Monday, June 3, 2013

Enga students to study in Philippines

Enga Governor Grand Chief Peter Ipatas MP

Source: Post Courier, 3rdJune, 2013
 
One hundred and twenty Engan students will this year go to Philippines to undertake studies in various technical trades.
This is possible, courtesy of the Enga provincial government (EPG) under the auspices of “action” Governor, Grand Chief Peter Ipatas who has placed K4.5 million for this purpose.
The funding came from the Enga Childrens Fund, a facility created from the sale and proceeds from the EPG equity in the Porgera gold mine project.
Enga’s “action” Governor, Grand Chief Peter Ipatas made this announcement when officiating the second culture show of the St. Paul’s Lutheran Secondary school at Pausa, Enga province on Saturday June 1.
“It’s no place for wantoks but for the best to go” and anyone, grade 10 and 12 leavers from the Enga province are eligible, and if interested can apply when applications are opened (advertised) in two weeks-time, Ipatas said.
He boasted of the 16-year-old free education policy of his Government, describing it as “the most successful policy ever by any one provincial government since Independence, that has actually influenced the National Government to adopt”.
Ipatas reiterated his Government’s fullest and continuous commitment to funding free education for all Engan students, until “Enga tops the country with the highest number of professional people in the workforce”.
Mr Ipatas then presented a cheque of K20,000 to the school’s show organising committee, to assist in some of their costs while announcing an additional K430,000 funding for the school by EPG.
He then cut the ribbon to officially open the school’s completed projects such as the new Ludtke library, school clinic, a duplex classroom, three teachers houses, a new school grand stand, and new look school gate.
Thousands gathered to witness this fun-filled day that was coloured up with student participating in their traditional singsing groups.
Also in attendance was Gutnius Lutheran Church Bishop, David Piso.
School principal, Mr Gerry Mark thanked Governor Ipatas for his continuous support to education in the province.
Mr Mark said his school was proud to host its second cultural day which aims to promote the Vision 2050 goals on preservation of culture and secondly, commissioning of the schools various projects.

Wabag MP Robert Ganim's 10 Million Kina Budget Praised

Wabag MP Robert Ganim

Source: The National, Monday 3rd June 2013
WABAG MP Robert Ganim has been commended for a well-documented budget of K10 million for the district services improvement program (DSIP).
Enga provincial administrator Dr Samson Amean told a provincial management team last week that it was first time for the Ganim and the joint district planning and budget priorities committee to have a budget plan with realistic priorities on spending.
Amean said the allocation of funds was in line with development targets of the national government’s Vision 2050 and various medium term strategies.
He said Enga would go a long way if other districts did the same as Wabag.
“I am happy that the MP for Wabag has come up with a well-documented budget plan that reflected the aspirations of the national government’s long and short term plans,” Amean said.
He said it was the role of the district administrators to advise the MPs on procedures involved in coming up with plans on how to use public funds so that the people in the villages were the ultimate beneficiaries.
Amean’s comments followed public speculation that many MPs only had “shopping lists” for DSIP funds without following proper budget expenditure procedures.
It is understood that service delivery and project implementation in a particular district in Enga had come to a standstill because the local MP did not follow these procedures and did not hold any budget priority committee meetings.
A senior public servant, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the acting district administrator for that district was still waiting for the MP to organise the operation of the district while other districts were ready to undergo their second quarterly budget review.
Governor Peter Ipatas raised concern two weeks ago about at least one MP’s decision to engage Western Highlands provincial authorities to administer road redevelopment in his district.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Pundari Tours InterOil's Refinery at Napa-Napa

Pundari lauds InterOil for efficient ecology handling

Hon. John Pundari MP., Minister for Enivironment & Conservation, Papua New Guinea

Source: The National, Monday 20th May 2013 

RESOURCE companies in the country should ensure they apply sound management system in their operations,  Environment and Conservation Minister John Pundari says.

