Monday, June 10, 2019

Timeline of change at the top



BY JEFFREY ELAPA - The National
THE recent political power play has set history in the country when many things unfolded.
Over the five week of horse trading, several political camps were created and members of Parliament were seen moving and jumping camp, in the name of power play.
However on May 29, then Prime Minister Peter O’Neill dropped a bombshell when he announced his resignation which was accepted by the Governor General Sir Bob Dadae who advised Speaker Job Pomat at around 10.45am at his parliament office.
Following the resignation, 28 members of the Laguna team led by James Marape broke ranks and moved over to the Grand Papua Hotel.
At 3.15pm Marape, O’Neill, Sir Julius Chan and Sam Basil led the 32 MPs into the Crown Hotel bringing the number to 76 MPs.
On Thursday, May 31 at around 9.50am the Government ream arrived in six buses while the Opposition arrived at 9.30am.
Former Prime Minister Peter O’Neill took his chair in the front at 9.39 am while Marape took his chair next to the Deputy Prime Minister at 10.30am after talking to the Speaker in his office before parliament resumed.
At 10.38am, Speaker Job Pomat walked into the chamber, led by the mace and started the session and asked the Member for Mul-Baiyer Koi Traipe to say prayers.
At 10.45am, the Speaker asked for nominations and Enga Governor Sir Peter Ipatas nominated and moved that James Marape be the Prime Minister and the Governor of Manus Charlie Benjamin seconded the motion.

Unprecedent move

Opposition Leader Patrick Pruaitch in a surprising and unprecedented move, nominated the Member for Ialibu-Pangia and the sitting Prime Minister Peter O’Neill, and that was seconded by Belden Namah and Peter O’Neill accepted it.
When the Speaker asked for other nominations, Member for Rabaul Dr Allan Marat nominated former Prime Minister and Member for Moresby Northwest Sir Mekere Morauta and was seconded by Donald James, the Member for North Fly.
The Nominations was closed by Imbongu MP, Pila Niningi and seconded by Southern Highlands Governor William Powi.
However O’Neill withdrew his nomination later.
An open ballot was taken and 101 MPs including Leader of Opposition Patrick Pruaitch voted for Marape. A notable absentee was Madang MP Bryan Kramer who abstained from voting.
Marape was declared at 11.13am after winning 101 votes against Sir Mekere’s eight.
The Speaker then suspended Parliament for the newly-elected Prime Minister to go to Government House to be sworn in.
Marape and his delegation returned from Government House at 12.30pm through the ceremonial entrance and walked into the Parliament where he shook hands with and thanked his colleagues before taking his seat in the front as the Prime Minister at 12.42pm and made his maiden statement.
He thanked everyone who was behind him through thick and thin throughout the five weeks period and also the MPs for electing him as the eighth chief executive of the country.
He undertook to reviewing especially the resource sector laws in the country and empower the citizens, and “take back PNG” to enable economic independence.
Tussle between equals
During the occasion Southern Highlands Governor William Powi who supported Marape’s rise to the top, commended both Marape and O’Neill for playing the political game as equals and ensuring a smooth transition.
“Marape and O’Neill, the captains of the political game were from the same political party, they were both from the same province until 2012 and they are good friends but what has surprised many of us, is when it comes to how best we can serve our people, the two differed in many respects,” Powi said.
Marape, the son of a Seventh-Day Adventist pastor, kept to his promise to his people of Tari-Pori that if the Government did not seal the Highlands Highway from Mendi to Hela and all the way to Komo and Kopiago and into the Strickland, he would leave the Government. The road was not sealed so he left the government that failed to delivery that economic lifeline to his electorate.
He surrendered his ministry and privileges for the sake of his people when he resigned and walked out and lived up to his words to his people.
“Marape, you have proven to your people that you are a man of your word. Leaders in this honourable house can take comfort knowing that they now have a Prime Minister who can keep his words, replacing a very talented, practical, and visionary Prime Minister, Peter O’Neill,” the Southern Highlands governor said.
“What surprised me is the loving and forgiving heart of our outgoing Prime Minister. It’s like the biblical story of the prodigal son, Marape returned and O’Neill received him with a warm open heart. I’m humbled. You have demonstrated great leadership of reconciliation, restoration and respect. This is a legacy that will be left behind for other to tell. We have lived to witness the living principles of the living God in this chamber is alive in this very act of forgiveness and reconciliation,” Powi said.
Southern Highland (then inclusive of today’s Hela) became the first oil producing province since 1992 and Hides gas became the first gas producing field in the country while Kutubu became the first oilfield and Gobe, Moran, South East Mananda were added later.
Then came the PNG LNG project; with hype and fanfare, the project was developed, creating myopic expectations of riches and wealth and transformation of the last province in the country to become the first. That did not happenand the cargo cult culture and free Government handout mentality cropped up.
Managing what can sometimes be unrealistic hope from a community coming out of the Stone Age into today’s information age can be a formidable task, even to the battled-hardened and tested politician. It is simply difficult.
Powi said: “Random and sporadic tribal fights in the Tari valley or political chaos and confusion in the SHP, spring from this sort of socio-economic background. Sometimes we are criticised, ashamed, laughed at and mocked.
“From this back ground, and when we had the first Prime Minister, we had the expectation that at least we would complete sealing the highways from Mendi to Tari, and on to Komo and Koroba-Kopiago. It was hoped that we would fulfil some of the promises made to our people under the oil and gas agreements.
“We said we would provide electricity from Mendi to Tari. Yet, Hides has hidden its electricity, bypassing the Hela people who are living in darkness. People of Kutubu have kept electricity on the oil fields, leaving the rest of Kutubu in the dark. The big trucks travelling the highlands highway to see these projects areas give us potholes and damage bridges. The pain and suffering of our people increases.
“It is this battle between contrasting social backgrounds that perhaps contributed to divide the two sons of Southern Highlands.
“The experience and the battle of Hela and Southern Highlands – poverty in the midst of world-class oil and gas project developments, it is the same battle and experiences of other parts of the country too.
“Refined by the crucible of this battle of hardship, pain and travail, combined with the heart of a shepherd, I believe Marape will lead the country well and hear the cries of our people.
“I believe you will allow the lesson of life to match and hear the cries of our people. I ask you to hear the voices of the people through their elected representatives on both sides of this house. Irrespective of our sitting arrangements, political affiliations, and social and cultural differences, I trust that you will hear the cries through their representatives for a fair, honest and transparent manner,” he said.
Honourable act
Powi said what O’Neill did on Wednesday to resign and to withdraw the motions on Thursday was recorded in the political annals of PNG as the first honourable and noblest act for him to take to preserve the unity and integrity of our young democratic nation.
“O’Neill’s actions should lay the foundation for current and future leaders to follow. When the Prime Minister fails to keep the confidence and trust of the leaders in the ruling party, this humblest act set you apart. You are the first Prime Minister to resign, it proves that you are not here for name, fame and power but for the people,” Powi said.

Call for unity

He called on Marape to call for national unity by giving confidence and comfort to the people of PNG through their elected representatives.
He said that unity could be achieved through the allocation of ministries representing various parts of the country, irrespective of party affiliations, party size or other factors.
“The Laguna camp, the Grand Papua Camp, the Crown Camp and all other camps must be united.
“I call upon the Prime Minister-elect to assemble a pool of local talents, technical expertise and national intellectuals from every field, every specialty and every persuasion, irrespective of political, regional or institutional difference to review our laws, economic policies, administrative structures and governance practices to help the Government design and develop a home-gown pathway to economic self-reliance.
“We must promote national unity through reconciliation, respect and caring and sharing through the Melanesian way,” Powi said.

Pruaitch fears govt may continue with old policies



Posted on The National

OPPOSITION Leader Patrick Pruaitch, pictured, is concerned that the new Government led by Prime Minister James Marape may not be willing to make the necessary changes to policies for the country going forward.
Pruaitch, who congratulated Marape on the announcement of a 33-member Cabinet on Friday, said the nation was hoping it would signal a change in policy direction.
But he feared the events of the past weeks and months had been initiated only to remove Peter O’Neill as prime minister.
Pruaitch said there were two recent instances which showed that the change was in name only. One was Marape leaving the Laguna camp with 28 MPs to forge an alliance with O’Neill’s People National Congress Party and other coalition partners.
The other is Marape promising the Opposition four Cabinet posts but gave only two.
“During recent discussions with Marape and his team, it has become clear that they have no specific plans about policy changes they want to immediately implement,” Pruaitch said.
“It now appears the main reason they wanted to oust O’Neill was to impose a different style of leadership but with no substantial change in policy direction.”
He said the Opposition had plans to immediately address the nation’s depressed economic conditions, and to restore employment growth.
“We accept our fate to remain as members of the Opposition for the remainder of this term in Parliament and we intend to play our role on behalf of the people to keep the Government honest and accountable to their promises.”
“The Prime Minister in recent days has had much to say about corruption. In the coming weeks, months and years the nation will judge whether these words lead to meaningful actions and whether the Marape Government was capable of rectifying the economic mismanagement of the O’Neill Government.
“The Opposition is of the view that this is the same PNC Government, but with a different PM.
“Hence there will be no policy initiatives by the Government.

Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/pruaitch-fears-govt-may-continue-with-old-policies/

Former governor Muthuvel entrusted with State Enterprises



Posted on The National

FORMER West New Britain Governor Sasindran Muthuvel is the new Minister for State Enterprises.
Prime Minister James Marape made the announcement on Friday, urging Muthuvel to ensure that state-owned entities pay dividends.
“Many of our state-owned enterprises are not declaring dividends to the state. They are working outside Treasury scrutiny, he said.
“Many of our state-owned entities are building their own empowerment and there will be a restructure.
“There will be greater visibility in Kumul Petroleum, Kumul Mining, we will set up Kumul agriculture and other Kumul subsidiaries.
“Muthuvel will be in charge of those areas and I have also restructured and I will make a few more announcements in that area.”
Marape announced that Goilala MP William Samb was the new Minister for Transport and Infrastructure and Air Niugini would come under that portfolio.
Samb, who was the minister assisting the prime minister under the previous regime was tasked to take care of Air Niugini.
“Air Niugini will be doing a diagnosis as to how it has been operating so far,” Marape said.
“You run a monopoly here, we know times are tough.
“You will now operate directly and report directly to a minister who will do a diagnosis into how Air Niguini is coming so we can maintain safety but at the same time improve in productivity and efficiency and at the end of the day we want you to also earn profit,” Marape said.
Rigo MP Lekwa Gure, who was the Civil Aviation Minister in the O’Neill-government, will continue in the portfolio.
Marape said Gure had much experience in that area and so would continue.

Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/former-governor-muthuvel-entrusted-with-state-enterprises/

New ministers keen to get to work



Posted on The National

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Justice and Attorney-General Davis Steven
“The Prime Minister has put together a formidable team with experience and quality,” Steven said.
“I will make a pathway forward as you know there is no peace or economic prosperity unless the social sector is strengthened and so the prime minister’s vision is clear.”
Minister for Foreign Affairs and Kikori MP Soroi Eoe
Eoe says that he has been exposed to so many international organisations in his previous role as director of the National Museum and Art Gallery.
“It’s really walking in the same path again but now taking on the bigger role to connecting this country with other countries of the world,” he said.
“My job is to ensure that our officers overseas are aware of the new directions, incentives and instructions into creating the connection that is needed, especially with new government’s aspirations.
“It’s a matter of prioritising national and international responsibilities rather than it being based on national interest.”
Minister for Lands and Physical Planning and Lae MP John Rosso
A first-time MP, Rosso says: “It’s a pretty big job. I come from an urban electorate and so it’s a challenge in front of me.
“I’m pretty grateful for getting the job but at the same time it’s lot of hard yards in front of me to fix a lot of the things inside the department.
“Lands is a key issue with a lot of people in Papua New Guinea, businesses and I have my work trying to sort out all the issues.”
Minister for Bougainville Affairs and Abau MP Sir Puka Temu
Sir Puka said he would deliver a credible referendum process leading up to the vote in October.
“That means to secure financial support to achieve this both from our government and our development bilateral as well as multilateral partners,” he said.
“I will undertake wide awareness both on Bougainville and mainland and in particular members of Parliament regarding a clear process post-referendum and an agreed time frame on when Parliament can ratify the outcome of the negotiated position post-Referendum.”
Defence Minister and Okapa MP Saki Soloma
Soloma says he looks forward to a big challenge ahead of him as Defence Minister in ensuring the force is active in carrying out civic work around the country.
He said his focus was to actively engage the soldiers in doing more civic work, assisting in nation building as required by the prime minister.
He said he wanted to make sure that discipline was also instilled in the force as the image had been down for some time with a few soldiers engaging in illegal activities with civilians.
Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/new-ministers-keen-to-get-to-work/

