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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Papua New Guinea reacts angrily to call for direct Australian
intervention
By Will Marshall
6 May 2003
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A report released in March entitled Papua New Guinea on
the Brink calling on Australia to adopt a more intrusive
approach to its former colony provoked a sharp reaction from the
PNG government last month. Arguing that PNG was following other
Pacific countries down the path to economic paralysis, government
and social despair, the report bluntly urged Canberra to
ignore charges of neocolonialism and to intervene
more directly, if necessary militarily, to prevent the country
descending into terminal decline.
The study was co-authored by Susan Windybank from the conservative
Centre for Independent Studies (CIS) in Australia and Australian
expatriate Mike Manning, who is one of PNGs most widely
known economic commentators. Manning directs the privately-owned
PNG Institute of National Affairs and is associated with big business
in PNG and Australia.
Manning and Windybank paint a devastating picture of the social
and economic crisis in PNG, pointing out that its social indiceslife
expectancy, years of schooling, infant and maternal mortality
ratesare closer to those of sub-Saharan Africa than to the
rest of the Asian Pacific region. Its gross domestic product has
risen only marginally risen since independence in 1975. With massive
unemployment of between 40 and 60 percent, the country is on the
verge of another financial crisis, with interest payments absorbing
more than half its development budget.
The report condemned virtually every institution. PNGs
dysfunctional institutions suffer from a lack of legitimacy as
much as they do a lack of capacity or resources, it stated.
The military and police are under-resourced, poorly equipped
and ill-disciplined. The judiciarys authority, at
least in the lower courts, has been eroded, while
the legal system seems incapable of bringing either small
or large crooks to justice.
The authors wrote scathingly of PNG politicians, declaring:
Nepotism is entrenched at the highest levels. Australian
funding, it declared, has subsidised the rise of a small
political elite and overblown central government at the expense
of investment in infrastructure and diversification of the economy.
It went on to warn: The government appears to have lost
control of parts of the oil-rich Southern Highlands, which are
contested by strongmen and criminals. This chaos is spreading
to other parts of the country. Australia will not be able to ignore
any fallout. There is no exit strategy.
Significantly, however, the authors are completely silent on
the responsibility of Australian governments and big business
for creating this crisis. A century of Australian colonial rule
left PNG as one of the poorest and least developed countries in
the world. Its infrastructure was designed to serve the mining,
trading, financial and plantation companies that dominate the
economy. Nearly three decades after independence, much of the
population still survives by subsistence farming, and most of
the country is inaccessible by road.
About half of the economy is owned by Australian big business
which has $2.3 billion in investment in mining, retail, banking
and other areas. Last years budget was largely dictated
to Port Moresby at an Australia-PNG Ministerial Forum, attended
by Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer and IMF and World
Bank representatives. Its main feature was huge tax exemptions
for mining investors paid for by drastic spending cuts to the
public service and education.
It is concern over these same business interests that prompted
Manning and Windybank to call on Canberra to intervene directly.
The emergence in PNG of what are regarded as attributes
of a failed state suggests that Australia should rethink
its relationship with PNG now to avoid high costs in the future,
their report stated.
The authors emphasised that too much was at stake for Australia
to be concerned about accusations of recolonising PNG and
propose a series of steps to Canberra. They suggest that Australian
economic aid, which has been cut back and increasingly tied to
specific projects, be refined even further so as to put pressure
on the PNG government. A more activist approach would
also involve sending teachers, doctors and policemen instead
of short-term consultants and advisors to PNG.
Failing that, however, the report referred to the need for
a military option, not only in PNG, but elsewhere in the Pacific.
Published on the eve of Australias participation in the
US-led invasion of Iraq, it declared: Australia has an Iraq
taskforce when it needs a Melanesian taskforce. In other
words, as in Iraq, Australian imperialism has to be prepared to
defend its interests in the Pacific militarily.
Angry response in PNG
Not surprisingly the PNG government reacted angrily to the
publication of the report and its recommendations. Prime Minister
Michael Somare called for the Parliamentary Privileges Committee
to conduct a hearing into whether the document constituted contempt
of parliament.
Manning appeared before the committee on April 3, as did the
head of the PNG superannuation fund Rod Mitchell. He was summonsed
over articles that appeared in Australia and PNG in January expressing
concerns over rising crime and the security of his family in PNG.
Manning, however, was the real target.
Prior to the committee hearing, its chairman Gumini MP Nick
Kuman pre-empted its outcome by saying that the government intended
to introduce new censorship laws. He complained that the committee
did not have the powers to prosecute publishing houses and foreshadowed
legislation to provide effective and justifiable means to
deter critics who persistently and knowingly publish damaging
articles.
The media described the committees proceedings as a kangaroo
court. Mannings request for a lawyer was denied, as
was his appeal to know what allegations were being made against
him. Kuman simply retorted: I dont have to explain
to you why you are here. Committee member Kimson Kare admitted
that he had never actually read Mannings report.
The two main PNG newspapers denounced the governments
sweeping moves to stifle freedom of speech. The ill-considered
and anti-democratic character of the response reflects the governments
impotence in the face of growing domestic discontent and the demands
of Canberra. Its immediate concern was the reports potentially
damaging impact on foreign investment in PNG. Indeed, Chevron-Texaco
recently announced that, after two decades, it was pulling out
of PNG, further weakening the prospects for the much vaunted $6.8
billion PNG-Queensland gas pipeline.
The PNG government, however, rapidly received a rap over the
knuckles from Washington. The US ambassador to PNG, Susan Jacobs,
who rarely makes public statements, publicly opposed the Kares
announcement and pointedly attended the Parliamentary Privileges
Committee hearing. It was enough to produce a backflip by the
government, which issued a media statement declaring that Kares
plans did not necessarily reflect the official view.
The Somare government confronts an impossible situation. An
unstable coalition of 13 separate parties and 20 independent MPs,
it is incapable of dealing with the intractable economic and social
problems plaguing PNG. Like his predecessors, Somare has dutifully
attempted to implement the demands of the IMF, World Bank and
Canberra for further economic restructuring and thereby heightened
social and political tensions inside PNG.
Now a discussion is taking place in Australian ruling circles
to the effect that, as the CIS report puts it, the longstanding
hands-off approach of respecting PNGs sovereign
right to make its own choices... has not worked. Just over
a quarter of a century after independence, Somare and the rest
of the PNG ruling elite face the prospect of a return by Australia
to more direct rule over its former colony.
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