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New Guinea
Papua New Guinea narrowly averts constitutional crisis following
"blighted election"
By Will Marshall
3 August 2002
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The Supreme Court in Papua New Guinea has, at least for the
moment, narrowly averted a constitutional crisis stemming from
national elections that were plagued by violence, vote rigging
and protracted delays in counting. Even though a number of seats
are yet to be decided, parliament, which is dominated by small
parties and independents, will meet on Monday to vote for a new
government.
The entire election process has been chaotic, a reflection
of the countrys deepening social and economic crisis. There
have been widespread reports of corruption involving police, electoral
officers, candidates and their supporters. Tens of thousands of
ballots have been forged or stolen. At least 30 people have been
killed. A number of election officials have been assaulted or
simply disappeared.
The problems were compounded by the governments decision
to withhold $US2 million from the Election Commission, creating
major difficulties in transporting officials to remote areas,
in a country that lacks roads and other basic infrastructure.
As a result of this anarchic situation, the Electoral Commissioner
Reuben Kaiulo was unable to count the votes and declare the polls
by the date prescribed in the constitutionJuly 15and
asked for a two-week extension, indicating as well that a re-vote
may be required in some seats.
Kaiulo reported that because of electoral violence and corruption
more than 250 ballot boxes have been destroyed or are missing
in the Highlands region. According to some estimates, between
a third and a half of voters across PNG have been prevented from
voting due to deficiencies in the Common Roll and gangsterism
at the polls.
In some areas, election officials simply had no votes to count.
In others, there were votes in abundance. The scope of the rorting
in the Highlands is revealed by the aggregate figures760,000
more votes were cast than the entire adult population of just
under one million. In Enga Province, the number of votes was 2.6
times greater than the number of eligible voters.
The governor general granted a two-week extension for the return
of writs but the decision only intensified the crisis. As seats
began to be declared it became evident that the parliament would
be deeply fragmented. Prime Minister Mekere Morauta narrowly retained
his own seat but his Peoples Democratic Movement was decimatedon
the latest counting it will have only 10 seats in the 109-member
parliament, down from 40. The largest partythe National
Alliance led by the countrys first Prime Minister Michael
Somaregained only 19 seats. The other seats have been won
by an array of small parties and independents.
The last fortnight has been dominated by frenzied backroom
negotiations as contenders for prime minister have sought to patch
together a parliamentary majority. The wheeling and dealing has
been heightened by recent changes to the constitution which require
the governor general to ask the leader of the party with the largest
number of seats to try to form a ruling alliance.
With a narrow lead in the number of seats, Somare calculated
that he was in the best position to form government and sought
to stymie his rivals by attempting to shut down further counting.
After winning his own seat on 14 July, he filed a constitutional
reference in the Supreme Court challenging the validity of the
two-week extension for the official return of writs.
Somares move appeared to have some constitutional validity
but threatened to plunge the country into a political crisis.
With nearly 40 seats undecided by July 15, a substantial section
of voters would have been formally denied a say in the formation
of the government. The resulting frustrations could have become
politically explosive. The election violence and vote rigging
was itself the product of different tribes, clans and language
groups attempting to put their representative into office in order
to gain a slice of dwindling government resources.
Moreover, drawn-out legal wrangling in the Supreme Court would
have deepened the crisis. The government could have been left
in limbo for weeks in conditions where the IMF, the World Bank
and business leaders are demanding immediate action to try to
pull the economy out of a deep recession. Technically, Morauta
would have remained the caretaker prime minister but he would
have had little credibility or authority. Virtually the entire
Morauta cabinet, including Deputy Prime Minister Michael Ogi,
either lost their seats or, like the Melanesian Alliances
Moi Avei and Sam Akoitai from the United Resources Party, have
defected to Somare.
Democracys darkest hour
The difficulties were compounded because a number of seats
could not be decided even if the two-week extension were declared
valid. Electoral Commissioner Kaiulo explained: It is also
impossible to organise new voting between now and July 29 because
of continuing lawlessness in the trouble spots which have forced
the Electoral Commission to suspend elections in the Southern
Highlands and Enga.
Mike Manning, president of the private-sector Institute of
National Affairs, summed up the situation, declaring: However
you look at it youve got a constitutional crisis. Youve
either got to decide either to count them, knowing that theyre
wrong, or to say no were doing it again, in
which case, how do you form a government without those two provinces
being there?
While certainly not averse to opportunist manoeuvres himself,
Morauta denounced Somares move, saying, Never in the
history of Papua New Guinea has such a blatant grab for undemocratic
power been attempted. It is our democracys darkest hour.
He also warned: By taking those fundamental rights away
from many, many thousands of people, he is risking widespread
civil disorder and unrest.
Morauta supported a counter-submission to the Supreme Court
insisting that the decision to extending the counting was constitutional.
Constitutional lawyers from the National Parliament, the Electoral
Commission, and the Ombudsman Commission made additional submissions.
In the event, Somare backed off from a legal brawl over the
constitution and withdrew his case before the Supreme Court hearing.
A panel of five judges including the chief justice and his deputy
handed down their decision on July 26. The court ruled that the
extension of counting was valid and that parliament could meet
even if all seats had not been declared. As well, the judges empowered
the Electoral Commissioner to rerun the election in seats where
voting had been seriously disrupted.
Although the Supreme Court decision averted the immediate crisis,
none of the underlying political tensions have been resolved and
there is still the possibility of legal challenges to the poll
results. Of the outstanding 15 seats, the Electoral Commissioner
finally declared results in six seats in Enga Province and three
of the nine in the Southern Highlandsthe two areas where
counting had been suspended. The poll has been declared failed
in the other six seats.
The most blighted election on record, as the media
has dubbed it, has provoked deep concerns in ruling circles in
Papua New Guinea and elsewhere. As the Australian Financial
Review noted, with some trepidation, on July 19: The
next government of Papua New Guineaand it is now most likely
that there will be a changewill have to address warlord-ism
and a collapse of the rule of law in the oil-rich Highlands, as
well as a more widespread crisis of confidence in government itself
after the tarnishing of the electoral process in the recent poll.
It appears likely that Somare will form a government on Monday.
He heads a disparate seven-party coalition, including his own
National Alliance, the Peoples National Congress Party, Melanesian
Alliance, Peoples Progress Party, United Resources Party, Peoples
Action Party and a group of independents led by Moses Maladina.
Somare still appears to be short of an outright majority, however.
Moreover, even if he does succeed in forming a government, he
will be faced with immediate economic and social problems for
which he has no solution. Business leaders declared this week
that whoever takes the reins of power will have to draw up a rescue
package of further austerity measures to deal with an economy
that has recorded three successive years of negative growth. Our
economy is in terribly, terribly deep trouble, stated Mike
Manning of the Institute of National Affairs.
At the same time, however, the government that emerges from
this blighted election could quickly face opposition.
Large sections of the population, who legitimately feel disenfranchised,
will react angrily to any attempts to make further inroads into
their living standards on behalf of big business. Under such conditions,
the precarious ruling coalition could easily break apart, creating
a fresh political crisis.
See Also:
Papua New Guinea election plagued
by corruption, violence and a lack of funds
[8 July 2002]
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