|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Calls for state of emergency in Papua New Guinea elections
By Will Marshall
7 June 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
With polling in the national elections due to begin on June
15, a series of calls have been made in Papua New Guinea for the
government to impose a state of emergency in response to reports
of campaign violence.
On May 21, the National, one of the two main English-language
newspapers, issued a strident editorial, declaring: It is
ridiculous to pretend that people who are involved in hostage-taking,
the widespread use of illegal weapons, and the slaughter of rivals
at every available opportunity can put these activities on hold
and cast a mature vote in a vital national election.
Reflecting broader concerns in ruling circles about the unstable
political situation, the editorial made clear any state of emergency
would not necessarily be temporary. The emergency might
well continue for a year or longer. If necessary, it could cover
a whole province, it stated.
The newspaper was immediately supported by Peoples Action Party
leader Ted Diro, a former armed forces chief, who insisted on
May 22 that the defence forces had to be called up straight
away to put an end to the anarchy in the Southern
Highlands Province. My information is that three electorates,
Tari-Pore, Koroba-Kopiago and Komo-Magarima, are totally out of
control, he said. The police are being overpowered
by the situation. The range of armaments is substantial. Police
cannot act against them alone.
Prime Minister Mekere Morauta ruled out any military involvement
but has called up the entire 10,000-strong police force, including
reserves, for a major security deployment ahead of the elections.
At the same time, he has cast doubt on the outcome of the elections,
saying that the public was entitled to have serious doubts
about the validity of the electoral roll.
In April, Morauta attempted to defer the election by seeking
an injunction in the National Court preventing the governor general
from issuing writs on the basis that the electoral roll was inadequate.
But Justice Sevua ruled that the application was frivolous
and vexatious, declaring: In my view, the State cannot
complain about the state of the Common Roll when, on the evidence
of the Chief Electoral Commissioner, it failed to allocate sufficient
funding to update the Common Roll.
Morauta has continued to raise the issue, indicating that he
may not accept the result if he loses the election. He has declared
that he would win a fair game implying that any loss
will be put down to foul play. The declaration of a state of emergency
would give Morauta wide powers to clamp down on any opposition,
including the detention of MPs, and to extend the term of the
parliament. Given that Morautas chances of winning the election
or even retaining his own seat appear shaky, he may be considering
using the ongoing violence to justify such a move.
A number of violent incidents involving electoral candidates
have taken place over the past month. In one instance, a government
MP was attacked with a knife, his daughter injured and his Toyota
Landcruiser overturned and stripped. Local villagers were angry
that he had only provided services for his immediate supporters
and not the rest of the district.
The most serious incident involved the shooting of a policeman
and the kidnapping of a candidate, Benias Perry, and two other
police in the Southern Highlands. The three were seized on May
18 by villagers loyal to Perrys opponent for the Koroba
Lake-Kopiago electorateEnvironment and Conservation Minister
Herowa Agiwa. The hostages were only released after the intervention
of former provincial governor Anderson Agiru.
A Strategic Intelligence Assessment issued by the PNG Defence
Force in January warned of the impending violence in the Highlands
and in the two main coastal citiesPort Moresby and Laeduring
the elections. It stated that political candidates might resort
to using illegal private armies to garner electoral support and
intimidate opponents and proposed the imposition of a state of
emergency in the troubled provinces.
A deepening social crisis
The political violence is, however, the direct product of the
social tensions fuelled by the policies of successive PNG governments
that have slashed jobs, wages and social services in line with
the demands of the IMF and World Bank. Political patronage resting
on tribal and language loyalties has always been a prominent feature
of official politics. Politicians, many of whom are independents,
come to power promising benefits for their wantoks
or tribal groupings, at the expense of other rivals.