Kramer tasked to restore public confidence in constabulary



By CLIFFORD FAIPARIK - The National

PRIME Minister James Marape is confident new Police Minister Bryan Kramer will implement plans to restore public confidence in the constabulary.
“We will be asking him in the first instance to restore credibility in the entire police hierarchy,” Marape said.
“It’s not only the commissioner or few sections of the force but the entire structure which is dysfunctional at the moment.”
Kramer said morale in the force was low.
“We need to revamp this area and we will give him total support to make sure that police officers are proud of their duties,” he said.
“They must work with pride and dignity and the restoration of the rule of law comes with effective policing.
“He will come under the watch of the Deputy Prime Minister Davis Steven.”
Marape urged people to assist the constabulary in its work.
“I’m calling on the public talking about corruption and mismanagement issues (to) bring evidence to the police,” he said.
“Your talk must be balanced with evidence.”
Marape urged the people who have any issue with “anyone including me” to present evidence to the police in the proper way to help in the investigation process.
“When our time is up in two years when we go for elections, we will leave behind an effective functional and better police force than the one we have today.”

Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/kramer-tasked-to-restore-public-confidence-in-constabulary/

Marape: Picking new Cabinet a struggle




By HELEN TARAWA - The National 

PUTTING together a new Cabinet was a bit of a struggle, says Prime Minister James Marape.
He said he could not satisfy “everyone”.
A notable omission from the line-up was coalition partner United Resource Party led by Hagen MP William Duma
He said some MPs short-listed for Cabinet were not considered because their party had requested four or five ministries which was not possible.
“We gave them an opportunity with one or two spots available but they wanted more than that,” Marape said.
“We will respect them wherever they are.
He has also told Opposition Leader Patrick Pruaitch that the Government will support to the Opposition.
“We want a functional Opposition (which) is good for a robust democracy and we expect them to fulfil that role.”
He said the Government would strongly recommend opposition MPs to parliamentary committees, especially the Public Accounts Committee and Public Works Committee.
Marape also said the UBS loan issue would be brought up for discussion in Parliament.
“Some key fundament institutions of the State would be looked at.
“For instance, the Attorney-General will set up the Independent Commission Against Corruption to ensure that good governance practices are maintained in our country,” Marape said.
“My name is mentioned in the report.
“Every one of us will make public announcements as to what will take place.
“I am subject to law like everyone else. I’m not higher than the law.”
The 14 ministers in the O’Neill Cabinet not in the Marape Cabinet are: Peter O’Neill (SHP), Kevin Iisfu (East Sepik), Fabian Pok (Jiwaka), John Pundari (Enga), Benny Allen (EHP), Merrah Kipefa (EHP), Rimbink Pato (Enga), Patrick Basa (Morobe), Jelta Wong (ENB), Roy Biyama (Western), John Kaupa (NCD)Simon Dumarinu (ARB), William Duma (WHP) and Douglas Tomuriesa (Milne Bay).

Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/marape-picking-new-cabinet-a-struggle/

PM picks two Opposition MPs in new-look Cabinet



Posted on The National

THE country’s eighth Prime Minister James Marape, pictured, made history on Friday when he included Opposition MPs Bryan Kramer (Madang) and Kerenga Kua (Sinasina-Yongomugl) in his 33-man Cabinet.
The announcement of Kramer as Police Minister during the swearing-in ceremony at Government House was greeted with a loud cheer – something never seen before at the governor-general’s official residence. Kramer is the Allegiance Party leader.
Kua, the National Party leader, is the Petroleum Minister.
Wabag MP Dr Lino Tom, an Independent, is the Minister for Fisheries and Marine Resources.
Marape’s Cabinet has 11 new faces, 10 of whom are first-time MPs. They are former West New Britain Governor Sasindran Muthuvel as the Minister for State Enterprise, Finschaffen MP Reinbo Paita as Minister for Communications and Energy, Telekom and PNG Power, Okapa MP Saki Soloma as Defence Minister, Jimi MP Wake Goi as Minister for Community Development, Sumkar MP Chris Nangoi as Minister for Correctional Services, Maprik MP John Simon as Minister for Agriculture, Lae MP John Rosso as Minister for Lands and Physical Planning, Wosera-Gawi MP Joseph Yopyyopy as Minister for Education, plus Tom and Kramer.
The ministers in the caretaker cabinet all retained their ministries except for Alotau MP Charles Abel who moves to Finance from Treasury and Bulolo MP Sam Basil to Treasury.
Justice Minister and Attorney-General Davis Steven, the Esa’ala MP, is the new Deputy Prime Minister.
Marape said Steven would look after ministers responsible for social sectors.
“Our country can never be fully benefit from gains of resources if we don’t have an effective functioning social sector.” Marape said.
Pangu has 10 ministries, the People National Congress Party was allocated nine, Melanesian Alliance Party has four, People’s Party with three, Peoples Progress Party has two, Our Development Party also has two, and one each to THE Party, National Party and the Allegiance Party.

Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/pm-picks-two-opposition-mps-in-new-look-cabinet/

DAY 1 ON THE JOB AS POLICE MINISTER

Image may contain: 1 person, sitting

By Bryan Kramer - Police Minister and Madang MP

Today marks my first day on the job as Minister for Police, an appointment where all credit goes to Prime Minister James Marape.

9:30am this morning I met with Commissioner for Police, Gary Baki at Police Headquarters to receive a debriefing. 

Commissioner arranged for a further debriefing 1:30pm this afternoon with Australian Federal Police who are heading the Australian PNG Police Partnership Program.

On Friday I will receive a debriefing by the divisional commanders from around the country.

Under the Marape Davis Government Members of Force can expect sweeping changes, not only in the how Government engages with the Constabulary but greater public accountability.

Papua New Guinea appoints reformer to crucial petroleum portfolio



By Tom Westbrook | Reuters | June 7, 2019
Commodity and energy companies with projects in the resource-rich archipelago have been awaiting the makeup of Marape's cabinet as a sign of his plans, after parliament voted him in last week on a platform of economic change.Papua New Guinea Prime Minister James Marape installed a reformer as petroleum minister on Friday, handing him a mandate to overhaul the sector and warning investors to "pack up and leave" if they did not like it.
Announcing his ministries in the capital of Port Moresby, Marape said Petroleum Minister Kerenga Kua - brought in from the opposition - shared his vision for raising more revenue from the resources sector.
"We are tired of being rent collectors," Marape told reporters at Government House where the cabinet was sworn.
He promised changes "friendly to the investor but also friendlier to our country".
Marape had sparked months of political chaos when he quit as finance minister over the government's handling of a big gas agreement struck in April with French oil major Total SA.
He then rode a wave of discontent over that deal, and an earlier one with ExxonMobil Corp, into the top office, triggering a new round of scrambling - this time from commodity firms clamoring to meet and lobby him.
Kua is a former attorney general turned prominent opponent of Marape's predecessor, Peter O'Neill.
He has been quoted in the media as saying resource laws should be changed to give the state a bigger stake in extractive projects.
"(He is) widely respected and a noted critic of dodgy deals," said Jonathan Pryke, director of the Pacific Islands program at Sydney think-tank the Lowy Institute.
Nevertheless, Marape has insisted reforms would be slow, unlikely to take effect until well beyond elections due in 2022, and not designed to harm investment.
Peter Botten, the head of PNG-focused energy firm Oil Search Ltd said in Sydney on Thursday he did not expect to make any significant new concessions on a gas deal it and ExxonMobil Corp hope to strike with the government.
Marape, referring to concern among foreign investors, offered both reassurance and a warning.
"I make no apologies to anyone," Marape said. "You don't like the way I'm speaking? Pack up and leave."
"Peter Botten knows me. I am investor friendly. But I have also to win for eight million shareholders of this country and that's what this generation of leadership is all about."
Go to this link for more: https://ramumine.wordpress.com/2019/06/08/papua-new-guinea-appoints-reformer-to-crucial-petroleum-portfolio/

Oil Search reinforces PR team as pressure mounts on several fronts



By Matthew Stevens | Australian Financial Review 

Don’t imagine for a second that Oil Search sits wholly calm amid the storm created by the dumping of long-standing Papua New Guinea prime minister Peter O'Neill  and the company’s place in the events that proved a tipping point in the collapse of political support for him.
In the lead-up to O’Neill’s replacement by leadership neophyte James Marape, Oil Search made wholesale changes to the way it manages its external affairs, delivering new blood to its media management and inviting Crosby Textor to take on the driller’s reputation management.
The most immediate effect of the Oil Search deckchair shuffle is that long-standing general manager of investor relations and communications, Ann Diamant, appears to have lost half of her brief to a former PNG television executive.
A familiar media contact point through her 16 years with Oil Search, Diamant has surrendered the day-to-day of communications and media management to a new face in the Australian media landscape. The new vice-president, communications and media, is Matthew Park.
Park lands at Oil Search with an ANU law degree, six years' experience in policy advisory with the Australian Communications and Media Authority and a whole lot of experience in PNG television. His most recent job of import was running a TV station in PNG and, even more recently, he ran PR for PNG’s APEC advisory council. But, according to his various CVs, that is about as close as he has got to knowing who’s who in the zoo of Australian media, or media anywhere but PNG for that matter.
Oil Search insiders suggest this shift and the decision to appoint Crosby Textor shows just how unnerved the company is by regime change rolling out in PNG.
As The Australian Financial Review reported on Friday, Marape continues to send mixed signals about his future relationship with Oil Search and its much more powerful partners in PNG liquid natural gas, Exxon and Total.
The house view at Oil Search is that Marape might seek changes to a recent deal with Santos that aligns the ownership of the P’nyang gasfield with a proposed LNG development, but that previous investment agreements will be left untouched.
Go to this link for more: https://ramumine.wordpress.com/2019/06/11/oil-search-reinforces-pr-team-as-pressure-mounts-on-several-fronts/

New PNG cabinet puts Oil Search and UBS Australia on notice



By Angus Grigg and Lisa Murray | Australian Financial Review 


Papua New Guinea’s new Prime Minister, James Marape, has appointed one of the most outspoken critics of a recently signed gas deal as the responsible minister and taken a swipe at Australia’s Oil Search in announcing a cabinet full of surprises on Friday afternoon.
In swearing in Kerenga Kua as the Minister for Petroleum, Mr Marape noted he was a lawyer who “shared his vision” for reforming the sector and maximising gains for PNG.
Mr Kua has previously said the $US14 billion ($20 billion) Papua LNG project, agreed in April, should be reviewed for its legality, potentially opening the way for the deal to be renegotiated.
The new Prime Minister has said he would not seek to unwind existing contracts. However, looking into the legality of this and other deals could be a way to reopen negotiations.
“We will come to a position that everyone is comfortable with without disrupting business," Mr Kua said when asked about the Papua LNG project after being sworn in.
"But [we will] ensure there is an equitable distribution of benefits which come out of these resource projects.”
Mr Marape used the occasion to take aim at Oil Search chief executive Peter Botten, following a speech Mr Botten made in Sydney on Thursday.
“Peter Botten knows me. I’m investor friendly but I also have to win for the 8 million shareholders of this country,” he said.
Prior to this the Prime Minister said he would not apologise for his comments on getting a better deal for the country out of resource projects.
“If you don’t like the way I’m speaking … pack up and leave,” he said.
This skirmish follows Mr Botten saying that any delay in the Papua LNG project would have it leapfrogged by other projects around the world.
"We can't wait too long before our place in the queue slips," Mr Botten said. "The government is aware of this, as is the new Prime Minister."
ExxonMobil and Total are spearheading the PNG LNG and Papua LNG projects, in partnership with Australian resources players Santos and Oil Search.
Shining a light on corruption
The other surprise move on Friday was the appointment of Bryan Kramer, a popular but outspoken opposition figure, as Police Minister.
Mr Kramer, who has over 117,000 followers on his Facebook page, has said former prime minister Peter O'Neill should face criminal prosecution and has written scathing articles about the UBS loan affair.
He said the deal, which had PNG borrow $1.2 billion from UBS to buy into Oil Search, would "go down as one of the dumbest investments in PNG's history".
His appointment should ensure ministerial-level support to further investigate the loan affair, which cost PNG $400 million.
On Friday, Mr Kramer said his main priority was keeping the people of PNG safe but he would also be looking at high-level corruption.
Shane McLeod from the Lowy Institute said Mr Marape had delivered a pointed and substantial shake-up of the ministry.
“Bringing across prominent opposition voices Kerenga Kua and Bryan Kramer – and placing them in key portfolios of Petroleum and Police – shows that Marape is serious about distancing himself from his predecessor, and shining a light on resource deals and allegations of corruption,” he said.

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