Former Fiji United Freedom Party (FUFP) leader Jagath Karunaratne (left) and ex-SODELPA whip Mosese Bulitavu in court in Suva yesterday. The judge ruled a retrial because a “substantial miscarriage of justice” had been carried out. Image: Jessica Savike /Fiji Times
Fiji judge orders retrial in ‘hate graffiti’ spray painting sedition case
By Jessica Savike in Suva
Fiji High Court judge Justice Vinsent Perera has ordered a retrial of former opposition SODELPA parliamentarian Mosese Bulitavu and Fiji United Freedom Party president Jagath Karunaratne in a case of alleged sedition over political graffiti.
The pair had appealed against their conviction and sentence of almost two and a half years each.
Bulitavu had been sentenced by Suva Magistrate Deepika Prakash to two years, five months and 13 days imprisonment, and Karunaratne was sentenced to two years, five months and 16 days imprisonment after being found guilty of sedition.
It is alleged the two were involved in spray painting words in different places between Nausori and Suva with the seditious intention of bringing into hatred or contempt, or to excite disaffection, against the government of Fiji.
It is alleged they did this with others between the August 1-27, 2011.
Justice Perera ruled in court yesterday there had been a substantial miscarriage of justice.
He said the magistrate breached or did not follow fundamental legal principles.
More than one person
Justice Perrera said it was clear the words were not spray painted by Karunaratne and Bulitavu, adding that the offence had been committed by more than one person.
The judge noted the citings of case laws by Magistrate Prakash, saying she had not followed them, and that it was clear she had not made a finding of the alleged act.
He set aside the conviction and allowed the appeal.
Bulitavu and Karunaratne have been released on bail.
The matter has been adjourned to September 24 and will be called before Chief Magistrate Usaia Ratuvili.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>Students, migrants boost Nepalese community in NZ by 1000%
A Nepali family at a Nepalese New Year’s celebration: Sujata Nepal (from left), Nepal Adhikary, Aarna Adhikary and Ashish Adhikary. Image: Rahul Bhattarai/Te Waha Nui
By Rahul Bhattarai in Auckland
Almost 17,000 Nepalese people are now living in New Zealand following a sharp increase of migration from the Himalayas country, according to Statistics New Zealand’s latest figures.
In 2013, there were approximately 1600 Nepalese people in the country, but five years later that figure has increased by almost 1000 percent.
Of those living in the Auckland region, the majority have typically settled in the Puketapapa local board area in Mount Roskill (16.4 percent), Henderson-Massey local board area (14.1 percent), and Waitemata local board area (11.3 percent).
The president of New Zealand Nepal Society (NZNS), Dinesh Khadka, said 60 percent were international students and 40 percent were long-term residents who were on visas or work permits.
“Approximately 9000 [Nepalese] people live in Auckland and the rest are dispersed across various parts of New Zealand,” said Dinesh Khadka.
Two communities
NZNS is one of two Nepalese community organisations in Auckland, with a registered membership of 280 families.
The other is the New Zealand Nepal Association with 100 registered members.
A national festival will be held in Auckland on October 13 when Nepalese will celebrate Dashain, a national festival, which symbolises the victory of good over evil.
Dashain takes place over 10 days, when family members and friends come together and enjoy traditional cuisine, play cards, fly paper kites and play on a traditional bamboo swing.
Rahul Bhattarai is a student journalist on AUT’s Postgraduate Diploma in Communication Studies and also a part-time reporter for the Pacific Media Centre’s Pacific Media Watch freedom project. This article was first published by Te Waha Nui.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – August 24 2018
Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – August 24 2018
Editor’s Note: Here below is a list of the main issues currently under discussion in New Zealand and links to media coverage.
[caption id="attachment_297" align="aligncenter" width="640"]
The Beehive and Parliament Buildings.[/caption]
Simon Bridges expenses leak
Jane Patterson (RNZ): Leak saga reveals a party with serious internal problems
RNZ: Bridges: Police know identity of texter claiming expense leak
1News: ‘Ultimately, I don’t know who this is’ – Simon Bridges says police know the identity of expenses leaker
RNZ: Watch: Simon Bridges reacts to expense leak development
Newshub: Simon Bridges wants investigation into leaker continued despite mental health plea
Jason Walls (Interest): Bridges’ leaker investigation to continue, despite police knowing their identity
Jo Moir (RNZ): Exclusive: Text plea to call off Bridges expense leak inquiry
Herald: National Party member claims they leaked Simon Bridges’ expenses: report
Newshub: Simon Bridges’ expenses leaker sends anonymous text pleading for end to inquiry
Herald: Mallard responds to alleged National Party text on Simon Bridges expenses leak
Cameron Slater: Who’s National’s dirty little leaker?
