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WSWS : News
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& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Bougainville autonomy deal remains fragile
By Will Marshall
18 September 2001
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The future of the autonomy package signed between the Papua
New Guinea government and various factions from the island of
Bougainville remains uncertain despite the orchestrated festivities
that accompanied the signing ceremony in the Bougainville town
of Arawa on August 30.
About 10,000 people, many in traditional costumes, attended
the celebrations as the PNG Prime Minister Sir Mekere Morauta
initialled the agreement with leaders of the Bougainville Revolutionary
Army (BRA) and the government-backed Bougainville Resistance Force
(BRF). Morauta declared the day to be special and significant
for the people of Bougainville and PNG, but his government has
not yet put the deal to the PNG parliament, where it requires
a three-quarters majority.
Between 1988 and 1997, Bougainville island1,200 km east
of the PNG capital Port Moresbywas ravaged by bitter fighting
as the PNG army and the BRF, armed and supplied by Australia,
attempted to crush the secessionist BRA. About 20,000 of the islands
175,000 people were killed by the fighting and a four-year army
blockade of food, medical and fuel supplies. The conflict was
sparked by landowner grievances over the giant Australian-owned
Panguna copper mineone of the largest in the world. BRA
fighters shut down the mine and dissident BRA members continue
to control the area around it.
Under the peace agreement, which has taken four years to finalise,
autonomy will be phased in over the next five years and an independence
referendum will be conducted in 10 to 15 years time. Bougainville
will establish its own police force, judiciary, taxation regime,
commercial bank and courts. The PNG government will retain control
over Defence and Foreign Affairs, although its military will largely
be excluded from the island.
Morauta has admitted that the national parliament may not ratify
the necessary changes to the PNG constitution. Every informed
citizen knows just how hard it can be to be sure of the numbers
on any particular day, he said. Morautas party, the
Peoples Democratic Movement, claims to have an overwhelming majority
in parliament, but his government faces deep resistance to its
IMF-dictated program of privatisation, economic restructuring
and budget slashing.
Parliamentary opposition figures, including former prime minister
Michael Somare have canvassed the defeat of the Bougainville deal.
I have my doubts about the legislation getting through,
Somare said recently. North Waghi MP Fabian Pok said no members
had debated the autonomy package and raised concerns that it would
set a precedent for other PNG provinces.
Unless the constitutional amendments are passed, the former
warring Bougainville factions may pull out of the proposed weapons
disposal program, which is being supervised by an Australian-led
monitoring force.
The tenuousness of the agreement was highlighted the night
before the signing, when members of the Meekamui Force erected
a roadblock to stop people travelling to the ceremony. Meekamui,
led by former BRA commander Francis Ona, controls nearly one-fifth
of the island. It has refused to participate publicly in talks
with the PNG government, despite pleas by the government and other
Bougainville factions.
Bougainville Affairs Minister Moi Avei could only express the
hope that Ona would not disrupt the agreement. While the
national government would obviously prefer that Francis Ona and
his closest supporters become full participants in the peace process,
he said, we recognise they have, in practice, respected
previous agreements, and look to them to continue doing so now.
Even if parliament passes the amendments, the situation will
remain unstable. BRA leaders have declared that they want a referendum
on independence within three to five years, rather than 10 to
15 years. BRA defence chief Ishmael Toroama signed the document
in Arawa, but maintained that the BRA had not agreed to the longer
period.
The PNG government is desperate to secure the agreement in
order to convince international investors of its ability to overcome
the countrys instability. Standard and Poors, the international
credit rating agency, recently downgraded PNG because of dwindling
mining investment. Mining and oil production account for 60 percent
of export earnings and 20 percent of government revenue.
Given the volatility throughout the Asia-Pacific regionfrom
the secessionist and communal conflicts across Indonesia to the
coups in the Solomon Islands and Fijithe government in Australia,
PNGs former colonial ruler, is equally anxious to end the
Bougainville fighting. Since abandoning hopes in a PNG military
victory and pushing for a ceasefire in 1997, the Australian government
has sponsored no less than 26 different sets of talks between
the Bougainville parties.
The Bougainville pact could have other consequences, however.
Two other PNG districts have called for similar autonomy deals,
raising the spectre of PNG fragmenting along regional and tribal
lines. East New Britain Governor Leo Dion has criticised the lack
of funds for development in his province, while chiefs on the
island of Buka, part of Bougainville province, have demanded a
separate budget.
On Bougainville itself, the agreement will not improve living
standards. The only beneficiaries will be the different faction
leaders who hope to use villagers as cheap labour. At the signing
ceremony, Bougainville Provincial Governor John Momis spoke of
a new social, economic order, but admitted that there
were no funds for such basic requirements as education, health
and road building.
See Also:
Papua New Guinea government
obtains shaky weapons disposal pact in Bougainville
[23 May 2001]
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