He said this during a tour of InterOil’s refinery facility at Napanapa, outside of Port Moresby last week.
During a briefing with the company, Pundari was impressed with InterOil’s environmental management and monitoring practices. He said the refinery facility was small, however, it uses some of the world’s recognised standards that are less harmful to the environment.

“This is small refinery but it introduces some of the world’s best standards as far as water treatment is concerned.  InterOil says it puts more emphasis on waste management and monitoring activities while using state of the art facilities. The company is also investing about US$250,000 on incinerator for treating solid and liquid wastes.

Friday, April 19, 2013

THE PACIFIC AXIS SHIFTS


An outstanding success: Voreqe Bainimarama arrives in Port Moresby (Photo:ABC)
An outstanding success: Voreqe Bainimarama arrives in Port Moresby (Photo:ABC)

There’s elation in Fijian Government circles over the highly successful outcome of this week’s visit to Papua New Guinea by the Prime Minister, Voreqe Bainimarama, at the head of the biggest Fijian trade and investment mission ever to visit another country. The original aims of the visit were ambitious enough – to lay more of the foundation for the creation of a single, integrated market for the countries of the Melanesian Spearhead Group. Yet the results exceeded even the most ambitious expectations of the PM, his Foreign Minister, Ratu Inoke Kubuabola, and the trade delegation of 65 Fijian business leaders from 47 companies.
Commodore Bainimarama described himself as being “on a high”. And the normally ultra-calm and measured Permanent Secretary for Trade and Industry, Shaheen Ali, said he was “overwhelmed” by the “marvelous” outcome of the visit. Within hours, some of the Fijian companies were already receiving orders and entering into agreements with PNG suppliers and distributors. And by day two of the mission, two more Fijian businesses had registered as foreign investors in PNG. This is in addition to the F$180-million investment by Fiji’s national superannuation fund, the FNPF, in Bemobile – a major telecommunications provider in PNG and Solomon Islands – and the management takeover of its operations by Vodafone Fiji.

The Fijian Government sees itself as equal partners with PNG in ultimately leading the other MSG countries into an economic union to improve the lives of every Melanesian. There’s a notable absence of rivalry of the sort we’ve witnessed over the years in Europe, where Germany, France and Britain have consistently maneuvered for advantage in the European Union. As Fiji sees it, Papua New Guinea has the biggest market – seven million people compared to around 900,000 here – plus the massive wealth that flows from its minerals and energy sectors. And Fiji has an established manufacturing base, a skilled and educated workforce and is positioned at the crossroads of the Pacific. In other words, their assets are complimentary. Each country has its particular challenges – Papua New Guinea with corruption and lawlessness and Fiji still grappling with finally putting to rest the divisions that have hampered its development since Independence. Yet there’s a strong feeling on both sides that working in tandem in a joint leadership role is the best way to improve the lives of their own citizens and their Melanesian brothers and sisters in the smaller MSG states.
There’s no doubt that Melanesian solidarity generally was a big beneficiary of this visit. As Commodore Bainimarama put it, PNG -Fiji ties go way beyond the mutual respect and cooperation that is the traditional benchmark of diplomacy. The peoples of both countries genuinely like each other, enjoy each other’s company and share a vision of a stronger Melanesia building a common economic and political future for all its citizens. And of course, both Governments bear significant grudges against the most dominant power in the region, Australia, which they regard as generally arrogant, overbearing and indifferent to Melanesian sensibilities. The same applies to New Zealand, albeit to a lesser extent.
As Grubsheet has written before, Australia’s mishandling of its Pacific neighbours – and especially Fiji – is a mistake of historical proportions. Its failure to fully engage with them, let alone comprehend their challenges, and its propensity to prescribe and even hector, has driven influential Pacific countries like Fiji and PNG further into each other’s arms and the arms of others outside the region. The Australian trade union heavies and their stooge of a Prime Minister who currently determine Pacific policy – and the foreign affairs establishment which implements it – seem to have little concept of Melanesian sensitivities and protocols. It’s well known in Suva than even the mention of Australia can trigger a surge of anger in Prime Minister Bainimarama, who feels sorely aggrieved that Canberra chose not to even  sit down with him, let alone try and comprehend his reforms. During this visit, the PM kept his counsel, adhering to the diplomatic convention of not criticising another country on someone else’s soil. In fact, it was the Papua New Guineans who made unflattering public comments about Australia. PNG’s Trade Minister, Richard Maru, accused Canberra of using his country as a “dumping ground” for its goods and said it wasn’t in Australia’s interests for the Melanesian countries to become self sufficient in anything. If that was what was being said publicly, then we can be sure that the language behind the scenes would have been a lot more colourful. The shared grievances of both governments about Australia would have been fully aired.