Herald: Former solicitor-general Michael Heron, QC, to lead Simon Bridges’ expenses leak inquiry
Stacey Kirk (Stuff): Former solicitor general to investigate leak of Simon Bridges’ expenses
RNZ: Former solicitor-general to lead inquiry into Bridges’ expenses leak
Lucy Bennett (Herald): Release of ministers’ expenses delayed by Internal Affairs oversight
Justice and police
David Fisher (Herald): Kelvin Davis: Letting prisoners vote brings them closer to society and takes them further from crime
Tom Noakes-Dunca (Newsroom): Keep talking until justice is done
Rosemary McLeod (Stuff): If you feel your life is valueless, why wouldn’t you turn to drugs, crime and junk food
Chris Trotter (Daily Blog): The Summit Of Folly: Why ‘Middle New Zealand” Will Have The Last Word On Crime And Punishment
Asher Emanuel (Spinoff): Media are critical in criminal justice thinking. So how did they cover the big summit?
Dan Satherley (Newshub): Labour MP defends justice summit
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): Nothing will derail Justice reform like the Woke Left
Liz Gordon (Daily Blog): Another cat rescued from dangerous tree
David Fisher (Herald): Act’s David Seymour says give inmates access to key programmes blocked by glitch in Three Strikes law
1News: Inside Parliament: A close-up look at the Government’s Criminal Justice Summit (video)
RNZ: ‘Restoring mana’ can cut Māori prison numbers – Little
Jim Rose (Herald): Andrew Little’s view put to test by world trends
David Farrar: An excellent case for the first maximum no parole sentence
Phil Pennington (RNZ): Family Court judges raised concerns with new Ministry 10 times
Education
Simon Collins (Herald): $65m Government bailouts for Unitec and Whitireia polytechnics
John Gerritsen (RNZ): Unitec and Whitireia need massive government bailouts
Newshub: Auckland’s Unitec and Whitireia get millions in Government boost
Jessica Long (Stuff): Poor financial health sees Government stump up with cash for Whitireia, Unitec
Josephine Franks (Stuff): $50 million cash injection for Unitec
Hamish McNeilly (Stuff): Otago uni redundancies cost $11.3m over five years
John Milford (Stuff): The gap between what business needs and what is being taught in our institutions
Peter McKenzie (Newsroom): Why students are so angry about mental health
1News: Wellington students lauch #MeToo blog in bid to make university experience safer
Leah Te Whata (Māori TV): Hato Petera closure not certain
Eden More (RNZ): ‘The question is, what happens next?’
Simon Collins (Herald): Hato Petera College supporters urge Education Minister Chris Hipkins to keep the school open
Eden More (RNZ): Local iwi fight for Māori catholic school to stay open
Kendall Hutt (Stuff): Education Minister Chris Hipkins hears from community on future of Hato Pētera College
Cherie Sivignon (Stuff): Salisbury School tips roll increase after Government announces wider access
Herald: Rosehill College school brawl: Mongrel Mob and Black Power at centre of claims
Tarannum Shaikh and Melanie Earley (Stuff): Police called to Auckland’s Rosehill College after reports of students fighting
Newshub: Auckland’s Rosehill College goes into lockdown amid school fight
Newshub: Rosehill College brawl: Alarming new footage captures scale of frenzied punch-up
Debbie Jamieson (Stuff): Cross country run optional at some schools to look after children’s ’emotional wellbeing’
Tema Hemi (Māori TV): Making maths fun for tamariki
Alice Angeloni (Stuff): Learning support strike a far cry from teacher strike
Jai Breitnauer (Spinoff): The treatment of teacher aids is a feminist issue
Mike Watson (Stuff): Hacker uses fake invoice to steal $53,000 earmarked for child care centre
Greg Boyed, depression
1News: Greg Boyed’s Banana news colleagues pay touching tribute to much loved presenter
Herald: Newstalk ZB’s Niva Retimanu remembers long-time friend Greg Boyed
Belinda Feek (Herald): Employers and colleagues play important role in care, Rawdon Christie about mate Greg Boyed
Stuff: Greg Boyed: Managers have a duty to care for employees, says Rawdon Christie
Herald: Greg Boyed’s death raises issues of mental health in the workplace – most employers won’t know
Belinda Feek (Herald): ‘He was a trusted voice’ – Mental Health Foundation
Philip Matthews (Press Editorial): There really is depression in New Zealand
Bill Ralston (Stuff): Many of us knew Greg Boyed. We didn’t know he had struggled for years with depression
Belinda Feek (Herald): More support needed for those with low to moderate mental illness
Stuff: Depression isn’t always visible – here’s how you can help
Mānia Clarke (Māori TV): Depression: a silent battle
Zoe Hunter (Bay of Plenty Times): Greg Boyed’s death sparks reminder to reach out to loved ones
Eleanor Ainge Roy *Guardian): ‘We need to change’: Death of New Zealand newsreader puts spotlight on depression
Aaron Hendry (Spinoff): Stop whispering: It’s time we all started talking openly about suicide
Newshub: Former Waitakere Mayor Sir Bob Harvey opens up about his struggle with depression
Foreign affairs and trade
Richard Harman (Politik): What happens if the Australians elect Donald Trump
Lucy Bennett (Herald): TransTasman relationship strong regardless who Australian leader, Ardern says
Stuff: Jacinda Ardern weighs in to reassure NZ over Australia’s leadership drama
Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): Aussie politicians – they like a blood soaked carpet
Mitch McCann (Newshub): Julie Bishop entering Australian leadership race – reports
Gareth Hughes (Spinoff): The ‘Straya spills prove that MMP was one of the best decisions NZ ever made
Dan Satherley (Newshub): Australia’s constant leadership spills prove just how good MMP is – Labour MP
RNZ: NZ Foreign Minister goes to Vanuatu
Amber-Leigh Woolf (Stuff): Polish President opens square in memory of Polish orphans
Eva Corlett (RNZ): Polish president faces protest on Wellington visit
Primary industries
1News: Concerns raised over intensive winter feeding after cattle left unable to move in knee-deep mud
RNZ Checkpoint: NZ’s largest feedlot: ‘We take great care of our animals’
Don Rowe (Spinoff): Why you should give a damn about feedlots
Herald: MPI issues M. bovis notice to Anzco Foods’ Five Star Beef feedlot in Canterbury
Julie Iles (Stuff): Five Star Beef notified of 44 suspected cases of Mycoplasma bovis on feedlot
Mike Joy (Newsroom):Why irrigation dams are a dumb idea
Herald Editorial: Farmers face a tougher climate
Moana Makapelu Lee (Māori TV): Govt initiative to support farmers and farming practices
Health
Laine Moger (Stuff): Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern visits midwives following $305m announcement
Newshub: Auckland hospitals get $305m for repairs and upgrades
1News: PM announces Auckland DHB hospitals to get $305 million infrastructure upgrade
RNZ: Auckland hospital buildings to get $305m upgrade
Libby Wilson (Stuff): New mental health unit: on Waikato Hospital grounds, or not?
Emma Russell (Herald): Middlemore Hospital staff raise concerns over bosses ‘relaxed response’ to swine flu outbreak
Oliver Lewis (Stuff): Nurses accuse health board of failing to take sexual harassment seriously
Oliver Lewis (Stuff): Planning changes result in delays for stranded mental health services
Alexander Gillespie (Dominion Post): Medicinal cannabis drugs should be in doctors’ toolbox
Shereen Moloney (Herald): Let’s rethink dementia approach
Catherine Harris (Stuff): Plumbers raise flag over lead contamination in drinking water from dodgy taps
George Heagney (Dominion Post): Helpful or harmful: euthanasia debate comes to Manawatū
Newshub: David Seymour invites Winston Peters and Marama Davidson to jump off a building with him
MP salaries
John Armstrong (1News): Ardern’s freeze on MPs’ pay defused a political time-bomb – but praise was unjustified
1News: Inside Parliament opinion: Was Jacinda Ardern’s call to freeze MPs’ pay a reaction to recent strikes? (video)
Scott Palmer (Newshub): How much are New Zealand’s MPs really worth?
Michael Reddell: Paying MPs
TOP
Matthew Hooton (Herald): Fewer tweets, more bold ideas from The Opportunities Party
Bryce Edwards (Herald): Political Roundup: Who’s going to vote for TOP?
Government
Peter Dunne (Newsroom): Greens paying for not playing hard to get
Lucy Bennett (Herald): No independent advice on Provincial Growth Fund coalition commitments
Kyle MacDonald (Herald):Is Jacinda Ardern guilty of ‘virtue signalling’?
Environment and conservation
Amber-Leigh Woolf (Stuff): New Zealand’s native frogs are in ‘grave danger’ and face extinction, report says
Lois Williams (RNZ): DOC and scientists hatch plan to tackle kauri dieback in Northland
Jessica Tyson (Māori TV): Calls for Māui dolphin protection at top of the South Island
Isobel Ewing (Newshub): Fairy tern nesting: NZ’s most endangered bird gets helping hand
Jamie Morton (Herald): The colour of our lakes – as seen from space
Andrew McRae (RNZ): Approval given for wasp to be used if there is a brown stink bug invasion
Dave Nicoll (Southland Times): Conservation board wants more support for DOC
1News: Where will New Zealand’s next Great Walk be?
Stuff: Waikato River Authority joins forces with Rowing NZ to help restore Lake Karapiro
Daniel Hutchinson (Stuff): Professor says Lake Taupō should be lowered for flood protection
Dominic Harris (Stuff): Final straw looming as Christchurch wages war on plastic
Newshub: Christchurch City Council plans to make the Garden City plastic straw free by 2019
Colin Williscroft (Southland Times): 100% Pure NZ ad man says subdivision will destroy goose that laid the golden egg
Media
Jim Tucker (Taranaki Daily News): Why freedom of speech survives, and a tribute to Warwick Roger
Tim Murphy (Newsroom): The $36 million question
Herald: NZME posts $23.2m EBITDA, chief executive Michael Boggs expands on paywall plans
RNZ: NZME profit falls by more than half
1News: TVNZ announces lift in earnings, reporting a strong year for audience and advertising
Tamsyn Parker (Herald): TVNZ gives staff $1000 bonus as profit jumps to $5.1m
Herald: Sky TV reports $240 million loss, sheds 11,000 more subscribers
Gyle Beckford (RNZ): Sky TV reports hefty loss after $360m write-off
Housing
Corzaon Miller (Herald): Death on the Street: Homeless die from asthma, hypothermia and other treatable conditions
Thomas Manch and Collette Devlin (Stuff): Wellington Night Shelter seeks Government funding for remodelling
Jenée Tibshraeny (Interest): A housing stocktake by Auckland Council’s chief economist
Jared Nicoll (Dominion Post): Recycling bin request sees council discover house that wasn’t being charged rates
Jacob McSweeny (Wanganui Chronicle): The Rent Centre fined $34,000 for not lodging bonds and other breaches of tenancy law
Jacob McSweeny (Wanganui Chronicle): The Rent Centre director says company has cleaned up its act
Transport
Kate Gudsell (RNZ): Air New Zealand urged to rethink services to regions
Grant Bradley (Herald): More challenges ahead, Auckland Airport boss tells passengers
Katie Fitzgerald (Newshub): Skypath advocate welcomes funding announcement from Government
Jessie Chiang (RNZ): SkyPath still has safety issues, say community groups
Nick Truebridge (Stuff): Government announces it will fund and build SkyPath along Auckland Harbour Bridge, but cannot give completion date
RNZ: SkyPath across Auckland Harbour Bridge to get $67m in funding
Dan Satherley (Newshub): Government pledges $67m to build SkyPath cycleway
Dan Dalgety (RNZ): Canterbury councils team up for carbon neutral public transport
Newshub: Christchurch’s billion dollar regional public transport plan
Simon Wilson (Herald): How to fix the hospital bus
Newstalk ZBWatch: Adorable video shows family of ducks crossing Auckland’s Northern Motorway
Local government
Talisa Kupenga (Māori TV): Gisborne District Councillor accused of racist remarks named
RNZ: Councillor denies making racist comments
Herald: Auckland Council rates team to reach out to revaluation objectors
Charlie Dreaver (RNZ): Parking fees cause council argument over church and state
Todd Niall (Stuff): Waiheke politician takes leave of absence over charges
Dominic Harris (Press): UV treatment to replace chlorine at key Chch water pump station
Banking
Tamsyn Parker (Herald): Hard sell at the bank – has it gone too far?
