
PNG politician Sam Abal
Paul Barker, PNG Institute of National Affairs

 

 

 Click here to view 01.12.2011 to 14.12.2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

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