Certainly, there was general astonishment about the way in which this visit appeared to have been downplayed by Australia’s national broadcaster, the ABC, which also has a significant presence in PNG. Aside from one story that correctly cited a series of “historic” agreements, the rest of the visit was generally ignored. Indeed on the first day, Radio Australia’s current affairs program, Pacific Beat, chose to lead with an item criticising Fiji’s constitutional process rather than give weight to the region’s two biggest and most influential island countries forging closer ties. It merely reinforced the notion in Fijian minds of the ABC’s chronic bias against the Bainimarama Government and Radio Australia as a lapdog of Canberra’s foreign policy. By any normal journalistic standard, this was a big Pacific story of significant interest to the populations of PNG and Fiji and, to a lesser extent, those of Solomon Islands, Vanuatu and the Kanaks of New Caledonia, who make up the rest of the MSG. It was buried.

Is Australia sensitive about the fact that its so-called smart sanctions against Fiji haven’t turned out to be smart at all? You bet. American diplomats report that far from modifying their policies in the face of defeat, the Australians have stepped up their efforts internationally to isolate Fiji. Was Commodore Bainimarama’s visit a collective two-finger salute to Australia? Well, maybe just a little. Yet the overriding sentiment in official circles in Suva nowadays is that Australian attitudes are irrelevant. In any event, Blind Freddy can see that Julia Gillard’s Government is toast -with a 29 per cent primary vote in the most recent opinion poll – and that Australian policy towards Fiji is bound to be more realistic, if not more favourable, when the Coalition’s Tony Abbott storms into power in the Australian election in September. A full year out from the promised Fijian poll, Abbott and his likely foreign minister, Julie Bishop, will have ample time to end Labor’s vendetta and rebuild the relationship.

There were many highpoints of this visit, not least the Bemobile signing -Fiji’s biggest foreign investment on behalf of all Fijians through the FNPF in one of the most dynamic sectors of the global economy- telecommunications. The Government’s critics continually harp on about the FNPF putting the retirement savings of ordinary Fijians at risk. Yet with Vodafone Fiji running Bemobile, the potential to grow that investment seems rock solid. In Fiji, there are more mobile phones than people – a penetration rate of 105 per cent. In Papua New Guinea, the penetration rate is 35 per cent. That’s a lot of potential customers and a lot of mobile phones.

Among other highlights of the visit:
·      The announcement that citizens of both countries will no longer require visas to visit each other. This is on top of existing plans to achieve a seamless flow of labour between the MSG countries.
 ·      The provision for retired Fijian civil servants – who are obliged to vacate their jobs at 55 – to work in Papua New Guinea to boost the local skills base.
 ·      The plan for a permanent Fiji Trade Mission in Port Moresby and the continuation of the joint effort to break down the remaining impediments to trade and investment, with a view to developing a common market.

Most important of all – at least in the shorter term – is the financial support Papua New Guinea has offered Fiji to conduct its election in September 2014 and introduce the first genuine parliamentary democracy in the country’s history of one-person, one vote, one value.

According to officials travelling with Commodore Bainimarama, the PM couldn’t believe his ears when the amount of the PNG contribution was announced out of the blue by his opposite number, Peter O’Neill. “What did he say?”, he asked. At first, the Ministry of Information flashed a media release that the amount was 15-million Kina. But it soon became clear that the fifteen was actually FIFTY. A sense of astonishment, delight and gratitude swept the Fijian delegation and text messages lit up in the corridors of power in Suva. More than 40-million Fijian dollars!  By any standards and especially in the Pacific, it is an astonishingly generous amount.

This contribution has sealed the Fiji-PNG relationship and laid to rest the concerns of some that PNG was more intent on cementing its own interests during this visit than pursuing a genuinely equal partnership. It means that Fiji no longer requires other outside assistance to finance the poll, and especially from those countries or groups of countries like the European Union, which appear more interested in using the money as political leverage than in assisting Fijians to determine their own future. Instead of having election observers from the EU – as happened controversially in 2006 – the Prime Minister wants election observers from PNG and the other MSG countries. He accused the EU observers of endorsing a “flawed” election in 2006 and said Fiji wanted an observer group with “integrity”. This will not be music to the ears of Fiji’s voluble EU Ambassador, Andrew Jacobs, who before the PNG announcement, was telling people that Fiji would need to  approach the EU for assistance and accept certain conditions that are now decidedly moot.

With Commodore Bainimarama having now travelled across the world to New York to chair a meeting of the G77 Plus China and the rest of the Fijian delegation making its way home, it’s clear that this visit has been an outstanding success. History may also judge it as the week that Fiji and PNG cemented their common future and came to realise more fully the potential they have – working together – to establish the MSG as the pre-eminent regional grouping and its integration as the best way to improve the lives of all Melanesians. One thing is certain. The axis of power in the Pacific is gradually shifting, whether Australia, NZ and their Polynesian client states such as Samoa like it or not.  

Thursday, April 18, 2013

PNG-UK trade takes off

Source: The National, Thursday 18th April 2013
 By MALUM NALU

Hugo Swire MP -Minister of State for the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office

TRADE between the United Kingdom and Papua New Guinea is growing fast and worth almost 160 million pounds (K531.8 million) a year.
Minister of State for the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office,
“In 2012, goods worth than 120 million pounds (K398.8 million) from Papua New Guinea were exported to the UK,” Swire said.
“Not to mention our import of six of your finest rugby players to play in the UK Super League.
“Distance matters less in the modern world.
“Spices and commodities like tea, coffee, palm oil, shell fish and gold from Papua New Guinea and the Pacific region are brought and consumed in the UK.
“The finest produce from across the globe finds its way to Fortnum and Mason, Her Majesty the Queen’s grocer in Piccadilly,, and their shelves are stocked with Papua New Guinean products like coffee and chocolate.
“Such is their universal appeal that the UK is the second biggest importer of Papua New Guinean produce in the EU – only Germany imports more .
“And goods produced just a few miles from here can be found in independent corner shops across the UK, from Cornwall to Aberdeen.”
Swire said it was not only finished products that were being imported.
“Raw materials also form a vital part of our shared economy,” he said.
“New Britain Oils Ltd has invested 18 million pounds (K59.8 million) in a state-of-the-art processing plant in Liverpool.
“This has created new British jobs and increased demand for sustainable-certified palm oil from plantations in Papua New Guinea.
“Just a few weeks ago a British company, Heritage Oil Plc, announced an expansion into Papua New Guinea’s gas market, acquiring operating rights and a substantial interest in two sites.
“The EU-Papua New Guinea Economic Partnership Agreement, which allows duty free access for PNG products entering the European market, can only increase trade – to the immense benefit of the Papua New Guinea economy and society.
“Indeed, trade between Britain and the whole of the Pacific is on the rise.”
Swire said PNG already had the largest economy in the Pacific and had the resources and potential to grow even more rapidly.
“A partnership with the UK will help to drive this long-term economic growth offering trade links, access to European markets, increased foreign investment and world-class expertise in the protection and sustainable development of natural resources,” he said.
“What I have seen and heard so far gives me great reason to be optimistic about our shared future, and I very much look forward to further successes.”
Hugo Swire, who is in Port Moresby for the Commonwealth Youth Ministers meeting, told a Port Moresby Chamber of Commerce and Industry breakfast at the Royal Papua Yacht Club yesterday that this was a significant achievement in the current financial climate.