Tamsyn Parker (Herald): Bankrupt farmer calls for NZ bank inquiry
Hamish Rutherford (Stuff): NZ Super and ACC issue legal threat to NZ Post over Kiwibank’s IT troubles
Building and construction, safety
Newshub: Insurance Council concerned over lack of fire safety in tall buildings
Phil Pennington (RNZ): Fire protection measures need revamp – Insurance Council
Thomas Mead (Newshub): Christchurch building company goes under
David Hargreaves (Interest): Fletcher Building CEO says Government’s flagship housing programme is both a threat and an opportunity for his company
Robin Martin (RNZ): New Plymouth stadium owner considering legal options
Other
Peter Dunne: National is beginning to look exposed
1News: Aliens unlikely in our lifetime but ‘could be down the road for our successors’
Mike Hosking (Newstalk ZB): 12 million reasons why this Government earthquake payouts are dangerously naive
Brian Fallow (Herald): Migration torrent slows – but only just
Bayley Moor (Stuff): Former MP Dover Samuels said Ngāpuhi leadership ‘mana munching’
Alice Angeloni (Marlborough Express): Green around the edges: Green Party members take winter ‘hiatus’
Herald: Fire trucks told to slowdown or risk police prosecution, union warns
Koroi Hawkins (RNZ): Helen Clark urges Solomons parties to support women]]>
Opposition MP files criminal complaint over PNG election
By RNZ Pacific
A Papua New Guinea opposition MP has filed a criminal complaint against the Electoral Commissioner for alleged misdeeds in last year’s general election.
Madang Open’s Bryan Kramer yesterday filed a formal complaint about Commissioner Patilias Gamato with the National Fraud and Anti-Corruption Directorate.
Kramer’s complaint focuses on the election in the provincial seat of Southern Highlands.
He said Gamato’s premature declaration of a result was an act of electoral fraud that must not be allowed to be “swept under the carpet”.
One of the most controversial results in an election hampered with irregularities, it sparked deadly violence among supporters of rival candidates in the province.
Tensions have lingered, and a court ruling in June which upheld Southern Highlands provincial governor William Powi’s election triggered a rampage by protesters who torched an airplane, courthouse and the governor’s residence.
Kramer has filed a similar complaint with the Ombudsman Commission.
This article is republished under the Pacific Media Centre’s content partnership with Radio New Zealand.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>Why Papuans feel differently about Indonesia’s Independence Day
A Papuan protester with a hand painted version of the Morning Star independence flag. Jayapura police chief says the use of Morning Star attributes could be linked to “treason”. Image: Free West Papua Campaign
By Ivany Atina Arbi and Nethy Dharma Somba in Jakarta and Jayapura
The 73rd celebration of Indonesia’s Independence Day last week was tinged with reports on actions from some Papuans outside and inside the provinces which upset authorities over their perceived refusal to celebrate Indonesia’s independence from the Dutch.
On August 15, a clash occurred between Papuan students and mass organisation members on Jl. Kalasan in Surabaya, East Java, as the students reportedly refused to raise the country’s red-and-white flag in front of their dormitory.
The men demanded the Papuan students comply with a regulation mandating the raising of the Indonesian flag every August 17.
READ MORE: Indonesian police detain 49 in attack on dormitory
A release signed by Azizul Amri of the National Students Front and Nies Tabuni of the Papuan Students Association in Surabaya said the students actually did not object to raising the flag.
They accused people from the mass organisations of attacking their dormitory before the dialogue between them had concluded.
According to the students, about 30 people from mass organisations asked them to raise the Indonesian flag. The students claimed they did not object to it but they needed time to “coordinate” with the dormitory’s caretaker, who was out of Surabaya at that time.
A clash ensued, in which a man was injured.
The Indonesian flag controversy: According to the Papuan students, about 30 people from mass organisations asked them to raise the Indonesian flag. The students claimed they did not object to it but they needed time to “coordinate” with the dormitory’s caretaker, who was out of Surabaya at that time. Image: Aman Rochman/Jakarta Post
Dormitory attack
Basuki, one of the mass organisation members, said as quoted by kompas.com that one of his men had been attacked by a dormitory resident wielding a sharp weapon.
The students said in their release that three members of the organisations had beat one student. The student later ran to the kitchen to retrieve a machete.
He brandished the weapon and the men ran away in a panic.
“One of them collided with another and he hurt himself from a fall,” the release stated.
Surabaya police officers then visited the scene and took dozens of students living in the dormitory to police headquarters for questioning.
But by Thursday, the students had returned to the dorm, and none of them were taken into custody.
“As many as 48 students have been returned to the dorm,” said Surabaya police criminal unit chief Senior Comrmander Sudamiran. He said the police would first gather evidence about the injured man.
Indonesian flag
After the clash, local residents of Jl. Kalasan eventually raised Indonesia’s flag in front of the dormitory, named Kemasan III.
