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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Signs of disintegration in Papua New Guinea security forces
By a correspondent
17 October 2000
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So far this year two of the three largest island nations in
the South Pacific have become engulfed in political turmoil. Both
the attempted coup in Fiji and the ousting of the government in
the Solomons have exposed the advanced state of decay in the state
structures of these countries. In the former, an elite anti-terrorist
group was involved in taking the entire government hostage; in
the latter the police force collapsed with its members defecting
to rival ethnic-based militia gangs.
Comments by Prime Minister Mekere Morauta last week in Papua
New Guinea (PNG)the largest Pacific Island nationreveal
that things are similar there. Overseas, including within
our own region, there is growing instability, he said. At
home we are trying to cope with a legacy of economic, social and
political turmoil... unfortunately, we have varying degrees of
breakdown in all three services.
The prime minister announced that his government had endorsed
the findings of a taskforce review of the armed forces set up
in March after disgruntled soldiers took to the streets of Port
Moresby to protest about living conditions at the Murray and Taurama
barracks. While most of the review has been kept secret, it concluded
that the armed forces no longer had the capacity to defend the
country's national interests or to adequately look after the basic
needs of its personnel. Management structures and systems were
either not appropriate or not working.
The review found that soldiers were paid late, did not receive
outstanding entitlements, and sometimes lacked food. Sleeping
quarters and uniforms were in short supply. Some soldiers were
not housed because hundreds had been discharged but still had
outstanding claims. As well, some off-duty soldiers had apparently
become involved in criminal or raskol gangs.
An incident last month gives some indication of the breakdown
of discipline and the level of tensions between different sections
of the security forces.
In the early hours of September 23, police in Port Moresby
killed an off-duty soldier, Private Bernard Gausi, 24, who had
allegedly been involved in a robbery. As the news spread, soldiers
from Port Moresby's two main barracksTaurama and Murraydemonstrated
outside the Boroko police headquarters. About 100 soldiers recovered
Gausi's body from the Port Moresby General Hospital morgue and
displayed it at the police station, demanding an explanation.
A police car was set on fire as soldiers surrounded the station,
throwing rocks and firing weapons at random.
Police fired off a full magazine of machine gun rounds over
the soldiers' heads to stop them invading the police station to
get at the officers responsible for the death. The soldiers ran
away, but later 500 returned to confront police. Rocks hit Port
Moresby Metropolitan Police Commander, Chief Superintendent John
Marru and the Boroko police commander, Chief Superintendent Tom
Kilunga, as they tried to negotiate with the soldiers. Soldiers
later held a sit-down protest in the Boroko shopping precinct.
The PNG cabinet met and ordered a coronial inquest into Gausi's
death.
On September 24, Brigadier-General Carl Marlpo ordered all
troops to return to their barracks: All servicemen must
refrain from any further action at this time. I want the commanding
officers and unit commanders to take their men home and not come
to the streets to try to take the law into their hands. That is
my direction to everyone in the force here in Port Moresby.
Parliament was placed under heavy police guard on September
25 as Speaker Bernard Narokobi adjourned a session for lack of
a quorum. Only 32 of the 107 members attended the sitting due
to rumours that angry soldiers would march to the parliament to
present a petition to the government.
The soldiers claim that Gausi was bashed to death. A PNG Defence
Force medical officer told the Post Courier newspaper that
Gausi appeared to have been beaten and kicked. A gunshot wound
on the man's left arm did not appear sufficiently serious to have
caused his deaththe likely cause was internal bleeding following
a beating. From the time I picked up the body I found the
marks of boots on these body parts.
Police have promised a full investigation into the shooting.
They insist that Gausi was part of a raskol (criminal)
gang that broke into a family's home near Taurama Barracks, robbed
the occupants and stole a vehicle. They allege that he was shot
dead during a pursuit. In addition, they say that Gausi was due
to appear in court on a previous charge of attempted murder.
Contradicting the military's account, and armed with the post
mortem results, metropolitan police chief John Marru said the
cause of death was a single shotgun wound. Marru said one bullet
had entered Gausi's left shoulder, penetrating his left lung and
ending up in his right lung.
This incident is not the first serious outbreak of dissension
within the security forces this year. Only one week earlier, during
Independence Day celebrations, soldiers at Moem Barracks near
Wewak went on a rampage and set fire to buildings. They were angry
that their mess had closed and no food was available.
The situation within the police force is just as bad. According
to the Post Courier: Until the public can be reassured
that the RPNGC [police force], is doing everything it can to cut
down on violence, drunkenness, and corruption within its own ranks,
the level of cooperation with police will remain abysmal.
A coroner's inquest is underway into the deaths of five men
who attempted to rob a Port Moresby bank last December. Witnesses
have given clear evidence that several of the men were killed
after they surrendered. Five other current murder investigations
in Port Moresby involve allegations against police. In two of
the cases, serving police officers have been charged.
Adding to the volatility is the fact that weaponry from the
army and the police has found its way into urban and rural areas
over the past decade. A fatal hand grenade attack in Port Moresby
last weekthe third of its kind in the past yearled
PNG's Police Commissioner John Wakon to urge people to hand in
to the police any grenades they have in their possession.
The unrest in the security forces is not simply a product of
poor pay and conditions, but reflects broader political and social
instability. Political life is dominated by loosely-knit factions
and short-lived alliances aimed at taking power for the benefit
of their own business and political backers, and to satisfy the
parochial needs of their own constituencies. The rivalries have
increasingly embroiled the police and the military, undermining
their ability to serve the broader national interests of the ruling
class and corroding the morale and discipline of their members.
In 1997, a protest movement involving sections of the army
forced Prime Minister Julius Chan to resign after it was revealed
that he had hired mercenaries from Sandline International to fight
against the separatist Bougainville Revolutionary Army (BRA).
Chan turned to Sandline after PNG Defence Forces had been defeated
by the BRA in several attempts to regain control of Bougainville
and its huge Panguna copper mine. Chan's plans cut across those
of Australia and New Zealand, which had concluded from the army's
defeats that it was necessary to strike a deal with the BRA to
end the war.
Opposition politicians working closely with Defence Forces
chief Brigadier General Jerry Singirok exploited widespread popular
resentment over the impact of Chan's economic policies to stir
up protests against corruption and the Sandline revelations.
Singirok issued a 48-hour deadline for Chan to resign then refused
to stand down when Chan sacked him. At the high point of the crisis,
thousands of students, unemployed, civil servants, workers and
soldiers surrounded the parliament building, forcing Chan and
his colleagues to flee in disguise.
Singirok was not disciplined over what amounted to a mutiny,
but rather over claims that he had been involved in taking money
from the British-based military supply company J & S Franklin.
Under previous prime minister Bill Skate, he was even reinstated
as head of the Defence Forces. The entire affair revealed the
degree to which the armed forces and the police have become vehicles
for regional, sectional and individual interests. The latest series
of incidents, and Mekere's remarks, indicate that the internal
rot is deepening.
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