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WSWS : News
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& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Canberra blackmails Papua New Guinea into accepting Australian
overseers
By the Editorial Board
24 September 2003
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Just two months after dispatching an Australian-led military
intervention force to the Solomon Islands, the Howard government
has bullied Papua New Guinea (PNG) into placing two key state
functionsfinance and the policeunder effective Australian
control. The preliminary agreement signed by Australian Foreign
Minister Alexander Downer and his PNG counterpart Rabbie Namaliu
on September 18 underscores just how rapidly Canberra is proceeding
to consolidate a neo-colonial sphere of influence in the Pacific
region.
Under the arrangement, which will be finalised at a joint ministerial
meeting in December, up to 200 Australian Federal Police (AFP)
officers will be stationed in the country and Australian public
servants inserted in senior posts in PNG ministries to oversee
their operations. The police will not only be located in the capital
Port Moresby but in Lae, Madang and major towns in the Highlands
region. Their tasks may include operational duties.
The Australian officialsdescribed by Murdochs Australian
as flying squads of auditors, administrators and other public
sector specialistswill be slotted into key positions
to scrutinise the books and, under the guise of improving
efficiency, to slash expenditure. Significantly, public
education and healthtwo crucial social services that have
already been stripped to the bonehave been identified, along
with finance, as targets. Canberra is also pressing for a major
downsizing of the PNG Defence Force.
The agreement follows weeks of acrimonious exchanges after
Howard threatened to withdraw the $A330 million ($US220 million)
in aid that Australia provides to its former colonya figure
representing some 20 percent of PNG government revenue. PNG Prime
Minister Michael Somare threatened to look to other countries
for financial assistance but caved in to Canberras demands
at the last minute. As a face-saving device, the two governments
agreed to further consultation, but no one was in
any doubt as to who was calling the tune or the significance of
the proposals.
Writing in the Sydney Morning Herald on September 23,
Hugh White, director of the government-funded Australian Strategic
Policy Institute, bluntly described the insertion of Australian
police into the PNG Constabulary as more like a takeover
that should be frankly acknowledged as such. Moreover, it was
only a start... A functioning police force is no use without
effective courts and an efficient prison system. It seems likely
that we will soon be drawn into a central role in these areas
as well.
Canberras intervention into PNG, which is by far the
largest and most resource-rich of the Pacific Island states, confirms
that a far-reaching and rapid shift in Australias strategic
orientation is underway. As the World Socialist Web Site
explained at the time, the Howard government participated in the
Bush administrations illegal war on Iraq in order to legitimise
and garner US support for its own pre-emptive actions
closer to home. The previous policy, which was based, at least
nominally, on recognising the national sovereignty of its neighbours,
has been replaced by the aggressive assertion of Australian imperialisms
interests in the region.
In the six months since the Iraq invasion, a spate of reports
has issued from right-wing thinktanks, arguing for a fundamental
policy change. In March, the Centre for Independent Studies (CIS)
published Papua New Guinea on the Brink which concluded
that the longstanding hands-off approach of
respecting PNGs sovereign right to make its own choices
had not worked. It called on the government to ignore charges
of recolonising PNG and adopt a more activist
approach. It even hinted that the formation of a Melanesian
taskforce along the lines of Washingtons Iraq taskforce
might be needed to prevent the country descending into terminal
decline.
In June, Hugh Whites Australian Strategic Policy Institute
published a report entitled A Failing Neighbour that
provided the blueprint for the Australian-led intervention in
the Solomons just a month later. It also supplied the rationale.
Under the banner of the war on terrorism, Howard insisted
that pre-emptive action was necessary in order to prevent the
failed state from becoming a haven for international
criminals and terrorists, but provided no evidence whatsoever
to justify his claims. Canberra is now making similar unsubstantiated
allegations about the dangers posed by PNG.
No sooner had Australian troops landed in the Solomons than
Howard headed off to the Pacific Islands Forum in Auckland in
mid-August where he rode roughshod over previous procedures to
impose Canberras agenda. The meeting formally sanctioned
the Solomons operation, ratified Canberras proposals for
a radical review of the Forums role, and, in a break with
all past precedent, inserted an Australian official to head the
bodys administrative secretariat. Howard bluntly warned
that future foreign aid, on which the member states are heavily
dependent, would be contingent on toeing the Australian line on
economic restructuring and governmental reform.
PNG targetted
In the aftermath of the Forum, Howard wasted no time in targetting
PNG, where Australian imperialism has far more at stake than in
the Solomons. The country of five million people dwarfs other
Pacific Island states and is a substantial source of cheap raw
materials. Australian companies have $2.3 billion invested in
mining, retail, banking and other areas. Moreover, Canberra has
always regarded PNG as pivotal to its strategic planning. It retained
close ties with the PNG security and intelligence establishment
after independence.
