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Somare set to win PNG election despite Canberras smear
campaign
By Will Marshall
31 July 2007
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This months Papua New Guinea national election results
are yet to be finalised but it appears that Prime Minister Michael
Somare will retain government. By yesterday, his National Alliance
had won 25 seats in the 109-member parliament, with 14 seats still
undecided. Having the largest single number of seats of any group,
Somare will have the first opportunity to establish a ruling alliance
with smaller parties and independents. The PNG press indicated
that the party was confident it already had sufficient support
to form a new government.
Somares two main political opponentsBart Philemons
New Generation Party and former Prime Minister Mekere Morautas
Papua New Guinea Partyare trailing well behind with just
four seats each. With PNGs highly fractured political establishment,
the poll has been dominated by small parties and independents.
Some 1,478 independent candidates stood in the election and so
far 18 have been elected.
Somares return to office will only heighten tensions
with the Australian government, which intervened into the election
campaign in what can only be construed as a deliberate attempt
to undermine the prime minister. In a front-page article yesterday,
Murdochs Australian signalled that Canberras
anti-Somare campaign is about to be intensified. It leaked further
details of a PNG Defence Force report into the so-called Moti
affair, a report that apparently calls for charges against Somare.
The Sydney Morning Herald last Friday described Somares
likely win as another setback in the South Pacific for the
Howard government. The article pointed out that Canberra
might now be placed in the difficult position of deciding whether
to allow Somare to attend the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC) forum in Sydney in September.
The Howard government banned PNG ministers from entering Australia
after a PNG military plane transported lawyer Julian Moti from
Port Moresby back to the Solomon Islands last September. Canberra
has been pursuing Moti on dubious charges of child abuse as a
means of pressuring the Solomons government and demanded that
Moti be extradited to Australia after he was detained in PNG.
Prime Minister John Howard and Foreign Minister Alexander Downer
accused the PNG government of organising Motis flight; accusations
which Somare denied.
Canberras manipulation of the Moti affair is a graphic
example of Australias neo-colonial intervention within the
region. Even Motis detention at Port Moresby airport appears
to have been orchestrated by Australian police who were sent to
PNG as part of Canberras so-called Enhanced Cooperation
Package (ECP). Somare crossed swords with the Australian government
over the package and threatened to look for aid from other countries,
but eventually agreed to allow senior Australian advisers
to oversee key areas such as finance, treasury, immigration and
the judiciary.
During the election campaign, Downer publicly called for the
release of the PNG military report into the Moti affair. On July
5 as voting was beginning, the Australian foreign minister declared
that there should be a public debate about it and for the
Papua New Guinea public to make up its minds about it ... obviously
it would influence anything we might do in the future as well.
Somare said that it was for the PNG people to decide, and he
is challenging the findings in court. The document was leaked
to Somares opponents who declared that it implicated the
PNG prime minister in Motis flight. In the midst of the
voting, the Australian press prominently featured an article on
July 16 claiming the report called for Somare to be charged over
the affair. Downer made further comments to the Australian
newspaper on July 17 again calling for the reports release.
Canberras blatant interference in the election campaign
appears to have backfired and produced deepening local resentment.
Australian-born PNG politician and Health Minister, Sir Peter
Baxter, told the Sydney Morning Herald on July 11 he was
not happy that Somare was leaning toward Asia rather than our
traditional friendship with Australia. But, he added: I
think the Australian government is equally at fault ... I think
Downer has a lot to learn about the Pacific, and I think John
Howard has as well. They havent played it very well.
Baxter revealed that Downer had attempted to pressure him last
year not to recruit Cuban doctors for PNGs desperately understaffed
health system, claiming it would destabilise security in
the Pacific. The PNG health minister explained: I
replied that we appreciated Australian assistance but it really
was our concern whether we bring in Cuban doctors ... I felt his
letter was totally out of place. PNG officials left for
Cuba this month to recruit 20 doctors.
Downers letter to Baxter underscores the fact that the
Howard governments interventions in the Pacific have nothing
to do with improving the lot of ordinary working people. Australia,
with the backing of the US, is seeking to tighten its grip over
what Howard has described as our backyard, amid growing
competition for influence from China, Taiwan and the European
powers. PNG, an Australian colony until 1975, is by far the largest
of the small South Pacific nations and is endowed with considerable
mineral wealth.
During the election campaign, Morauta and Philemon made clear
their loyalty to the Howard governments agenda, declaring
that PNG had no choice but to maintain close relations with Australia.
In the name of fighting corruption, both men have championed the
acceleration of market reforms being demanded by the IMF, World
Bank and Canberra. Somare backed Philemons slashing of public
spending before sacking his finance minister last year over a
leadership challenge. The economic agenda of both Somare and his
opponents will inevitably lead to a further decline in living
standards in a country where unemployment, poverty and the lack
of adequate health care and education are already major social
problems.
While they lag far behind in the count, Morauta and Philemon
are engaged in behind-the-scenes horsetrading with
independents and other political parties. They are also keen to
exploit divisions within the National Alliance. Deputy Prime Minister
Don Polye has said the National Alliances grouping from
the Highlands may exploit one of the provisions in the partys
constitution to challenge for the post of prime minister if it
returns the highest number of seats.
The oppositions prospects of unseating Somare appear
slim, however. The National Alliance has won more than the 19
seats it had in the previous parliament. Somare, who became the
countrys first prime minister in 1975, is a master at the
wheeling and dealing required to put together a coalition government.
Unlike many of his recent predecessors, he served a full parliamentary
term without being ousted in a no-confidence vote.
If Somare does succeed in forming the next government, the
Howard governments political intervention into PNG will
only deepen. Downer has already put Somare on notice over the
Moti affair. Theyre just going through an election
at the moment and theres an election underway in Papua New
Guinea this week so I think we can probably do nothing more than
revisit this issue once the election is out of the way,
he declared earlier this month.
Having failed in its attempt to undermine Somare at the poll,
the Australian government seems intent on pushing for legal action
against the newly elected prime minister.
See Also:
Threat of Australian intervention hangs
over Papua New Guinea election
[6 July 2007]
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