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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Papua New Guinea ministers sacked as Australia applies pressure
for economic restructuring
By Frank Gaglioti
21 March 2000
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this version to print
Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Mekere Morauta on March 9 suddenly
sacked three cabinet ministers and demoted a fourth on the eve
of an Australian ministerial delegation, heightening the political
tensions in PNG.
Mekere sacked Petroleum and Energy Minister Tommy Tomscoll,
Labour and Employment Minister Chris Haiveta and Correctional
Institutions Services Minister Daniel Kapi. Vincent Auali was
demoted from the Corporatisation and Privatisation Ministry to
become Minister of State. Mekere accused the ministers of manoeuvring
to destabilise his seven-month-old government.
Haiveta and Kapi are both members of the Pangu Pati, one of
the governing coalition parties, while Tomscoll and Auali are
from the Prime Minister's own Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM),
which forms the biggest faction in the PNG parliament.
Tensions have arisen within the government over the implementation
of International Monetary Fund (IMF) demands for far reaching
restructuring of the PNG economy. So determined is Mekere that
the privatisations go ahead unhindered that he has personally
taken over the Corporatisation and Privatisation Ministry, as
well as Treasury and Finance.
The dismissals coincided with two leaks in the Australian media
of an Australian government document giving a damning assessment
of the PNG government and a World Bank report outlining the dire
straits of the PNG economy. Both leaks were clearly high-level,
designed to pressure the PNG government to continue implementing
the dictates of the IMF and World Bank, in particular the selling
off of all government enterprises.
The Melbourne Age published details of an Australian
Cabinet report written by Foreign Minister Alexander Downer. Under
the headline, PNG stuck in a rut, Cabinet told, one
correspondent commented: Corrupt interests continue to thwart
political reform in Papua New Guinea, political pressures still
determine some major appointments, the country's administration
remains weak and its defence force corrupt and badly managed.
The article warned against expecting a successful outcome of the
reform process within the next decade, even though
Mekere's leadership represented the best hope.
A second Age article, headlined Why PNG's troubles
are bad news for us, specifically referred to PNG's military
and police capacity. The cabinet report expressed little confidence
that the PNG Defence Force would remain loyal to an elected government.
It pointed to the border with Indonesian West Papua as a possible
future flashpoint and said the PNG military would not have the
capacity to respond. The PNG government was also incapable of
resolving the continuing strife on the island of Bougainville,
where several hundred Australian and other regional troops are
stationed as part of plans to end a secessionist war.
PNG Foreign Affairs Minister John Kaputin summoned Australian
High Commissioner Nick Warner to explain the content and leaking
of the Australian cabinet paper. Kaputin expressed the hope that
the leak was not part of a deliberate destabilisation, referring
to the Australian government and media destabilisation of the
previous Skate government in July 1999.
The Australian Financial Review continued in a similar
vein as the Age when it detailed the leaked World Bank
report in a feature article entitled PNG at the edge of
an abyss. It's the business environment from hell,
the article stated. Interest rates 23 percent. Inflation
14 percent. Unemployment 36 percent. Corruption endemic. Only
a third of children are at primary school and only half the population
is literate. Central bank viability is threatened. Top of the
world table in violent crime.
The article detailed the endemic cronyism in PNG at all levels
of government. It specifically referred to one of the sacked ministers,
Haiveta, as having been involved in a property scam without any
charges or disciplinary action being taken.
The World Bank report concluded that cynicism is now
widespread, the morale of the civil service has never been lower
... all public institutions are in a state of decline ... and
social and economic risks are seen as too overwhelming for investment.
The World Bank PNG director Klaus Rohland said it was becoming
increasingly difficult to convince bank shareholders to invest
further funds in PNG.
All this emerged in the Australian media as Downer, Defence
Minister John Moore and four Australian senators were making their
way to PNG for the 12th PNG-Australia Ministerial Forum. At stake
for the PNG government was the next payment of promised funds
from Australia, Japan and various financial agencies.
The payment included $US100 million from the IMF, $100 million
from the World Bank, structural adjustment loans of $30 million
and $50 million from Australia and Japan respectively, as well
as a $10 million grant from China and another $10 million from
Korea for structural adjustment programs. Mekere's office complained
earlier this year that no extra offshore funding was received
in the last five months of 1999. In the last fortnight the Kina
sank to its lowest ever rate of US31c.
Kaputin opened the forum by condemning the Australian cabinet
leak and declaring that Australia was shouting from the
rooftops. He described the proposed Australian aid as having
a boomerang effect and said the arrangements were
so complex and so closely tied to Australian commercial
interests ... that the real benefits to Papua New Guinea are only
a fraction of the amounts which appear to be spent.
The joint forum endorsed the Mekere government's restoration
of relations with the IMF and the World Bank, the sweeping privatisation
plan and proposed constitutional changes. The two governments
accepted that their defence agreement would have to be renegotiated
and that the Bougainville crisis could only be resolved in a framework
where it remained part of PNG. Steps were taken to secure the
border with Indonesian West Papua by building a Highlands Highway
and other national roads and airports to make the area accessible.
Downer announced a $US73.2 million currency swap.
The PNG government has just accepted the report of an International
Advisory Group headed by Professor Ross Garnaut, an Australian
National University academic and chairman of Lihir Gold, the largest
gold mine in the world. The report recommended that all major
state assets be prepared for privatisationby first being
made profitable.
The government announced that Finance Pacific, the only state
business making a profit, be the first to be privatised. A controlling
interest would be sold through competitive auction at the end
of this year and the remaining shares would be sold to the public
within 12 to 18 months of the auction. Air Niugini, Telikom, Post
PNG, Harbors Board and the water assets would be offered for sale
by the first half of 2001. In this way, the government hopes to
pay off all government debt by 2002.
Mekere cited Air Niugini as a typical example of the general
state of public enterprises. Last year the government poured in
$US39 million to keep it afloat, but it is still losing $US310,000
per month. It is expected that over 1,000 jobs will be shed to
make it competitive. Altogether, the privatisation program will
drive thousands more Papuan New Guineans into unemployment.
The World Bank report reveals some of the widespread poverty
that already exists in PNG. More than a third of the population
lives below the poverty line. Health services are more than four
hours away for the poorest half of the population and more than
60 percent of the population relies on unsafe drinking water.
The report's main concern, however, is the impact on investment.
Crime is now so severe that it is the single biggest deterrent
to business and investment, it comments, and is costing
firms $US122 million a year.
These sentiments were echoed by business representatives who
attended the PNG-Australia forum for the second time. They demanded
that the government do more to crack down on crime and unrest.
Papua New Guinea Australia Business Council president Chris Byrne
said, the lack of opportunity of young people joining the
workforce has been a significant factor in the law and order issues.
The lack of police, judiciary and correctional institutes to deal
with these offenders does not help ... Once people feel secure
in this country, they will far more likely reinvest in PNG rather
than remit overseas as much as they can the instant it is earned.
See Also:
Papua New Guinea budget targets
public sector workers
[11 January 2000]
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