Following a cabinet meeting on August 20, Canberra announced
proposals to assert firmer Australian control on the pretext of
ensuring that aid was being properly spent. A senior diplomat
Bob Cotton was dispatched to Port Moresby with a letter to PNG
Prime Minister Somare outlining details of a plan to install senior
Australian bureaucrats in departments such as finance, planning
and treasury.
The PNG government reacted angrily. At the end of August, Somare
announced that his government intended to conduct its own aid
review and to formulate an Australian Aid Exit Strategy
as a counter to Canberras demands. Tensions escalated even
further after Downer provocatively declared that Somare was demanding
a blank cheque and that Australia would not be just handing
over money in that way to the Papua New Guinea budget.
As Somare and Namaliu pointed out, Australian aid is closely
managed by AusAID and the bulk of it ends up in the hands of Australian
business. An audit in 2002 found that 31 percent of the $330 million
was spent on consultants fees and 38 percent went to contractors,
of which the majority in both cases were Australian. Another 17
percent was allocated to specific programs in Health and Education,
leaving just 14 percent over which the PNG government had some
limited control.
Somare accused Downer of deliberately misleading
the Australian public and cancelled the foreign ministers
planned trip to Port Moresby. In an interview on the Australian
SBS TV program Dateline on September 3, Somare insisted
that PNG was a sovereign country. I dont like the
idea of getting officers to come to [the] Finance Department to
run the show for us, to come to [the] Prime Ministers department
and run the show for us. Dont we have people that you have
educated in the public service of Papua New Guinea? he exclaimed.
Somare bluntly told Dateline that PNG had the option
of rejecting Australian aid and looking elsewhere. It was clear
from his remarks that he was well aware that Canberras main
objective was to tighten its grip in the Pacific and keep out
economic and strategic rivals. Asked if PNG intended to strengthen
its relations with China, Somare did not rule out the option and
pointedly noted: Strategically Papua New Guinea is only
50 to 150km away from Australia and its [in] Australias
interest to make sure that we are their best friends.
Far from toning down his rhetoric, Howard continued to insist
that Australian aid would be tied to good governance.
Downers visit was rescheduled and he arrived in Port Moresby
on September 17 to a cool reception. Somare boycotted the formal
dinner given in Downers honour. Significantly, a high-level
Chinese delegation was in PNG at the same time for talks on trade
and investment.
Just a day before Downer arrived, Somare had used a ceremony
marking the 28th anniversary of PNG independence to reinforce
his message to Canberra. After appealing for greater efforts to
establish economic independence, he declared: Let
us redefine our relationship with Australia... open up to Indonesia...
[and] pursue our national interest to the north.
However, in the space of just two days, Port Moresby caved
in completely to Canberras demands. The abrupt about-face
recalls the diplomatic thuggery employed by Canberra earlier in
the year to pressure East Timor into signing away the lions
share of the Timor Gap oil and gas reserves. By deliberately delaying
the deal, Howard and Downer threatened to undermine the Bayu Undan
project on which Dili was relying for its immediate revenue. Despite
its initial protestations, East Timor had little choice but to
agree.
Whatever was said behind closed doors in Port Moresby last
week, Downer plainly made an offer that the PNG prime
minister could not refuse. As well as a possible cutoff of Australian
aid, Somare also faced the threateither implicit or explicitof
a campaign of political destabilisation aimed at removing him
from office. And if that failed, the Solomons had set a precedent
for direct Australian military intervention. There were already
signs that all these options were under active consideration in
Canberra.
An article in the Age newspaper on September 6 noted:
Privately, senior Australian officials have given up on
Somare, suggesting he lacks capacity to bring what they see as
a corrupt, bloated administration to heel. They also believe his
leadership could not survive losing Australian aid that provides
a quarter of government revenue. There is a new readiness to play
hard ball. If the game costs Somare his job, few tears will be
shed.
Somare already faces sharp divisions in his unstable coalition
government. An oppositional group known as Open MPs and
Governors, which includes members of Somares own National
Alliance Party, has criticised the lack of services in their districts.
Somares constitutional period of grace18 months free
from a no confidence motionis due to run out in February.
Former Prime Minister Julius Chan warned Somare to take Australian
threats very seriously and avoid a confrontation with
Canberra.
Chan has his own experience of political destabilisation. In
1997, the Howard government leaked secret plans by the Chan government
to hire the mercenary outfit, Sandline International, to suppress
the longrunning separatist rebellion on the island of Bougainville.
The news provoked large protests in Port Moresby and a virtual
rebellion in the PNG armed forces, compelling Chan to stand down.
The Sandline deal threatened to allow unnamed business interests
to reopen the huge Panguna copper mine on Bougainville at the
expense of Australian-owned companies.
As for an Australian military intervention, PNGs former
defence commander Jerry Singirokthe man who played the pivotal
role for Canberra in forcing Chan to step downindicated
plans were already under discussion. In comments to the Post
Courier on 15 August, he spelled out in detail the steps that
the Australian military would take, then added: Such scenarios,
although hypothetical and remote, are being seriously considered
and entertained in the circles in Canberra.
Failed state
Having forced PNG to accept Australian police and financial
overseers, Downer suggested that it was all for the benefit of
the country. Were not arguing that the people who
are there are incompetent or we dont trust them, he
said. Its just a question of Papua New Guinea making
the best of the resources that are available to it. And this is
a country which, if I may say so, as the Australian Foreign Minister,
is very lucky to have a resource available to it which helps itand
that is Australia.
Far from being of any benefit, Australian help
to PNG over the last century has created an unmitigated social
and economic catastrophe. Canberra has always viewed the country
as the prize in the Pacific. Having taken colonial control of
Papua in the nineteenth century, Australia was handed the more
developed German colony of New Guinea after World War I as the
quid pro quo for the sacrifice of tens of thousands of Australian
troops in defence of British imperialism.
When Australia granted independence to PNG in 1975, it left
behind a country lacking basic physical and social infrastructure.
In the 28 years since, Australian corporations have been in the
forefront of plundering the countrys rich natural resources,
particularly minerals, with reckless indifference to the environmental
and social consequences. As commodity prices fell and the PNG
economy faltered, successive Australian governments insisted that
Port Moresby implement the restructuring dictates of the IMF and
World Bank.
The economic decline, along with Canberras demands for
reforms, sharply accelerated following the 1997-98 Asian financial
crisis. PNG is now in its fourth year of continuous recession
and foreign debt has climbed to 8.2 billion kina ($US2.5 billion)
representing about 80 percent of GDP. Interest rates and inflation
have soared to over 20 percent. The economic strategy dictated
by Canberra, the IMF and World Bank consists of offering large
financial incentives to international investors, particularly
in mining, while slashing government expenditure through privatisation,
job cuts and the winding back of limited social services.
As a result, the countrys social crisis continues to
deepen. Around 85 percent of the population live in rural villages,
where they eke out an existence in subsistence agriculture, supplemented
in some cases by small cash crops. The majority lacks access to
the most rudimentary serviceshealth, education, welfare
and even roads. The young people who flock to the shanties surrounding
the main towns have no prospect of a job or a future. As a result,
crime, drug abuse and the other social ills caused by desperate
poverty are all on the rise.
PNGs social indices are comparable to those of sub-Saharan
Africa. Average life expectancy is just 56.7 years, the infant
mortality rate is 79 per 1,000 live birthshigher than Kenya
and Zimbabweand diseases such as malaria and tuberculosis
are returning. Alarming levels of HIV/AIDS have fueled predictions
of an epidemic of African proportions. The average number of years
of schooling is just 2.9.
This disaster has created deep resentments, fueled inter-tribal
and inter-regional frictions and led to growing political instability.
Canberra cannot solve these intractable social and economic problems.
Nor does it intend to even try. The Howard governments agenda
in Papua New Guinea is similar to its program at home: savage
economic restructuring to boost the profits of Australian business
and law-and-order measures aimed at attacking the
democratic rights of the vast majority of ordinary people.
Australian imperialism, however, is heading for a shipwreck.
Inevitably, the Howard governments attempt to carve out
a sphere of domination in PNG, the Solomons and the rest of the
region will breed hostility and resistance. Moreover, when it
does develop, popular opposition will be far more explosive and
far-reaching than the relatively limited movement against colonial
rule that preceded independence in the region in the 1970s and
1980s. For the oppressed masses of the Pacific, the solution does
not lie in a return to national independence but in unifying their
struggles with those of the working class in Australia and internationally
around a socialist perspective.
See Also:
Australian officials take
control in the Solomon Islands
[27 August 2003]
Australian prime minister
bullies the Pacific Islands Forum
[20 August 2003]
Behind the Solomons intervention:
Australia stakes out its sphere of influence in the Pacific
[15 August 2003]
Oppose Australias colonial-style
intervention in the Solomons
[3 July 2003]
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