Showing posts with label Hela. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hela. Show all posts

Monday, March 2, 2020

PM Marape to speak to Hela Landowners on Royalty & Equity

Image result for James marape

By Prime Minister James Marape

All my tribes women and men from Gobe, Kutubu, Moran, Angore, Hides ( both pdl 1&7) and Juha, your royalty and equity from PNGLNG is still sitting in central bank.
I want to speak to those of you already in Pom this Wednesday so instead of your infightings that is derailing the process of distributing benefits to every children, mothers and all men, few of you have stood in the way can reach amicable solutions for the majority.
To all of yous back home, you don’t need to come to Pom, I will assist our petroleum minister Hon Kua and his department reconcile all that needs to be done in department and also assist expedite all matters few LOs have filed in court that has stopped payments for yous.
I will come back and visit those of yous back home in all pdls when time permits, so don’t come to Pom. I am checking on DPE to progress status of all PDLs in March and those PDLs who do not have court issues will be paid.
For those in courts, let’s mediate as our ancestors are great mediators. I want you all to talk and let’s resolve these issues and let’s roll the money to all our families and tribes.
Our friends in central province are getting theirs under my instructions because they have no disputes, our Kikori cousins should be getting theirs too so up to you all tribal leaders in the mountains to assist your clans and tribes.
See those of you in Pom on Thursday afternoon at 12 pm at Sir John Guise indoor stadium. Those not in Pom please don’t come, government will come to your project areas.
Cheers!
PMJM.

Sunday, March 1, 2020

Hela Provincial Education Division Launches Free Toll Numbers for Public to use to Report Teachers

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By FM 100 News

The Hela Provincial Education Division has officially launched its toll free number 79500048 at the Digicel head office on Tuesday this week.
Provincial Education Advisor Ronny Angu says this is the number the public can use to report sightings of teachers roaming around freely during working hours when they are supposed to be in the classroom teaching.
HE says the Provincial Government has allocated a lot of money in the Education sector so teachers must be in the classrooms , faithfully discharging their duties.
Angu is encouraging the public to make use of this number to report teachers.
HE adds under his leadership, tougher actions will be taken for those Teachers missing out in classrooms and those found to be roaming around doing nothing.
He also stresses that there will be no time for all the ghost names and lazy teachers who are paid for doing nothing.
Mr Angu says they must work harder to get quality output or leave Hela to get another job elsewhere.
He says his department would like to work with every stakeholder to increase the quality of education and making a difference in the future generations of Hela.
Meanwhile, the newly appointed Provincial Education Advisor also pledged his commitment to improve the education standard of Hela Province.
Mr Angu continues under his leadership education will be reformed and improved.
He says it will start with investing in Teachers by placing them in appropriate levels that will enable them to be competitive to provide quality education.
Teachers will have to improve their expertise in delivering quality curriculum based on their training and qualifications, he says because he believes investing in Teachers reform is the way forward in building quality output of students graduating in each level of education.
The Hela Provincial Education has already started working on creating a data base to screen qualification of teachers from elementary to secondary schools and of course the TVET.
He adds that Teachers with a Degree in Education, with subject specialists will all be required to teach in secondary schools while all those who have a Diploma in Teaching , will be teaching in primary schools.
He says Teachers with fake certificates will be identified and dealt with accordingly and as a way forward no Vocational and TVET trained Teachers be allowed to teach in Primary Schools in the Province.
(PICTURED: Mr Ronny Angu going through a presentation with a BSP Officer after taking office as the new Provincial Education Advisor for Hela.)





Friday, January 10, 2020

Centuries-long Hela war gets deadlier

Guns

AHMAD HALLAK
| The Age (Melbourne)
HELA - It is often said that tribal fighting in the Papua New Guinea Highlands is part and parcel of the socio-cultural fabric of the region.
With a history stretching back hundreds of years (if not more), it can be seen simply as an indivisible feature of the Highland way of life.

While to some extent true, tribal fighting in the last 30 years has become more akin to conventional warfare on the battlefields of the Middle East or sub-Saharan Africa than the pitched battles using the bows and arrows that characterised pre-colonial confrontations in the Highlands.
In the last 30 years, modern weapons, along with other accoutrements of modern technology, have made their way into Papua New Guinea. They have disrupted the traditional rules of tribal fighting that had historically limited the effects and consequences of the fighting and restrained fighters from going too far.
While in the past a decision to go to war with an opposing clan or tribe would have been taken collectively, now young and disillusioned men with access to modern weapons can unleash devastation on their enemies and their own communities almost single-handedly.
The presence of these modern weapons and their destructive firepower has also meant that the number of casualties is much higher, making it harder for opposing sides to reconcile (and the traditional exchange of compensation prohibitive) and leading to completely unprecedented tribal fighting dynamics.
Instead of pre-arranged battles between warriors in designated areas as in the past, villages are now attacked under cover of darkness as part of a scorched earth policy to kill and destroy with abandon. And while previously fighting was restricted to the geography of the tribes involved, targeted killings can now occur against random members of either side almost anywhere.
Schools and clinics are frequently attacked and destroyed, and most recently in Hela pregnant women and children were killed and some burnt alive.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has been present in PNG since 2007 and opened its offices in Mount Hagen and Bougainville in 2012. Since then, we have progressively grown our presence.
Today, most ICRC staff and resources are focused on protecting and assisting people affected by the tribal fighting in the provinces of Enga, Hela and the Southern Highlands.
Our teams are consistently in the field working with and supporting affected communities and local authorities to rebuild or rehabilitate schools (sometimes working hand in hand with previously warring tribes) and clinics, to install rainwater harvesting systems, storage tanks, and sanitation facilities.
The ICRC has helped women and orphan-headed households whose previous main breadwinners were killed in tribal fights, with one such beneficiary telling a colleague of mine how she was now no longer “invisible in her community” and part of the communal fabric once again.
Such cash grants are complemented with training on keeping livestock and agricultural techniques as well as on financial literacy. ICRC experts also carry out training for health professionals on emergency room trauma care and emergency management of victims of sexual violence. Soon, they are also looking to provide mental health and psycho-social support to victims of violence.
As we have a unique relationship with weapon bearers, we also conduct training on international policing standards for the Royal PNG Constabulary and officers of PNG Defence Forces involved in law enforcement operations. Moreover, we conduct training on international humanitarian law for legal advisors and senior officers from the PNG Defence Forces.
Having worked with the ICRC in Sudan, Iraq, Afghanistan, and South Sudan before Papua New Guinea, I cannot claim that the violence in the country, both past and present, shocks or surprises me, and that is unfortunate in its own way.
What complicates our work in PNG is that where it concerns tribal fighting groups, unlike an armed force of the state or non-state armed group, there is no established hierarchy to have a dialogue with who can issue orders to its soldiers.
Bouts of tribal fighting to the outside observer are as unpredictable as the weather, some with roots going back many generations.
Our teams spend countless hours listening, conversing with and persuading widows and community leaders, policemen and tribal fighters, provincial bureaucrats and church leaders to become partners in an age-old struggle to lessen the inevitable human suffering arising from conflict.
Ahmad Hallak was the head of mission of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Papua New Guinea

Go to this link for more: https://www.pngattitude.com/2020/01/a-violent-centuries-long-war-gets-deadlier.html

Saturday, December 21, 2019

Christmas message from Hela Provincial Administrator to Hela

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By William Bando-Hela Provincial Administor

Today 19th December I stood on behalf of our people and our Hela Provincial Government at Homa Field and said sorry and thank Papua New Guinea that came to shoulder our pain and wipe our tears for a week. We have been mocked and tortured for the doings of a few but surely the week long crusade here at Homa Rugby Field has been a blessing to many. May I wish all you Heavenly Angels from the 21 provinces and our big brothers ((Engans) from CAF Ministry a safe journey back to your respective provinces.
I also took the occasion to Forgive those that pulled the trigger and those that induced you to do what you did on me last september at the Tokia Bridge. I am sending a message that pig and money cannot buy life and we must never resort to compensation as a remedy. Hela must learn to say sorry and forgive in a true hearty way and I have started and done just that.
If I as your Provincial Administor do not embrace forgiveness, Hela will not know forgiveness and therefore I have forgiven those that do what they love doing. The killers and gun totters must be told point blank by us elites if we care about our place and people. I applozise to my relatives in Tani Pureni, Maria, Pori, Fugwa, Koroba and Tari if I had acted out of your wishes for compensation for their wrongs. Forgiveness was never in my mind but came naturally when on stage for the presentations
May you all find peace in these difficult times and it is my desire that all educated elites of Hela must start educating their immediate siblings and the very clan we come from to take back Hela. If we do not get the family unit which is the foundation of our existance stabled, the experiences of today is only a begginning of a time bomb and therefore all of us have a responsibility to our province through the discipline of our own individual family units.
To those wanting to succeed me as the Provincial Administor, I will give you time shortly so may I ask you to allow me to finish my term and then shall your turn come. We don't have many to choose from so therefore respect "mas stap"
Merry christmas to you all lovely God Never forgotten people of Hela and from me and my boys we wish you all a very peacefulful and a prosperpus 2020 for Hela and its people.

Thursday, December 19, 2019

Cabinet approves K300mil for hospitals



By PETER WARI - The National
THREE new hospitals to cost K300 million each will be built in Hela, Southern Highlands and West New Britain, Health Minister Jelta Wong says.
He said Cabinet had approved the projects.
Other provinces will be looking into later.
Wong accompanied Prime Minister James Marape and others to open projects in Tari, Hela, yesterday.
He said, although Hela was known for law and order issues, the unity of partners such as the Oil Search Foundation, Santos, the Tari-Pori development authority, Hela government and the Australian government through the incentive fund had seen new projects realised to benefit patients and health workers.
“The improvement and construction of infrastructures are taking place because of like-minded and God-fearing people working together to serve the people,” he said.
“The opening of the 28-room nursing quarters, mess hall for patients, X-ray and pathology unit and four houses for doctors are the beginning of many things to come.”
Wong commended the provincial health authority headed by chief executive Dr James Kintwa “for the wise and prudent management to put up such infrastructures”.
Oil Search Ltd chief executive officers and Hela health authority chairman Peter Botten said the support from partners such as Australia had improved health services in the province.
The PNG Incentive Funds gave K10 million for the development at the hospital.

PM opens nurses’ quarters, hospital kitchen during visit

PRIME Minister James Marape visited his Tari-Pori electorate in Hela yesterday to open several projects at the provincial hospital in Tari.
They were funded by the PNG Incentive Fund for K10 million through the PNG-Australia partnership programme.
Marape thanked the PNG Incentive Fund for the construction of a nurses’ quarters, plus the hospital kitchen and messing facilities.
The other projects was the hospital’s X-ray and pathology laboratories.
Marape said the partnership between the government of Australia, Oil Search Foundation and Oil Search “is a testament to the commitment to serving the people of Tari-Pori and the country as a whole”.
He said it would boost the morale of the hospital staff.
Marape said he wanted nurses and doctors to attend training sessions too.
He said the Government planned to bring better health services to the rural areas.


Hela health authority chief executive Dr James Kintwa (from left), Marape, Hela Governor Philip Undialu, Davis, Oil Search Ltd chief executive Peter Botten, Oil Search Foundation chief executive Stephanie Campbell and Wong opening the 28-room nurses’ quarters. – Nationalpics by PETER WARI

Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/cabinet-approves-k300mil-for-hospitals/

Thursday, November 21, 2019

Court to decide Hela regional recount



Posted by Post Courier

People of will know whether an initial order for a recount of ballot papers for the regional seat by the National Court will proceed to counting or a current Supreme Court review on that decision will go before a full bench of the high court. That was the indication by a one-person bench of the Supreme Court Justice Teresa Berrigan on Tuesday. 
This followed the hearing of two applications, one by the petitioner Francis Potape to dismiss the review for want of prosecution and another by the respondent and incumbent Governor Philip Undialu to vary or set aside the orders of another Supreme Court that ordered for the review book to be ready by last month, that is October 28. 
Lawyers for the parties, Paul Othas for Francis Potape, Gileng Goiye for Governor Philip Undialu and Alice Kimbu for the Electoral Commission spent almost half a day arguing their case before Justice Berrigan. 
Mr Othas submitted that the applicants had failed to comply with a Supreme Court order made on October 14 for the review book to be ready by October 28. 
“It is not only non-compliance of the rules but of a court order, they have no evidence to show compliance, filing and service as per the order nor have they set aside, varied or discharged the orders of the 14th…. The review must be dismissed for want of prosecution.” 
Goiye and Kimbu in rebuttal argued that there was no deliberate delay on their part and that the orders by the Supreme Court on October 14 were taken out on an exparte basis. They also highlighted to the court that there was another Supreme Court review involving the same parties that is awaiting a decision for amalgamation and a transcript that must be included in the review book. 
And in their application to vary and set aside the October 14 orders, Goiye submitted that the court had powers to do that and also make an additional order for the court reporting section to provide the transcript of the leave application before the Chief Justice.

Go to this link for more: https://postcourier.com.pg/court-to-decide-hela-regional-recount/

Friday, November 15, 2019

First echo-cardiographer passes on


James Tawila Wagiebu (12.1.1958 – 20.9.2019)
The Wagiebu children – Noel, Penny and Mali.









By BETTY GABRIEL WAKIA - The National
HELA has lost one of its most dedicated, committed, and humble public servants in James Tawila Wagiebu who was the most qualified Papua New Guinean echo-cardiographer also known as an echo tech or heart technician.
Echocardiography is a term mostly used by doctors or nurses who study an ultrasound of the human heart which shows the size and shape of the heart and how well the heart’s chambers and valves work by using the echocardiogram machine. The late James Wagiebu was the only qualified Papua New Guinean who knows how to use the machine.
Most Papua New Guineans who had gone to Port Moresby General Hospital (PMGH) to check up on their heart or students who had been to University of Papua New Guinea Medical School (UPNG) might see or know a bit about Wagiebu. He was the only practicing echocardiography (ECG) technician in the country with Sir Budi Kidu Heart Institute of the PMGH who serves thousands of Papua New Guineans. He also served hundreds of UPNG students by taking part in teaching basic echo and ECG to fourth year medical students and post graduates nursing students, and also assists doctors with research studies for postgraduate masters and undergraduate medical students for BMS.
Wagiebu comes from the Pari clan of the Pandu village in the South Koroba district of Hela. He was a pioneer in education from his village to become the first Papua New Guinean echo technician. All his families and relatives did not know what he did or what his work was all about until hearing from Prof Sir Kevau during the funeral service.
It was a huge surprise to his families, tribes and Hela communities when the late Wagiebu’s colleague and family friend Prof Sir Isi Kevau announced at his funeral that Wagiebu was the only echo technician in the country.
He has been outspoken about the importance of echocardiography and talking to the Health Department to train Papua New Guineans to take up echocardiography but that had never eventuated until his sudden passing on Sept 20 this year, which has affected the operation of the ECG room at PMGH to a sudden stop.
The ECG room at PMGH was shut down for a couple of weeks now whilst searching for someone from overseas to replace him.
Ruben Mari, James Wagiebu and Ken Kama – “The Three Musketeers” – in a UPNG Medical Faculty laboratory in 1989.
James Wagiebu’s education was influenced by his late mother Wagubi Katia, a village woman who had no knowledge of what education was, fought her way for her son to be enrolled at Koroba Community School in 1966 to 1972 and he went onto do grade seven to 10 at Tari High School in 1973 to 1976. In 1977 to 1980 he attended Mt Hagen School of Nursing and in 1981 he went onto do matriculation studies at UPNG.
He and two others, Ruben Mari from Wanigela and Ken Kama from Samarai were the pioneers in the field of health science who called themselves ‘The Three Musketeers’. In 1992, late Wagiebu was the first Papua New Guinean to study echocardiography at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Sydney, Australia followed by Ruben Mari who became the second Papua New Guinean and Ken Kama went onto study medical technology at London Biomedical Institute of Technology in United Kingdom.
These faithful and humble men from Papua who were committed to their profession -‘The Three Musketeers’ – have quietly been serving the eight million-plus people of Papua New Guinea.
The late James Wagiebu is survived by his wife, two sons and a daughter. He was laid to rest on Wednesday, Oct 23, 2019

Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/people-4/

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

ECG scientist James Wagiebu dies at 61

James Tawila Wagiebu

By BETTY GABRIEL WAKIA - PNG Attitude
PORT MORESBY - Hela has lost one of its most dedicated, committed and humble public servants with the death of James Tawila Wagiebu (1958–2019), the most qualified Papua New Guinean echocardiographer.
And, with his death, echocardiography services in PNG have come to a temporary halt as an urgent search for a replacement continues.
Echocardiography (also known as ECG) is a specialised medical technique which enables the human heart and its functioning to be studied and understood, and James Wagiebu was the only qualified Papua New Guinean qualified in this field.
Most Papua New Guineans who have gone to Port Moresby General Hospital’s Sir Budi Kidu Heart Institute to have their heart checked by the ECG machine know of James, as do students who have passed through the UPNG Medical School.
As the only practicing echocardiograph technician in the country he served thousands of Papua New Guineans over the course of his career.
He also served hundreds of UPNG students by teaching basic ECG to fourth year medical students and postgraduate nursing students as well as assisting many doctors with their research.
James Wagiebu came from a Pari clan of the Pandu village in the South Koroba district of Hela Province.
Many in his family and extended family did not understand his work until they heard about it from Professor Sir Isi Henao Kevau, a family friend, during the funeral service.
There was much surprise when Sir Isi explained that James was the only echo technician in Papua New Guinea.
James had been outspoken about the importance of echocardiography and in urging the health department to train more Papua New Guineans in this expertise, but this never eventuated.
As a result, his sudden death on 20 September caused operations of the ECG suite to come to a halt. The search continues overseas for a replacement technician.
James’ education was encouraged by his late mother, Wagubi Katia, who, even though uneducated herself, fought for her son to be enrolled at Koroba Community School (1966-72) from where he went to Tari High School (1973-76) and the Mt Hagen school of Nursing (1977-80).
From there went on to further study at the University of Papua New Guinea.
He and two colleagues, Ruben Mari from Wanigela and Ken Kama from Samarai, known as ‘The Three Musketeers’, were pioneers in the field of health science in PNG.
In 1992, James was the first Papua New Guinean to study echocardiography at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Sydney.
In his footsteps followed his comrades Ruben Mari and Ken Kama, who studied medical technology at London Biomedical Institute of Technology in the United Kingdom.
These faithful friends and humble men, committed to their profession, have since those formative years quietly been serving the eight million people of Papua New Guinea.
James Wagiebu is survived by his wife and two sons and a daughter. He was laid to rest last Wednesday.

Friday, October 25, 2019

Education remains company’s priority



Posted on The National

OIL Search has invested more than K16 million in its education sponsorship programme since 1996, benefiting more than 2,000 students from Hides, Kutubu, Moran, Gobe and Kikori.
The largest share of funding goes to covering university fees which averages almost K200,000 annually.
Students from the project impact areas attending vocational, technical, secretarial, teaching, health/medical and theology training can also receive annual funding for school fees.
Medical doctor and senior lecturer of the University of Papua New Guinea Medical Faculty (UPNG MedFac), Dr Phili Mapira, is a former recipient of the Oil Search scholarship.
Mapira attended Koroba Secondary School in Hela and went on to study medicine and surgery at UPNG from 2000 to 2005.
She returned to her old school in Koroba as a guest speaker during the grade 10 and 12 graduation ceremony where she challenged students to commit to learning if they wanted to be successful in life.
She also took the opportunity to acknowledge Oil Search as a continuing sponsor of the school’s academic dux awards and prizes which includes laptops, dictionaries and scientific calculators.
The initiative underpins the education sponsorship programme and is run by the Oil Search community affairs team in Hides to recognise and reward high performing students from Koroba and Tari secondary schools.
“As a former graduate of the school, I thank you for being a partner in human resource development through the education sponsorship programme. My (academic) success can be attributed to your support,” Mapira said.
Oil Search senior community affairs officer Kevin Wanima said the Oil Search Academic Dux Awards not only recognised and reward students, it also helped motivate others to work hard.
He encouraged students to exercise discipline and to use their knowledge to better themselves.
The Oil Search community affairs education sponsorship programme currently focuses on education, health, business/finance and technical courses, engineering and theology.

Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/education-remains-companys-priority/

Namah to PM: Act on Hela



By JEFFERY ELAPA - The National

A POLICE officer injured in an ambush in Hela was yesterday evacuated to Port Moresby, as the Opposition urged Prime Minister James Marape to quickly address the violence in his Hela province.
Oil Search Limited assisted in the medical evacuation of Constable James Kobol from Tari yesterday.
Kobol was injured in an ambush last week at the Tokoyo Bridge in Hela.
He was airlifted from Tari Hospital on an Oil Search helicopter to Moro where he was transferred to an Oil Search-chartered Link PNG flight to Port Moresby.
At Jackson airport, Kobol was met by Oil Search staff who transported him in St John Ambulance vehicle to the Port Moresby General Hospital.
Rick Loveridge, Oil Search senior vice-president medical and health services said: “We were happy to assist Constable Kobol and take immediate action upon receiving a request from Hela Governor Philip Undialu.”
Marape, the Tari-Pori MP, was in his province last week to attend the funeral of police officer Sergeant David Hale who was shot the week before.
He urged his people to stop the violence and learn to peacefully co-exist.
Yesterday, Opposition Leader Belden Namah accused Marape of failing to address law and order issues in Hela.
He said the recent attacks on police officers should prompt Marape to “take back Tari and Hela from lawlessness”.
Namah called on Marape to resign because the crime rate in Hela and the country had “spiralled out of control”.
“He does not know how to address the law and order situation in the country.
He can’t (even) control it in his district and province,” Namah said.
“He cannot defend his lack of leadership following the mass murder of innocent people, the gunning down of Sergeant David Hale last week and the chopping up of another policeman in Tari on Tuesday this week.
“The prime minister has all the resources at his disposal but cannot control law and order in his own district and province.
“What hope is there for the rest of the country?”
Efforts to get a comment from Marape yesterday were unsuccessful. Namah said Marape should arrange for a special security force operation “to flush out crime” in Hela and arrest the “senseless killers”.
“Enough of the empty rhetoric about talking back PNG and making PNG the richest black Christian nation in the world,” he said.
“He must show leadership and go back to his people and stop the senseless killings and frequent murders.
“He has failed his people of Tari-Pori and Hela,” Namah said.


Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/namah-to-pm-act-on-hela/

Monday, October 21, 2019

Marape tells people in Tari-Pori to protect public servants



Posted on The National

PRIME Minister and Tari-Pori MP James Marape told people in his district yesterday to protect public servants including police officers who were there to serve them.
He arrived with a government delegation to attend the funeral of policeman Sergeant David Hale who was killed last week.
Marape met the relatives of the late officer at the Pai police barracks.
He passed on his condolences.
Today, he will address the people of Tari-Pori and Hela in Tari town.
He told the people at Paipali village yesterday after arriving at Komo not to harm policemen and public servants and to respect the law. He said the police officers must be respected.
Marape was accompanied by Minister for Inter-Government Relations Pila Ninigi, State Enterprises Minister Sasindran Muthuvel, Hela Governor Philip Undialu, Chief Secretary Isaac Lupari, secretary for National Planning Koni Samuel and Works secretary David Were. The delegation flew into Komo and drove to Tari.
He was happy that they could inspect the road condition from Komo to Tari.
Marape wants the road from Mendi to Tari and into Komo and Koroba to be sealed.

Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/marape-tells-people-in-tari-pori-to-protect-public-servants/

Thursday, October 10, 2019

Namah tells PM to ‘take back Tari first

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By Isaac Nicholas - Post Courier

Prime Minister James Marape must “Take back Tari first before you take back PNG”, opposition leader Belden Namah told Parliament yesterday. The alternate Prime Minister, Mr Namah asked the Prime Minister to tell Parliament what had happened to investigations into the massacre of 24 men, women and children in his electorate this year. Mr Namah said an entire community including two pregnant mothers and children were reported killed in Munima, Peta and Karida villages in Tagali LLG between South Koroba and Tari on July 7. High powered guns were reportedly used in the fighting. “The shocking scene was brutal and ghastly, even by the standards of tribal warfare which happens often in many parts of our country,” Mr Namah told Parliament. He said the Prime Minister said at the time: “I am coming for you.” Mr Namah said a few weeks back, Hela Governor Philip Undialu and the Commander of the Defence Force celebrated a guns handover ceremony with locals in Komo, Hela. Mr Namah’s questions included: (.)Can the Prime Minister tell us whether or not any of the Tari killers been caught? And can he update Parliament. (.) Can the Prime Minister tell Parliament why we seem to be celebrating arms handovers in the province when we should be arresting every person with a gun? (.) What is the bigger message our Prime Minister is giving to PNG and the world by allowing a guns handover ceremony? You can kill and mutilate people and then we will ask you to hand over guns in a ceremony?” (.)Can the Prime Minister inform Parliament of law and order policies and of how he intends to take our cities and towns back from hoodlums, criminals and trigger-happy policemen? (.) And finally, can the Prime Minister tell us why he asks each of us to take back Papua New Guinea if he cannot take back Tari Pori? Mr Marape in response said what happen in Tari is a result of many years of neglect and problems faced as population grows but the economy has not corresponded with it. “The lack of police action in Tari is an indication to us, that the statistics we are faced with is nationwide. The Opposition leader’s view is that we step up and contain the law and order situation. Tari and Hela is home to 400,000 people with only 60 policemen. Statistics show one policemen to 7000 people. What has emerged is a symptom of a society that has absolutely little presence of law enforcement or the total government law and justice sector working. “Areas that anchor our current economy at present has minimal presence in the law and justice sector. “These projects continue to survive by the goodwill of the people, without leadership on the ground. “This is a sad point in time for 22, 24 or even one life is important and should not be lost at the hand of a mercenary. “One cosmetic approach will not be a permanent solution to the endemic problem. “Our nation is faced with the threat of insecurity from within our domestic ends, the prevalence of guns amongst us not only for the Hela province, but guns as a migratory species that moves from province to province, district to district hands to hands, and the mercenaries make good money out of this. “This parliament has it in our disposal to discuss, debate in total clarity to find a solution to this issue. “If it’s not a threat today, it will be a threat for us tomorrow.”


Go to this link for more: https://postcourier.com.pg/namah-tells-pm-to-take-back-tari-first/

PM salutes young man who lost entire family in Tari massacre



By Isaac Nicholas - Post Courier

Prime Minister James Marape has saluted a young ward member who lost his whole family during the massacre in Tari by not taking the law into his own hands. Mr Marape said the young ward member, Oli Ripu, has all the tribal arsenal he can use to retaliate for the killing of his entire family but did not. “He is a small businessman who can buy guns and retaliate but he literally cried in front of the policemen after he spoke to me on the phone,” he said. “He is the ward member of the village, and I said if you go and fight again, what will happen? “In the midst of negativities, good stories do emerge in places like Tari. “The young man said Member I will not go and retaliate, I leave it in your hands, hands of law and justice sector. He had every tribal arsenal to retaliate but he never retaliated and I take my hats of to this young ward member.” “As prime minister, because it is happening in my own electorate, I cannot be too greedy in mobilsing resources to attend to one matter because law and justice sector issues are prevalent right across our country. “One cosmetic approach will not be a permanent solution to the endemic problem our nation is face with, the threat of insecurity from within our domestic ends. “The prevalence of guns among us, not only Hela province, but guns is a migratory species. They move from province to province, district to district, hand to hand. The mercenaries they make money out of this one. “This parliament has it in our disposal to discuss, debate in total clarity and find a solution to this issue. If its not a threat today, it will be a threat for us tomorrow.” Mr Marape was responding to questions from Opposition Leader Belden Namah in Parliament yesterday.


Go to this link for more: https://postcourier.com.pg/pm-salutes-young-man-who-lost-entire-family-in-tari-massacre/

Friday, October 4, 2019

Undialu hopes to end fighting



By REBECCA KUKU - The National

Hela Province is host to a number of many natural resources projects that benefit Papua New Guinea.
The current biggest project, includes the PNG LNG Project source area of Hides, Angore, Kutubu, Moro, Moran and Mananda oil fields.
But despite its beauty and its resources tribal warfare continues to ravage their land as families are left homeless, children fatherless and women widowed at an early age as law and order issues continue to rise.
Cassie Kamuni is a 19-year-old widow with two young children aged three and one. Not only was her husband killed in a tribal fight but her father and two brothers as well.
“When I was 15 years old, they came in the night and killed my father and two brothers, my mother took us and we ran away back to her village.
“Without a father and brothers to stand up for us we were left defenseless, so my mum gave my hand in marriage to an old warrior who already had three wives, I was to become the fourth.
“But that is our way of life, one of his daughters is the same age as me, and we became friends.He was kind to me.”
“Though there were times when his other wives, older than I would attack me and beat me, we later became good friends and they loved my children and treated them as they were their own.
“But soon the tribal warfare began again, my husband left with his men after two weeks word reached us that he had died in battle.”
Cassie has gone back to her mother’s village but now with young ones to care for.
“All my husband’s worldly things were shared amongst the older sons; my children and I were given nothing.”
“We are now left at the mercy of my mother and her people to care for us,” she says.
Cassie says tribal fighting robbed her ofa normal childhood.
“If my father was not killed, I would be in high school now, but now I am a mother and again tribal fighting has robbed my children of a father.
“Such is the way of life for us, but it is how it has always been,” she says.
Hela Governor Philip Undialu says that Cassie’s story is just one of the many untold stories of his people.
“I can honestly say that tribal fighting has caused many damages, destructionand claimed many lives in Hela.
“Tribal fighting unlike the earthquake which just happened and is over, continues on a daily basis. Every day homes are burnt, people killed and it is an obstacle that we face every day.
“There areno actual figures, but I can say that there has been too many lives lost in tribal fights,” he said.
Undialu said that they have started holding peace mediation talks and called for the surrender of firearms but it would take a while.
“Though Hela is a resource-rich province in terms of oil and gas deposits, not everyone is benefiting from the extraction of these resources.
“That’s why, our focus is on building the welfare of individuals and that we can achieve through driving the agriculture sector and agribusinesses.”
Undialu said that the provincial government has started creating more job opportunities for their people in the hopes that warriors would lay down their arms.
“The provincial government in partnership with the LR Group from Israel established the Piwa Agro project at Tari producing around 8,000 chickens per month and Koroba Agro in the Koroba-Lake Kopiago electorate producing around 11,000 eggs per month.
“When you look at the benefits of these agribusinesses, they are generating a fair bit of income into the community.
“For instance, we have more than 30 local workers for Koroba Agro and if they are paid K350 per fortnight, you are looking at around K10,500 plus injected to the village every two weeks.
“In a month, it’s more than K20,000 put directly into people’s pockets.”
Undialu said the same was done for Piwa Agro and the price of eggs which used to be K1.50 each is now 70 toea.
“Our focus is to improve the welfare of our people and we hope to achieve that by investing more in the agriculture sector.”
He said the total investment made to establish the chicken farm was around K20million and the provincial government owns 80 per cent whilst the LR Group owns 20 per cent.
“Our next target is Wigman coffee and that will be the biggest agribusiness we will drive in the province with the aim to train around 5,000 farmers and plant around 15million coffee trees.”
Undialu hopes that with all these job opportunities people will start laying down their arms.
He said they were working on helping their people to become independent and also provide some stability in their lives so that people would have something to protect and will lay down their arms.
“We will also be providing materials for building homes for those who willingly surrender their firearms.
“If these people have permanent homes and jobs they will lay down arms because they would not want a tribal fight that would probably end with their homes being burnt.
“At the moment the homes are made of bush materials so they have no care; they can easily rebuild them again, but if we give them a stable home, they will want to protect them knowing it would not be easy to rebuild again if they get burnt down in a tribal fight,” he said.
Undialu said they were doing their best to address the issue within the province through their society context but also needed support from the National Government, non-governmental organisations, churches and other partners to address the ongoing tribal fights.


Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/undialu-hopes-to-end-fighting/

Thursday, October 3, 2019

Komo league ends season with first grand final



Posted on The National

KOMO Rugby League Association had its first grand finals on Sunday, signifying a historic achievement for the district.
The inaugural season has seen Komo produce female, Under-20 and the A-grade teams.
Under-20 player Humule Thomas Wabe made it into the Highlands side at the regional championships in Goroka.
Sunday started with Topai Python and Gateway Dust facing off in the women’s division. Gateway Dust won 3-0.
The B-Grade fixture was the second match of the day, with Elawi Sharks beating Topai Tigers 2-1.
The last game was the men’s grand final. Kupe Eels’ Ikipe Amenaya scored the opening try and man-of-the-match Aipe Kamia scored the last four-pointer to secure a 18-8 win over the Tigers
Hela Sports and Youth coordinator Ken Angobe, ExxonMobil PNG’s Kim Hahn, Murray Johnson and Elly Sawa and Hides Gas Development Corporation operations manager Abel Voyorite attended.
Kim Hahn when making the presentation said the tournament had brought peace and unity to the community. She said it had broken down barriers and had included all members of the district.
“We are glad that we have been here with you since day one when you started this journey and you have truly inspired us as well as other communities who now want to be like you,” Hahn said. Angobe thanked ExxonMobil PNG and Hides Gas Development for their support towards the association.
Angobe praised the community and the players for displaying a safe and eventful day of matches.


Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/komo-league-ends-season-with-first-grand-final/

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

K500,000 for Hela Privincial Health Authority Doctors Incentives

Image may contain: 9 people, people smiling, people standing and outdoor

By Amos Libe

Today a cheque presentation of K500,000 was made to the Hela Privincial Health Authority (HPHA) as doctors incentives by Hela Governor Hon. Philip Aja Undialu on behalf of the Hela Provincial Government (HPG). This was from a commitment he made early on in the year.

Getting in qualified and experienced health professionals has been one of the major challenges of the HPHA in the past couple of years. Hela is seen by many as a challenging place to work. Hence, this funding support will go a long way in retaining as well as recruiting new qualified and experienced, specialist medicial professionals to take up specialised roles in the HPHA.

The Hela Provincial Government under the Political leadership of Governor Undialu as well as Provincial Administrator William Bando have continuously supported the HPHA. In the recent past they also gave a K1million funding support early last year. This funds have been used in many of the capital works programs currently happening within the Tari Hospital premises. This includes changing the face of the hospital with the new Accident and Emergency building being erected in front.

On behalf of the HPHA board and administration under Dr. James Kintwa , I would like to extend my appreciation to Governor Undialu, all the Hela Assembly members and the HPG for this timely support. We appreciate your efforts to maintaining a healthy and commited working relationship between HPG and HPHA. We also look forward to your continued support in the future.

Health is everyone's business and the HPG has shown commitment to this cause. This is appreciated by all stakeholders. Especially the people to which we owe and who deserve nothing less.

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Hela: Will the people avenge Big Pig LNG?

Prized big pig in the main street of Tari (Albert Tagua)
Prized big pig in the main street of Tari (Albert Tagua)

By SIMON DAVIDSON - PNG Attitude Blog
| An entry in the Crocodile Prize
SONOMA – The highlands province of Hela is host to a multi-billion dollar liquefied natural gas project. But operating alongside the wonders of modern technology is a culture full of rich tradition and custom.
Hela functions on the patrilineal system, where the man owns everything: the land, the pigs and he is the heir of the father’s riches, knowledge of the sacred rites and traditional history.
In traditional Hela, pigs play an important role. The men use pigs to pay compensation, make feasts, pay bride price and meet communal obligations. Through pig wealth, the man becomes beneficent to the community.
A man’s wealth is determined by the number pigs he has. Men marry many wives to look after their pigs. If they have many pigs, they will build many pig houses.
To be a real man, there were many prerequisites. A man must be brave. He must run towards fear, not retreat. He must fight courageously in battle and kill many men.
But he must also own a lot of pigs. Before the emergence of modern billionaires, a traditional rich man was defined by the pigs he owned.
Today Forbes magazine nominates the rich list, but then the people in the community nominated the richest man. There would be consensus among the people as to who was the richest man.
Young women in the village had to fight to marry the richest man, a boon and a blessing to her family and tribe. Families wanted to be aligned with the rich man to build and gain prestige and hegemony over the clan and warring tribes.
During pig killing ceremony, the big man killed many pigs and distributed the meat to his extended family and neighbouring clans. He gained pleasure by seeing his pig killed and the meat distributed and given to his relatives to eat and celebrate.
The carcass of the beast was distributed amongst his vast extended family, so they could reciprocate when their time came. In the process, the big man gained fame and popularity, built new relationships and cemented existing ones.
The village folks who feast upon the big man’s generosity praised him and called him the man who kills pigs. He was praised by friend and foe alike.
The pig killing exploits increased his status and he became a big man in the community. He assumed leadership roles. He became the spokesman at important gatherings. He was consulted before the community performed a traditional ceremony. The community expected him to contribute more when there was a pig exchange ceremony.
It was culturally improper for someone else to kill a pig, cut it and give him a lesser share. If this happened, a heated argument erupted which usually resulted in tribal fighting. This could last many months and cost many lives.
Houses and other property including trade stores were burned down, all for the loss of a pig. The pig was a cultural icon that gave identity and value to the owner. To kill someone’s pig was to touch a cultural commodity that was highly prized. The pig gave the owner prestige, power and fame. For pigs, men were willing to fight to the last man. For their pig, they would die.
To the modern day Hela people, LNG is their biggest pig.
It is owned by the Hela people. It is found in their land and they are the host to the multi-billion dollar project.
Traditional legends predicted the time when the LNG project would come, symbolised by fire coming out of the earth. The ancient myth of their fathers was fulfilled before their eyes. They own the LNG gas.
Culturally, they have the right to a big say about how their pig is to be killed and distributed to their family and their extended tribesman around this beautiful nation. They should have been consulted with a sense of respect.
The decision to kill the pig and distribute it was made at a Kokopo hotel at a Landowner Benefit Sharing Agreement (LBSA) signing between government and illiterate land owners.
The landowners were induced to sign away their birthright after the offer of free beer, women and money.
To villagers who for most of their life had never seen civilisation, the LBSA ceremony was their moment when fantasy became reality. For many old folks who grew up hearing the legend, the LBSA ceremony was a dream come true. They were excited about what was taking place.
But what were they getting in reality? They had agreed to allow the developer to pipe their gas and export it. For this, they would receive a royalty a million times less than the developer.
The major beneficiaries are Exxon Mobil and its consortium of overseas investors and the PNG government. Moreover, some of the major decisions about the LNG project are decided in corporate boardrooms in America and other places.
Like the proverbial Esau who sold his birthright for a pot of soup, the Hela people were conned to sign away their heritage for a pittance.
Today, more than 10 years and 200 LNG shipments after the signing, many people in Hela are beginning to see that they were truly cheated by the developers and the government. They are still waiting for their money and many have borrowed substantially from private lenders in anticipation of the royalty windfall.
Instead of realising their dreams they are being chased by loan sharks. They are under pressure and many are dying without tasting even a small benefit of their long waited royalty.
Culturally, it is an insult to trick someone to get their biggest pig and give the owner less than he deserves. Rightfully he deserves a big portion because he is the owner. To deny the rightful heir and owner is unjust and immoral.
What is likely to happen is a rebellion by the Hela people against the developers and the government for taking their LNG and giving them less than they are entitled to.
When you give a Tari man less pig than he deserves he says, "Bring my pig back." He is a child of his culture. He is conditioned by the assumptions of his culture. Tari men are also fearless fighters. They are not afraid to die. Fear is not in them. They are known even to kill themselves if things don’t go their way.
Some of the big ethnic clashes in the suburbs of Port Moresby have been ignited by Tarians. To deal with Tarians foolishly is to play with fire.
If the government and developers do not soon meet the demands of the landowners by giving them a fair share of the LNG proceeds, the people’s long impatience may explode causing another crisis in the new Hela Province.
When this happens it will shake the nation’s weak economy whose brightest hopes are bound in LNG. It will also undermine investor confidence in this nation.
What the government and investors need to do is remedy the mistake of yesteryear. They have to revisit the Landowner Benefit Sharing Agreement and give the owner of the biggest LNG a bigger share of his beast.
The British mining law adopted by Australia and the PNG government, which gives the government absolute right of all minerals under the ground, is draconian because it robs the people of their birthright.
This law makes foreign investors richer while the original landowners are marginalised on their own land.
When the men from Tari discover they have been marginalised, they will react with violence and it will be a seismic event whose tremors will be felt widely.


Go to this link for more: https://www.pngattitude.com/2019/09/hela-will-the-people-avenge-big-pig-lng.html

Tuesday, September 10, 2019

Parkop condemns violence



By Rebecca Kuku and Majorie Finkeo The National

NATIONAL Capital District Governor Powes Parkop has condemned the violence that broke out after the Lae Tigers beat Hela Wigmen 15-4 in the Digicel Cup rugby league final at the National Football Stadium on Sunday.
Parkop said that he was “totally disgusted, ashamed” by what had transpired.
According to police reports, four females were stripped and sexually abused by a group of Hela Wigmen supporters at Boroko.
Dog Unit director Leith Nidung told The National that the four young women wearing Lae Tigers T-shirts were pulled off near the big drain at the back of Stop & Shop next to Salvation Army, where their clothes were torn off.
Nidung said they were harassed and sexually assaulted when police arrived at the scene.
“They were completely naked and the group of Hela Wigmen supporters were trying to gang-rape them when police arrived and rescued them,” he said.
“The public assisted the four women with clothes to cover their bodies.
“Luckily, the incident happened close to the police station, there was a lot of people watching but no one wanted to help till police arrived at the scene.
“What has happened to our society for such an animalistic act to have taken place?”
Nidung said Hela Wigmen supporters also threw stones at their vehicles and police were outnumbered but they did their very best to contain the incident.
“Vehicle windscreens were stoned, lap tops, mobile phones stolen, bag-snatching, pick-pockets and many innocent Lae Snax Tigers supporters were attacked.
“It was difficult to arrest the suspects because of the crowd and we could not identify them.”
Hela Governor Philip Undialu also condemned the attacks and mayhem caused by Hela supporters after they lost.
Undialu told The National that “while he was not taking responsibility for the incidents” he condemned the actions of the person or persons using the Hela Wigmen name to incite violence.
Meanwhile, the Hela Wigmen Rugby League Club released a statement yesterday saying that it was an isolated incident by opportunists.
The statement said that an isolated incident could not be used to discredit what was an outstanding 2019 Digicel Cup competition, an entertaining finals series topping off with a spectacular grand final on Sunday.
“The Kroton Hela Wigmen were gracious in defeat.
“No punches were thrown by the players or the officials for the entire 80 minutes. Rugby League won at the end of the day,” the statement said.
“What happened between spectators within National Football Stadium are within the jurisdiction of the venue management to take note off and appropriate fines and actions to be imposed on the people concerned.
“What happens outside the National Football Stadium are in the hands of the police and appropriate charges must be laid on the people concerned by laying formal complaints. It is a police matter.”


Go to this link for more: https://www.thenational.com.pg/parkop-condemns-violence/

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