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New Guinea
Papua New Guinea adopts Bougainville peace package
By Will Marshall
15 April 2002
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After more than five years of negotiations overseen by the
Australian government, all factions in the Papua New Guinea (PNG)
parliament came together on March 27 to vote unanimously for the
Bougainville Peace Agreement , giving limited autonomy
to the resource-rich island and the possibility of a ballot on
secession in 10 to 15 years time.
The 85-0 vote to amend the PNG Constitution to allow a referendum
was the culmination of a process first initiated by Australia,
PNGs former colonial ruler, in 1997 after the PNG military
proved incapable of defeating an eight-year insurgency by the
self-styled Bougainville Revolutionary Army (BRA). More than 20
separate conferences between the PNG government, its supporters
in the Bougainville Resistance Force (BRF) and various factions
of the BRA were needed to secure what remains a shaky agreement.
Under the deal, a proposed Bougainville provincial government
will gradually become autonomous over the next five years. No
changes will occur, however, until a United Nations Observer Mission,
a five-person team headed by Guyanan diplomat Noel Sinclair, secures
weapons handed in by the warring parties.
Two unelected bodies, the official Bougainville Interim Provincial
Government and the Bougainville Peoples Congress will establish
a Constitutional Commission to draft a constitution to go before
a representative Constituent Assembly. There is no
provision for any vote by the Bougainville people until after
a constitution has been adopted. A Bougainville government will
then be elected, but no date has been set for a poll.
The Bougainville administration will eventually establish a
police force, judiciary, taxation system, commercial bank and
courts. The national government in Port Moresby will retain control
over defence and foreign affairs, although its military will largely
be excluded from the island.
The actual transfer of functions to Bougainville will largely
depend on its capacity to set taxes and raise loans. In addition,
it must give the PNG government advance notice of any institutional
changes and ensure that its constitution is in line with the national
constitution.
Differences and tensions remain between the Bougainville factions.
Just four months before the parliamentary vote, the BRF almost
withdrew from the weapons disposal agreement after four of its
senior commanders were murdered. BRF leaders accused the BRA of
the killings. BRF chairman Hilary Masiria only agreed to resume
the peace process after a high-level meeting of his commanders
with the provincial governor and deputy governor.
As well, the Meekamui Force, led by former BRA commander Francis
Ona, who continues to control nearly one-fifth of the island,
has remained aloof from the negotiations. But his recent request
that the PNG Electoral Commission ensure that his supporters and
their families are eligible to vote in Junes PNG elections
seems to indicate that he seeks a place in the settlement.
Despite these uncertainties, the agreement is being hailed
as a major step toward peace and a new era of freedom for the
people of Bougainville. Today is a great day for Bougainville
and Papua New Guinea as a whole, PNG Prime Minister Mekere
Morauta declared. Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer
was even more effusive. This is a truly historic opportunity
to bring to an end one of the regions longest running conflicts
and to build a peaceful and prosperous future for the people of
Bougainville, he claimed.
Yet for the population of 180,000, the majority of whom live
a subsistence life on the small 200 kilometre-long island, living
standards will improve little. The limited autonomy will be wielded
by a tiny ruling elite, who like PNG itself, will be completely
dependent on the main regional powers, Australia and New Zealand,
for funding and investment.
Bougainville Provincial Governor John Momis last year admitted
that there were no funds for such basic requirements as education,
health and road building. Arawa, the depleted capital, is a symbol
of the poverty and destruction wrought by the civil war. It has
just 1,000 residents, some shops, a medical clinic and a fifth
of its buildings intact.
In the financial year 2000, the Interim Provincial Government
had a budget of only 23 million kina (US$6.25 million) and suffered
a shortfall of K1.2 million in recurrent expenditure. During a
parliamentary debate on the autonomy plan last November, former
PNG Prime Minister Michael Somare put the costs of establishing
infrastructure for self-rule at 300-400 million kina per year.
Even in hailing the agreement, Morauta warned Bougainvilles
people not to raise their expectations too high. Let me
emphasise that we all need a sense of realism, not only about
needs but also about available resources.
Earlier this year, PNGs Minister for Bougainville Moi
Avei said the future prosperity of Bougainvilleans is on
the land, indicating that the islands major economic
activity will be selling copra and coffee. The prospects
for early achievement of fiscal self-reliancelet alone prosperityare
not very bright, he added.
The coffee industry in mainland PNG is reeling under the impact
of some of the lowest prices in a decade, while there has been
a general drop in agricultural prices worldwide.
Australian hegemony
The civil war had its origins over a dispute involving royalties
from the giant Panguna copper mine, operated by one of the worlds
largest mining companies, the Anglo-Australian Rio Tinto group.
In 1988, landowners led by Ona began sabotaging its operations,
demanding higher payments. After brutal military retaliation by
the PNG military, Ona established the secessionist BRA.
For six years, the PNG army, armed and assisted by Australia,
attempted to crush the BRA. At least 10,000 people were killed
by the fighting and a four-year army blockade of food, medical
and fuel supplies. In Canberra and Port Moresby, the military
campaign was seen as critical not just for the future of the Rio
Tinto project but also the security of mining investment throughout
PNG.
Having been largely responsible for the six-year war on Bougainville,
the Australian government changed tack in 1997 after it became
obvious that PNG military could not crush the BRA. This policy
switch was strengthened after the PNG government attempted to
fly in Sandline mercenaries to fight the BRA, sparking a revolt
by the PNG military.
Canberras anxiety to end the destabilising conflict increased
following the 1997-98 Asian financial meltdown crisis, which helped
trigger political upheavals throughout the Pacific region, including
coups in Fiji and the Solomon Islands, as well as military mutinies
in PNG. Australian investment is considerable in PNG, particularly
in several huge and highly profitable mining projects that provide
most of the small countrys revenue.
Foreign Minister Downer underscored how much was at stake for
Australian investors. He involved himself personally in the Bougainville
talks, visiting PNG several times and convening a week-long meeting
of factional leaders at an air force base in Townsville, northern
Australia. In order to secure an agreement with the BRA, Downer
prevailed upon the Port Moresby regime to accept the possibility
of a referendum on secession.
To strengthen its hand during the protracted negotiations,
the Howard government provided funding of US$51.6 million and
most of the members of the peace-monitoring group. About 2,000
Australian military personnel and 260 civilian officials have
served in Bougainville since 1997. At the same time, Canberra
has continued to support the PNG armed forces, contributing about
$10 million per year as well as training.
To this day, none of the underlying issues surrounding the
Panguna mine have been resolved. Rio Tinto has said that notwithstanding
the agreement with the BRA, it would not be profitable to re-open
the mine, as it would cost nearly $1 billion to restart. An attempt
by Ona to sue the company for environmental degradation and the
suffering caused by the war has been blocked in the US courts
but may proceed in PNG.
All too aware that Australia substantially controls the purse
strings, the PNG government has acceded to its demands for a Bougainville
settlement. Yet many in PNGs ruling elite fear that Bougainvilles
secession could set a precedent that will be exploited by other
provinces, notably those with mineral resources. According to
former Deputy Prime Minister Akoka Doi: Granting autonomy
to Bougainville as a one-off case to self-govern after March 23
... is nothing more than recipe for accelerated disintegration
of national unity. There will be chaos.
Already, the East New Britain and Morobe provincial governments
have insisted that their provinces be granted greater financial
autonomy from the national government, accusing it of failing
to meet its financial obligations. Last week the governors of
Madang and New Britain called for their provinces to be granted
greater autonomy along the lines of Bougainville.
See Also:
Bougainville autonomy
deal remains fragile
[18 September 2001]
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