Voters, particularly in impoverished and remote areas such
as the Southern Highlands, have increasingly come to rely on these
small handouts as other sources of income have shrivelled and
services have deteriorated or been ended completely. As a result,
winning the local election has become a process fraught with sharp
tensions and rivalry. Last year, on the orders of the World Bank,
Morauta slashed the District Development Program Grants or slush
fund available to MPs to disperse in their electorates from
1.5 million kina ($US450,000) to just 500,000 kinamaking
the competition for a piece of the shrinking pie even fiercer.
At the end of last year tribal fighting near Mendi in the Southern
Highlands resulted in the deaths of more than 120 people and many
more injuries. The clash between Ujumap and Wogia villagers stemmed
from unresolved issues involving political allegiances in the
1997 national elections. According to the 1999 Pacific Human Development
Report, the Highlands have some of the worst conditions in the
country: the illiteracy rate was 71.8 percent and 76 percent of
the population lacked access to safe drinking water. Health and
education services are rudimentary or non-existent.
A record number of 3,200 candidates and 46 parties are standing
in the elections. Last year Morauta pushed through new legislation,
known as the Integrity of Political Parties and Candidates Act
, in a bid to prevent MPs shifting their allegiances and
severely restricting the registration of political parties. Those
deemed to have divisive policies that seek to challenge
national unity are barred.
But from the standpoint of the ruling elites and the IMF, which
demanded the new law to end the countrys chronic political
instability, it has proven to be a dismal failure. The majority
of candidates in the present elections are independents who are
likely to win at least one third of the seats and will trade their
votes to the highest bidder. A huge turnover of MPs is predicted60
percent or higherand no party is expected to gain the 30
seats required to form government outright.
I doubt if this was what the Political Integrity Bill
was designed to create, and, in fact, we face the possibility
of an even more fractured government, Port Moresby Chamber
of Commerce and Industry President David Conn declared in frustration.
Morauta himself did not win office through the 1997 election
but only came to power after Prime Minister Bill Skate was ousted
under strong international pressure. The World Bank, IMF and the
former colonial power, Australia, all strongly backed Morauta,
a former head of the countrys central bank, as the means
for implementing economic restructuring measures.
He launched a program of wholesale privatisation, including
the PNG airline, water and electricity utilities, and the national
bank and harbour facilities, despite meeting widespread opposition.
In March 2001, a report calling for thousands of retrenchments
in the PNG army was the catalyst for a military mutiny that forced
Morauta to back down and grant an amnesty to all the soldiers
concerned.
Only a few months later, after police shot and killed three
students protesting against privatisation, he clamped down on
public outrage by imposing a dusk-to-dawn curfew in Port Moresby.
As a result Morautas own re-election is in doubt as his
seat in Port Moresby covers the University of Papua New Guinea
and nearby squatter settlements where many anti-privatisation
protesters came from.
Morauta has nevertheless pledged to continue with the IMFs
restructuring program. Significantly, the National, which
called for a state of emergency, has spoken glowingly of the prime
ministers commitment to economic reform, saying: He
is not prepared for one minute to abandon privatisation nor the
structural adjustment programs. Nor should he.
Morauta has strong support from business circles in PNG and
internationally. According to the Australian Export Finance and
Insurance Corporation, Apart from Sir Mekere, no politician
is apparently anywhere near the same commitment to reform.
The Asia Times noted that international development
agencies are ready to pronounce an economic and social catastrophe
if the next government fails to display the same resolve
as shown by Morauta in imposing the IMF/World Bank agenda.
Whoever comes to power will be under pressure to accelerate
economic restructuring and slash public spending even further.
Mining and petroleum, the economys mainstay, is in sharp
decline, exacerbating the countrys economic crisis. ANZ
banks senior economist Bernie Shuttleworth declared in April:
A supplementary budget will be necessary after the election
no matter who wins and it will need to be harsh if a liquidity
crunch is to be avoided.
In this context, the call for emergency rule takes on a wider
significance. It is an indication that the ruling elites in Port
Moresby and internationally are well aware that to impose deeply
unpopular economic measures will ultimately require anti-democratic
methods of rule.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |