Thursday, September 12, 2013

Papua New Guinea Treasurer Polye to chair International Monetary Fund, World Bank board

Papua New Guinea Treasurer Don Polye will be the next chairman of the board of governors of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
Hon Don Polye, MP
Polye was selected to be the chairman in 2014 by fellow governors, who are finance ministers of member countries.

Prime Minister Peter O’Neill commended Polye, saying his elevation to chair of the important financial institutions was a vote of confidence in PNG and would raise its profile on the global scene.
In a letter to Polye, the prime minister said his selection was in recognition not only of Polye’s leadership and talent by his peers, but also of PNG’s increasing role as a major player in the region.

“I have no doubt that PNG and the region would benefit greatly from your tenure as Chair of the Fund and Bank,” O’Neill said. The treasurer said the chairmanship was a prestigious position and he was honoured to take it up.
“This will certainly complement well our government’s drive towards making PNG the leader and big brother amongst Pacific Island nations, and an emerging economy in the Asia-Pacific region,” Polye said.

Papua New Guinea decentralises control of development spending

OXFORD BUSINESS GROUP

In the line with an electoral platform that pledged to deliver more local level services and control over spending, the national government of Papua New Guinea has introduced a budget for 2013 that transfers nearly K1.5bn to provincial, district and local authorities.
Each province is expected to receive K5m per district, while districts will be directly allocated K10m and local governments K500,000.

The government has set up guidelines for spending, with 30% of funding committed to infrastructure, 20% each to education and health care, and 10% each to law and order, support for economic activities, and administrative issues such as tendering.
In total, the amount of funds transferred represents an 87% year-on-year increase in support for sub-national programs.
Prime Minister Peter O’Neill told Oxford Business Group, “Local communities will now have more control over decision making and the implementation of development projects. These efforts combined will help to ensure the country’s continued economic and social health.”

The central government will retain final approval for larger projects, but funding will now be in the hands of sub-national authorities. This has raised some concerns, as Treasury Minister Don Polye conceded in a speech in late 2012, but he noted that the government had carefully considered the risks, as well as strengthened accountability and auditing systems.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Papua New Guinea's Opposition leader Belden Namah’s ‘15-days secret mission’

Opposition Leader ready to take on Government as House resumes

Post Courier (Tuesday, 10th September 2013)
Opposition Leader Belden Namah who has been on a “secret” 15-week mission overseas is ready to take on the government of Prime Minister Peter O’Neill. Mr Namah did not give details of his 15-weeks absence, just saying it was a “fact finding mission” and a secret at this stage.
It is understood that he may be out there plotting to topple the prime minister who he helped to install just over two years ago.

After arriving in the country over the weekend, he held a media conference with his small group of Opposition MP’s including Bulolo MP Sam Basil, Kundiawa-Gembogl MP Tobias Kulang and Huon MP Ross Seymour and appealed to MPs not to support the proposed constitutional amendments to the no- confidence motion.


“I have been out on a fact finding mission and I have looked in from the outside to see a lot of things that are not right under the current government.”
“My dream for Papua New Guinea is that we need to have a radical change, to see that our citizens benefit from the vast natural resources that are being taken out from their land.” Mr Namah said,” From my 15-

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Papua New Guinea's local business industry be supported, say Rhado Piggery

JOE WASIA | Supported by the Bob Cleland Writing Fellowship

For years many local businesses in Papua New Guinea have never been given a face lift.  However, these local businesses have managed to survive with the most determined and dedicated hearts and minds.
Rhado-before moving to sales section
Rhado Piggery Limited is one good example. The company, formerly known as Hagen Planters Ltd, specializes in breeding-weaning, growing, producing and selling live and slaughtered pigs to the National Capital District and Central Provinces.The farm is located in 15-Mile along Sogeri road in Central Province, less than half an hour’s drive from Port Moresby. It’s located next to one of the PNG’s oldest companies, Hugo Cannery Ltd, a manufacturer of Ox & Palm tinned meat.

For more than 20 years, managing director of the company Robert Rasaka has been committed and dedicated to the business. Mr Rasaka told the National Development Bank (NDB) last year that he started the business with less then 50 pigs in early 1990s. Now the company has thousands of pigs and its one of the leading pig breeders in the country. Every

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Belden Namah: The man behind the Engima

BLUNT TALK SHARP ACTION (BTSA)
Sonja Barry Ramoi > BLUNT TALK SHARP ACTION (BTSA)

Deep in the mountains of the village called Paru Paru - the village of late secessionist leader and former first President of Bougainville Joseph Kabui - not far from Panguna Mine, Defence Force Captain and Helicopter Pilot Charlie Andrews was ordered by the Commander of the PNG Defence Force Brigadier General Jerry Singirok to go in and get Captain Belden Norman Namah out. The terrain, in enemy territory under the control of the Bougainville Revolutionary Army, was no place for a chopper to land. Captain Namah – in a daring, innovative feat and display of bravery – was airlifted out of the bush by hanging onto the skid of the chopper. Only a very strong man highly skilled and highly trained to be a Special Forces Unit commando could do that.

Monday, August 12, 2013

Unsuspecting elite citizens in Papua New Guinea lose thousands to global crime

By Online Editor
4:58 pm GMT+12, 13/06/2013, Papua New Guinea


About eight Papua New Guinean elites have fallen victim to international money laundering scams, losing almost K1 million (US$446,000).
Among these leaders is a former Minister and Member of Parliament, a former top cop who was so traumatised he felt sick and died and several former Government Departmental heads who lost money to alleged businessmen and corporations in Nigeria, United Kingdom and the Philippines. A Papua New Guinean who migrated to Australia with her husband 15 years ago but divorced also fell victim to what she called a “love scam” where she lost $20,000 (US$8,900) to someone she met online and who promised to marry her over a five-year period.

These elites (named) either transferred money through MoneyGram or Western Union and have wired money which included about K250,000 (US$111,000) from a female elite who wired this amount in exchange of Pound 13 million for winning a lottery, a former MP and Minister K120,000 (US$53,000) ( for a housing money transfer), K50,000 (US$22,00) to assist a person who claimed was stuck in a war zone and couldn’t take her father’s $US90 million parked in a trust account, K30,000 (US$13,000) and K10,000 (US$4,000 for stock trade in the United Kingdom.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Papua New Guinea’s controversial seabed mining and related projects not needed

By Joe WASIA

Seabed mining, of course, it’s a new term to the ears of many Papua New Guineans. In very simple definition it’s the underwater extraction of minerals resources.
This method is rarely used in the world whereas onshore mineral extractions are vastly used through out the world. Both methods have environmental and health risks which are assessed and analysed before projects are started.   

Now, a new frontier in mining is set to be opened up by the underwater extraction of resources from the seabed off the coast of Papua New Guinea, despite vehement objections from environmentalists and local activists and even some parliamentarians.

Canadian firm Canadian Natalius Minerals has been granted a 20-year licence by the PNG government last year under the Somare regime to commence the Solwara 1 project near East New Britain and New Ireland provinces, which many people refer it as the world's first commercial deep sea mining operation.

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Scam on the rise in the 21st Century electronic world

Scam groups are mushrooming everywhere as the global information technology has been increasing in the last few decades. Thousands of people especially from developing countries are victims of this.  
Here is an abstract from my post on Facebook:

Hi OVER NIGHT MILLIONAIRES!!!!!
I probably know some of you are already victims of spam. Be careful of emails and text messages you receive on your mobile phones, computers etc. In this electronic world, spammers are targeting people from developing countries like PNG were you can be a victim. Some of you are already have sleepless nights after receiving emails or text masges saying you have won millions of dollars or you receive a messages saying you could help her (usually an African) to transfer millions of dollars that were parked in a bank in Europe or Africa after her father died in a civil war etc.. 

Monday, July 22, 2013

Lamb flaps should be banned in Papua New Guinea

A private member bill introduced by the former Aglip South Waghi MP, Jamie Maxton Graham, to ban lamb flaps in PNG had stirred debate among Papua New Guineans and importers and dealers in lamb flaps.
Hon Jammie Maxton Graham, MP

However, the issue had been dropped after Mr Graham has lost his seat in the last election. Food containing fat, like lamp flaps, play a vital role in our body. Stored fats is used when we do not take enough fatty food in our diet. However, fat becomes injurious to health when we continuously eat fatty foods like lamb flaps as it builds up in the tissues.

The fat content of a lamb flap is about 90% of which 50% is saturated fat. This is five times the daily requirement of our body.

Saturated fat is stored as glycerol in muscle tissue. Excess fat build up under the skin and inside the body and can weaken the normal functions of heart, liver and other organs. Continuous deposition of fat can lead to many lifestyle diseases such as heart failure, strokes, coronary heart disease, colon cancer, diabetes, obesity and many more.

It has became an issue of debate in parliament because many leaders do not understand the low nutritional value of lamb flaps. Many countries overseas regard it as waste food and feed it to domestic cats and dogs because they have the nutritional knowledge.

It should be ban it here in PNG and supplement it with other protein. The government should solve the current issues in the Department of Agriculture and Livestock and pump more money into the department so we can raise our own sheep, pigs and poultry as an alternative to lamb flaps. We have enough land to do that. The government must also support existing piggery companies like Radho and Boroma at 14 Mile and cattle farms like those in the Markham Valley and others.

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Wapenamanda’s Tsak LLG Elections turned into nightmare

By Joe WASIA

The Tsak constituency in Wapenamanda district of Enga Province is the home of some of the highly educated elites in Papua New Guinea including the head of the PNG's legal system, Chief Justice Sir Salomo Injia. He hails from the Waimin tribe of the Tsak constituency in the district.

The constituency has its own Local Level Government Council president and has more than 30 council wards. The district administration is comprises of two council presidents from the two constituencies, the district administrator and the open MP as the chairman. This is under the amended law of Provincial and Local Level Government Act.

Under the amended law, the 22 provincial governments receive separate funding from the national government while districts receive K10million direct funding from the government annually. The LLGs will now receive K500 000 direct funding from the national government. This is after governments decision to divert its forecast on the service delivery in all rural districts. 

For year's, since PNG's political independence, the people of Tsak had no problems relating to anyelections. They were the peace-loving people in the province. However, this year LLG election has turned into nightmares for the whole constituency.