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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Bougainville autonomy talks to resume
By Peter Byrne and Tim Joy
23 January 2001
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Talks on the future status of the resource-rich Papua New Guinea
island of Bougainville will resume this week following a meeting
earlier this month between Bougainville leaders and the relevant
PNG minister.
A joint media statement issued by the new PNG Minister for
Bougainville Affairs Moi Avei and Bougainville politicians, including
the provincial Governor John Momis and Bougainville Peoples Congress
president Joseph Kabui, expressed confidence in reaching
an agreement on Referendum and Autonomy for Bougainville.
Momis and Kabui stated: We can see the signs of a real
breakthrough on the referendum issue that resulted from a willingness
of both sides to compromise in the interests of peace. We are
looking forward to the next round of talks with genuine hope.
Precisely what the compromise may be is not entirely
clear, but the leaders will convene on January 26, after a meeting
of technical officers on January 22.
These moves follow the breakdown of talks at the end of last
year. Despite negotiations dating back to mid-1997, and a new
series of discussions during 2000, the final round
of meetings was adjourned at the start of December. The Bougainville
representatives left the talks claiming that the government had
done a back flip on a promise to hold a referendum
on independence.
At that stage, Momis and Kabui warned that the secessionist
Bougainville Revolutionary Army (BRA) would resume armed resistance
unless the government agreed to an independence ballot.
The deal now under discussion is likely to involve the transfer
of powers to an expanded provincial government, with some form
of referendum to ratify the arrangement. Kabui, an ex-BRA commander,
recently called for Bougainville to become a nation within
a nation. He has reportedly demanded that Bougainville have
its own police force and judiciary, and powers over international
trade, currency, taxation and immigration. It appears that Kabui
would only leave some foreign affairs and defence powers in the
hands of the PNG government.
Last November, the National reported a source close
to the Bougainville delegation stating that such arrangements
could undercut those in the BRA who are seeking a secession ballot.
They [the delegation] feel that if they get some or all
of these powers, the question of a referendum on complete independence
might fade away in the minds of the real militants among them,
the source was quoted as saying.
The renewed bid to strike a deal follows the signing of the
Loloata Understanding last March, which canvassed the possibility
of an independence referendum. It stated: The National Government
acknowledges the aspirations for a binding referendum on independence
as called for by the Bougainvillean leaders. The parties reaffirm
their support for a progressive political settlement that takes
account of, among other thing, the wishes of the people of Bougainville.
Bougainville leaders, who claimed they had obtained a commitment
from the PNG government to hold an independence referendum, hailed
this evasive formulation as a breakthrough. As part of the deal,
a provincial government was re-established on Bougainville, with
Momis, a provincial member of parliament, as Governor. Kabui's
Bougainville Peoples Congress, set up as part of earlier negotiations
to form a transitional government, agreed to back the provincial
government.
Last September, however, PNG Prime Minister Sir Mekere Morauta
ruled out any secession. Although the word referendum'
has come to be used in some circles as a form of short-hand for
a binding referendum on a separate independence for Bougainville,
let me make clear that the Government's (and, I believe, the entire
Parliament's) position for national sovereignty, unity and independenceand
against secessionremains, he declared.
In December Kabui and Momis appealed to Australia and New Zealand
to play a much more active role to break the deadlock in
these talks. Later that month, Australian Foreign Minister
Alexander Downer visited Bougainville and Port Moresby, the PNG
capital, as part of a trip that also included New Zealand, Vanuatu
and the Solomon Islands. After meeting with various Bougainville
factional leaders, Downer claimed that he had made proposals to
overcome the stalemate. He said he was very pleased with
the progress of the discussions, but refused to provide
details, saying it was a matter for the PNG government and the
Bougainville leaders.
Between 1989 and 1997, governments in Australia, the former
colonial power, supported, armed and trained the PNG military
as it fought an eight-year war against the BRA, as a result of
which 20,000 people, or 1 in 8 Bougainvilleans, were killed. The
Hawke and Keating Labor governments were intent on reopening the
British/Australian Rio Tinto-owned Panguna copper mine, then one
of the largest copper and gold mines in the world. Local landowners,
led by former mine employee Francis Ona, had seized the mine,
demanding higher royalty payments, and later formed the BRA in
response to the PNG military's brutal retaliation.
The PNG armed forces failed to crush the BRA, however, forcing
Australia and New Zealand to shift their stance and push for a
settlement. A mid-1997 ceasefire agreement led to the deployment
of an Australian-led peacekeeping force, with the perspective
of brokering a deal that would protect the regional powers' economic
and strategic interests and ultimately allow the Panguna mine
to re-open. As well as supplying almost 300 troops, the Howard
government in Canberra is now funding port and road-building projects
designed to open up the island to the world market.
A group led by Ona still controls the area around the Panguna
mine and has remained outside the negotiations. Other sections
of the BRA have joined the talks, but remain divided, resulting
in fighting last year between different factions from south and
central Bougainville. Throughout last year the PNG government,
Momis and Kabui repeatedly stated that any agreement would require
Ona's participation, but they may now be seeking to reach a settlement
without him.
The basic perspective of the various Bougainville faction leaders,
regardless of whether it takes the form of secession or autonomy,
is to carve out their own territorial power base and take a cut
of the super-profits being sought by the multinationals. By appealing
for support from Australia and New Zealand, Momis and Kabui only
underscored their readiness to serve as local partners in meeting
the requirements of the transnational mining houses and other
companies.
For its part, the PNG government, under pressure from Australia,
is anxious to secure an agreement, but it is also wary that if
it grants too many concessions this will set a precedent for other
parts of PNG, which contains more than 800 tribal and language
groups. In recent months Morauta's government has been in sharp
conflict with provincial governments and landowning groups in
the Southern Highlands, Western and Enga provinces, which contain
the country's biggest remaining revenue-earnersthe oil and
gas fields, and the giant Ok Tedi and Porgera gold and copper
mines.
Despite Morauta's insistence on the national sovereignty,
unity and independence of PNG, the country is highly fragile.
The army is riddled with divisions and unrest, foreign investment
is at an all-time low, extensive poverty and unemployment have
produced rampant law and order problems and political instability
constantly threatens the government. This month the local currency,
the kina, fell to a two-year low of 29 US cents.
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