Separately, during the orientation event for freshmen at Cendrawasih University in Jayapura, Papua, on August 14 and 15, senior students required the freshmen to chant free Papua slogans and bring Morning Star attributes to the campus.
The Morning Star refers to the flag used by the Papuan independence movement.
During the opening ceremony of the event, the seniors reportedly prohibited the freshmen from singing Jakarta’s national anthem, “Indonesia Raya”.
The university’s rector, Apolo Safanpo, confirmed the incident, accusing some people of imposing their “political motives” on the orientation event.
“The intruders required the freshmen to bring Morning Star attributes and chant slogans contrary to Indonesia’s ideology,” Apolo said, adding that the orientation events had been halted.
Meanwhile, Jayapura police chief Senior Commander Gustav Urbinas said the use of Morning Star attributes could be linked to treason, and therefore he had called Cendrawasih University student executive body chairman Ferry Kombo and the chairman of orientation events Agus Helembo to the police headquarters.
‘Asked for explanations’
“We asked for some explanations about the use of Morning Star attributes and the chanting of free Papua slogans,” Agus said.
Both of the students had signed a statement citing that they would not let the same incident happen again at their university, or else they would be prosecuted for “treason”.
A prominent youth figure in Papua, Samuel Tabuni, who is also the director of the Papua Language Institute, said what happened at Cendrawasih University was the students’ “spontaneous action to show their intention to create a future that is free from all threats”.
According to a 2018 Amnesty International report titled “‘Don’t bother, just let him die’: Killing with impunity in Papua”, unlawful killings by security forces remains high in Papua even after the 1998 reform began.
Amnesty International has recorded 69 cases of alleged unlawful killings between January 2010 and February, with 95 victims. Eighty-five of them were native Papuans, the report said.
The Jakarta Post provides an Indonesian perspective on events in West Papua.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>Former BRA and BLF fighters break arrows to heal Bougainville wounds
Breaking bows and arrows … the people of Haku show their commitment to the future of Bougainville. Image: Radio New Dawn FM News
By Aloysius Laukai in Buka
The people of Haku have demonstrated their commitment to the Bougainville peace process by reconciling former fighters from the Bougainville Revolutionary Army and the Buka Liberation Front ahead of their mass reconciliation next week.
The ex-fighters and commanders broke bows and arrows in a traditional ceremony marking reconciliation before next year’s referendum on independence.
At the height of the Bougainville conflict, the people of Haku formed the Buka Liberation Front (BLF), which later changed into the Bougainville Resistance Forces after many atrocities were being committed to the ordinary citizens of Bougainville.
They then went to Nissan island to get support from the PNG Defence Force soldiers who were stationed there.
The reconciliation at Luli village was attended by both the Bougainville Revolutionary Army (BRA) and BLF commanders and their soldiers.
They broke bows and arrows in front of their chiefs to show their commitment to peace and unity for Bougainville leading up to the referendum on independence next June.
BLF commander Donald Hamao said that the people of Haku were committed to the future of Bougainville and wanted to end yesterday what they had started 28 years earlier when they had formed the resistance force in 1990.
No time for war
Mathew Gales, commander of the BRA, also said there was no time for war on Bougainville. He called on the people of Haku and Bougainville to look at the “big picture ahead” and create peace in their communities.
The reconciliation included flag raising ceremony speeches and activities.
Haku will do a big reconciliation ceremony next Thursday at Eltupan village, the place were fierce fighting between the two factions took place at the height of the Bougainville conflict.
The ceremony was co-sponsored by the chairman of the Bougainville Import Export Group which operates SOLMAL in Buka town, Jason Fong.
Other sponsors included the ex-combatants member for North Bougainville, Ben Malatan, and the national member for North Bougainville, William Nakin.
Aloysius Laukai is editor of New Dawn FM News community radio.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>
















Richard Don … six people from his Yalanda village died in the earthquake. Image: Koroi Hawkins/RNZ Pacific
The mountain top village of Yalanda. Image: Koroi Hawkins/RNZ Pacific











Former Colonel Richard Hall speaking on the dilemmas of peacekeeping. Image: David Robie/PMC
Afghan women under the watchful eye of a soldier. Image: Richard Hall







The wrecked entrance to the Kamasan Papuan Dormitory in Surabaya, Indonesia. Image: Suara Papua






Crowds gather to meet the crew of the Freedom Flotilla ship as they prepare to leave for Gaza. Image: Middle East Monitor









