|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Papua New Guinea in legal battle with mercenary outfit
By Peter Symonds
11 March 1999
The British mercenary company Sandline International is engaged
in a series of unprecedented legal moves in Europe, the US and
Australia to seize $US25 million in funds from the Papua New Guinea
government, which has refused to make the final payments on a
contract signed in 1997 to mount a military operation against
separatist guerrillas on Bougainville Island.
Last Friday, Sandline sought to compel the Banque Bruxelles
Lambert (BLL) to hand over $US6 million in agricultural subsidies
donated to Papua New Guinea by the European Commission. The money
was deposited in the Brussels bank last year in the name of the
central bank of PNG under an EC scheme to compensate developing
countries for declining agricultural commodity prices.
PNG Prime Minister Bill Skate reacted angrily to Sandline's
actions, saying: "First they want to carpet-bomb Bougainville,
now they are attempting to take money that is intended to pay
for medicine and build hospitals in Papua New Guinea." Sandline
has not yet moved against another BLL account holding money destined
for victims of the last year's tidal wave disaster in the Aitape
area of PNG.
At the end of February, Sandline obtained a court order to
freeze the accounts of three PNG diplomatic missions and has warned
that it will take similar measures in the US and Australia. Sandline's
commercial adviser Michael Grunberg has made further legal threats,
warning that comments by Skate that Sandline had been engaged
by the former Chan government to "murder Papua New Guineans
on Bougainville" for "blood money" were potentially
libelous.
Sandline International signed a secret $36 million contract
with the previous PNG government of prime minister Julius Chan
to "conduct offensive operations on Bougainville" in
order to "render the BRA [Bougainville Revolutionary Army]
militarily ineffective and repossess the Panguna mine". The
huge copper mine at Panguna, operated by the British-Australian
Rio Tinto mining conglomerate, has been shut since 1989 by the
BRA, resulting in a substantial loss of revenue to the PNG government,
which is a major share-holder.
Sandline was to provide 70 staff, including aircrew and aircraft
engineers, intelligence and equipment operatives, mission operators,
and ground, technical and support personnel to operate in conjunction
with the PNG Defence Force. Equipment to be supplied included
helicopter gunships armed with multiple rocket launchers, transport
helicopters, heavy machine guns, automatic grenade launchers,
electronic surveillance equipment and large stocks of ammunition.
Details of the contract and the military preparations were
leaked in the Australian press. The Australian government put
substantial pressure on the Chan government to abandon the deal
and encouraged opposition politicians such as Skate and army officers
including PNG Defence Force chief Jerry Singarok to challenge
Chan. Amid sizeable anti-government protests in the capital Port
Moresby, Chan was forced to stand down in March and the Sandline
operation was called off.
Australia, the former colonial power in PNG, was not opposed
in principle to a military assault on the BRA. Australian governments
had supplied equipment and training for the PNG military, which
had failed throughout the previous eight years to defeat the BRA.
The Sandline operation, however, cut directly across preparations
by the Australian and New Zealand governments to negotiate a deal
directly with sections of the BRA leadership to end the fighting
and reopen the mine.
Skate, who replaced Chan as Prime Minister, has refused to
pay the remaining money owed to Sandline. Last year an international
arbitration panel found that the contract was valid under international
law and ordered PNG to pay the second half of the fee, plus legal
costs. The Skate government is seeking to recover the initial
$18 million paid by Chan to Sandline in a legal action in court
in Brisbane, Australia due to begin on March 11.
Sandline's representative Grunberg has been at pains to play
down its legal actions, accusing the PNG government of being "unfair
and misleading" and failing to meet its obligations. But
the entire affair highlights the growing use of these private
"guns for hire" by governments and corporations around
the world.
Sandline signed the contract with the PNG government but subcontracted
out the provision of military personnel to the South African-based
Executive Outcomes, which is notorious throughout Africa for its
mercenary operations. Executive Outcomes was hired by the Angolan
government in 1993 to fight UNITA rebels, receiving in return
rich mineral concessions. The company, which has close links to
mining and oil corporations, was also involved in shoring up the
regime of Valentine Strasser in Sierra Leone and is reportedly
active in more than 30 African countries.
See Also:
Mercenary scandal
continues to plague PNG government
[5 November 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |