Johnny
Blades, RNZ International - johnny.blades@radionz.co.nz
The Papua New Guinea coalition
government appears to have a comfortable majority in parliament despite
attempts to table a motion of no-confidence against the prime minister.
But as the PNG parliament resumed
this week after a break of almost five months, Peter O'Neill found himself
under fire over his handling of an economy showing serious fissures.
Papua
New Guinea's Prime Minister, Peter O'Neill. Photo: PNG PM's office
Since election in 2012, the prime minister's mastery of the numbers in parliament has rarely looked in doubt. Mr O'Neill's People's National Congress has been able to lure dozens of MPs from parties less-resourced than his, to become easily the largest party in parliament, with around fifty of the 111 MPs in its ranks.
The opposition this week lodged the
motion of no-confidence with the Speaker's office, but the motion was being vetted
by a parliamentary committee stacked with supporters of the prime minister.
The deputy opposition leader Sam
Basil said whether the motion went through or not, parties within the ruling coalition were disillusioned with
the leadership.
"The country is cash-strapped
now," he said. "We're seeing signs of no liquidity in our system and
as I've said the Central Bank has been pressured by the government to raise
more funds."
"They are really struggling at
the moment to do that. And as far as we can see, it's not a good sign of a good
government running the country in terms of bringing us to that mess."
Mr O'Neill was however dismissive in his response to
opposition leader Don Polye's questions in parliament
about cash flow problems, debts and the allegedly rapid decline in the state of
the economy.
"Mr
Speaker, I know it's grand-standing to the highest degree for us to just come
and say anything that we want to say, but we must be factual about what we
say," said Mr O'Neill, adding that monetary
policy was the domain of the Central Bank and not his government.
Papua
New Guinea opposition leader Don Polye. Photo: Supplied
However, opportunities for the
opposition to engage in serious debate with the government are very few since
the O'Neill-led government moved legislation to reduce the number of annual
sitting days in parliament from over 60 to 40.
PNG's registrar of Political Parties,
Alphonse Gelu, admitted that recent developments had
eroded parliament's effectiveness.
"You know, the demise,
diminishing number of members in the opposition; the number of sitting days;
and the inability of the opposition to hold the government to account; there's
a number of things, and most importantly the debate on very important
legislations that go through parliament," he said.
Dr Gelu said he is frustrated that
legislation he helped develop to revise the Organic Law on the Integrity of
Political Parties and Candidates had not made it onto the parliamentary agenda
before the 2017 election. He explained that the legislation would tighten up on
the flagrant movement of MPs from political parties which they entered
parliament in, something which has gutted Peter O'Neill's opponents since the
2012 election.
A
view of the government benches in Papua New Guinea's parliament. Photo: RNZ / Johnny Blades
Still, the main parties in the
coalition government moved to signal their commitment to the prime minister
after the motion of no-confidence planes re-surfaced this week. Ben Micah, the
leader of one of the People's Progress Party, said the coalition's support for
the prime minister remains locked in until the election.
"My commitment to prime minister O'Neill and our coalition partners, the
National Alliance and the United Resources Party, is unshakeable until the
writs are returned in 2017," said Mr Micah, who
holds the influential Petroleum and Energy ministerial portfolio.
Public
pressure
But outside the parliament questions
about the O'Neill administration persist as the country's cash flow troubles
begin to bite.
Public servants continue to go
without pay. Power blackouts have become constant in the main cities Port
Moresby and Lae. Also, budget constraints have meant
cuts to health and education services amid a prolonged drought.
Catholic Health Services, which
provides up to a third of PNG's medical services throughout the country and
relies on government funding, is feeling the effects of the cash crisis. The
director of Catholic Health Services, Justine McMahon, said the government had
reduced its support and for some staff this means 40 percent pay cuts.
"Staff will have to be put
off," said Ms McMahon, "but other staff
will leave because they will not put up with that level of cut."
The Health minister, Michael Malabag, told parliament that the health of the people was
not being put at risk by the cuts to health services. However public concern
about these problems is growing.
Papua
New Guinea's parliament.
Photo: RNZ / Johnny Blades
A planned public march on
parliament, protesting about poor governance, was planned for this week but
police issued a directive saying it would be illegal. Police said the decision
was for the safety and security of residents and businesses.
However, the activist Martyn Namorong said the police
action was disappointing.
"Given the difficult economic
times, the problems that are associated with that, there was a big response to
the call that was put on social media for a protest, and predictably we have a
clamp down on it," said Mr Namorong,
who is the national co-ordinator of the PNG Resource
Governance Coalition.
"Again, from my perspective,
the authorities have the legal mandate to do that and so it brings into question
whether Papua New Guinea truly sees itself as a democracy if we have laws that
allow police to clamp down on lawful assembly."
PNG's
mainly rural-based population struggle for access to adequate health and
education services Photo: RNZ / Johnny Blades
These and other signs of a stifling
of public discussion in PNG are a concern to the MP for Sinesine-Yongomul,
Kerenga Kua, who likened
the current situation in PNG to a pressure cooker reaching boiling point, with
the government holding down the lid.
"That's what they are doing,
they are building up pressure in the system, they are building up pressure in
the community, they are building up pressure in the
country. And when you do that for long enough, it explodes," he said.
"When it explodes, you lose your
ability to control and regulate it. If you're running the country, it's a
serious matter. I would want to think that we should not put the lid on debate.
Allow debate to take place on all fronts. You listen and then you
respond."
LNG
Project facility, Central Province, Papua New Guinea. Photo: RNZI / Johnny Blades
Money
woes
To add to the prime minister's woes,
PNG has been placed by Moody's Investors Service on review for a currency
issuer ratings downgrade.
Mr O'Neill's government deployed significant state resources
for PNG to successfully host the Pacific Games as well as the Pacific Islands
Forum summit last year. PNG is preparing to host the APEC summit in 2018 too in
what's billed by the government as a sign of the country's growing international
role.
However these big ticket events are
no consolation to most of the population which struggles for adequate health
and education services. PNG's resources sector boom of the last decade is well
and truly over, and revenues from its landmark LNG gas Project (led by Exxon
Mobil) appear to be tied up with repaying government debt.
Powes
Parkop, the governor of Papua New Guinea's National
Capital District. Photo: RNZ / Johnny Blades
The Governor of the National Capital
District, Powes Parkop,
insisted that PNG was not facing a debt crisis, but said now ws the time for the government to borrow more.
"We are in a situation where we
have the opportunity that we have - oil and gas and minerals - might not exist
for the future. So it is this generation that is going to make that choice for
our people for the future. Sometimes, for me, I think we are not making that
choice. We are also not taking advantage of the (international) aid finance
that is available to us."
The prime minister was last year taken
to court by opposition leader Don Polye for his
decision to take out a US$1.2 billion loan with Switzerland's UBS without
parliamentary approval. However Mr Polye appears to approve of Mr
O'Neill's government reportedly taking out a new US$250 million dollar-loan
from the International Monetary Fund in order to meet its basic expenditure in
health and education, and other essential areas.
Port
Moresby CBD.
Photo: RNZI / Koro Vaka'uta
The government, Mr
Polye said, had been forced into the loan because
commercial banks had lost their appetite for buying the government's treasury
bills to raise revenues to meet its spending, and Peter O'Neill's sovereign
bond issue was not taken up. The international lending agency, according to Mr Polye, had better strategies
on how PNG could create a sustainable and sound economy.
Governance
But according to Kerenga
Kua, a lot of the disillusionment around Peter
O'Neill centred on his lack of adherence to basic
standards of governance. He cited the prime minister's refusal since 2014 to
stand down to allow police to probe his role in a major fraud case involving allegedly illegal state
payments to a law firm.
"Here's a prime minister who is
facing a warrant of arrest. Instead of stepping down, he's still sitting in the
chair and throwing all the state resources into defending himself," he
said.
The MP claimed the prime minister has
been "throwing all manner of trivial applications into the court" to
frustrate and delay the case on technicalities, and "procrastinate through
the court system forever and ever."
"And the sad thing is even the
courts are buying into it," said Mr Kua who was removed as Attorney-General by Peter O'Neill in
2014 for pressing the prime minister to step aside to allow the investigation
to take course. The new Attorney-General, Ano Pala,
is currently on bail on a criminal charge for allegedly perverting the course
of justice over legal matters related to the fraud case.
Papua
New Guinea's Attorney General Ano Pala and the man he
replaced in the job, Kerenga Kua.
Photo: RNZ Todagia Kelola
Meanwhile, Mr
Kua has rejected a government claim that his
signature was forged on the motion of no-confidence being considered by the
speaker's office for tabling in parliament.
The leader of government business,
James Marape, said the opposition's motion was
questionable because it wrongly purported to have signatures of Mr Kua and Sir Michael Somare. Mr Marape
told media he would refer the opposition to police for attempting to abuse
procedures of change of government through forgery, fraud and deceit.
But Mr Kua said he saw Mr Marape's claim as a diversionary tactic. He said his
signature was not forged as claimed, but conceded that he failed to convince
other members of his party, the National Alliance, to support the motion.
Peter O'Neill's coalition partners
look set to stay with him until next year.
Topics: Papua New Guinea
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