Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – July 4 2018 – Today’s content
Editor’s Note: Here below is a list of the main issues currently under discussion in New Zealand and links to media coverage.
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The Beehive and Parliament Buildings.[/caption]
Police and justice
Herald: Editorial: Inquiry needs to ask hard questions of police appointment
Jared Savage and Phil Kitchin (Herald): Victim of Mt Maunganui rape calls for Wally Haumaha to resign as deputy police commissioner over comments
Talisa Kupenga (Māori TV): Haumaha’s apology “falls short” – Louise Nicholas
Herald: Peters explains Haumaha’s support for mates
1News: Watch: Fired up Winston Peters denies Wally Haumaha was NZ First Candidate in face of Simon Bridges’ questions
Stuff: Nats leader Simon Bridges talks about ties between NZ First and top cop
No Right Turn:The bigger crime?
Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): Wally Haumaha’s past comes back to haunt him
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): Sweet Jesus! Parents hide your children – it’s that one time of the year Mike Hosking is kinda right
Tracy Neal (RNZ): Couple targetted in 1080 investigation say faith in police destroyed
Martin van Beynen (Press): IPCA rules police used excessive force
Dal Dalgety (RNZ): Force used by police officer constituted assault – IPCA
Belinda Feek (Herald): Police guilty of using ‘excessive force’ in Ashburton arrest: IPCA
Emma Hurley (Newshub): Police used excessive force ‘leg-sweeping’ man in Ashburton – IPCA
No Right Turn: Still the obvious question
Rob Kidd (ODT): Senior police officer scolded but cleared
Tim Brown (RNZ): Senior Dunedin detective criticised over investigation
Brian Rudman (Herald): Govt has bob each way on penal policy
Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): Kelvin Davis – caught between a rock and a mega prison
RNZ: Head of the Family Court retires from the bench
Herald: National Party wants restrictions on how serious offenders spend compensation
Housing
Zane Small (Newshub): Who will be able to afford a KiwiBuild home?
RNZ: KiwiBuild eligibility: Couples can earn up to $180,000
Henry Cooke (Stuff): KiwiBuild: Couples earning up to $180k will be able to buy homes
1News: KiwiBuild home buyers must have income below $120,000 for singles, $180,000 for couples
Newshub: KiwiBuild income caps announced at $120,000 for singles and $180,000 for couples
Greg Ninness (Interest): KiwiBuild home buyers who meet the eligibility criteria will go into a ballot to be able to buy a home
Craig McCulloch (RNZ): Govt to impose max income cap on KiwiBuild buyers
Anne Gibson (Herald): Applicants can earn up to $180k to qualify for KiwiBuild homes
Jenna Lynch (Newshub): KiwiBuild income caps to be introduced
Mike Hosking (Newstalk ZB): Exactly who can afford Phil Twyford’s ‘affordable’ homes?
Anuja Nadkarni (Stuff): Sniffer dogs in apartments for random drug tests
Katie Doyle (RNZ): Tenancy Tribunal backs tenant against property manager Oxygen
Jenny Ling (Stuff):HNZ tenants intimidating Northland residents
Business
Bernard Hickey (Newsroom): React now to this confidence problem
Hamish Rutherford (Stuff): A war between big business and the unions could see everyone lose
Richard Harman (Politik): Peters sets out on facts offensive
Newshub: Winston Peters says business confidence report is ‘bias from a minority’
Liam Dann (Herald): Grant Robertson pushes back on business gloom
Bryce Edwards (Herald): Political Roundup: How has the Government got so offside with business so quickly
Liam Dann (Herald): Business getting even gloomier, latest survey shows
Patrick O’Meara (RNZ): Winter of discontent continues for business
BusinessDesk: NZ business confidence hits seven-year low
Emma Jolliff (Newshub): Business confidence slumps to a seven-year low – report
SImon Hartley (ODT): Businesses increasingly pessimistic
SImon Hartley (ODT): Otago business confidence ‘particularly downbeat’
Patrick O’Meara (RNZ): Investors confident after strong returns
Employment
Jordan Williams (Herald): Public servants are well paid compared to private sector
John Gerritsen (RNZ): Primary teachers vote to strike after rejecting pay offer
Adele Redmond (Stuff): Primary school teachers vote to strike, reject Government’s pay offer
Newshub: Striking teachers say pay rise offered is not enough
Newshub: Primary teachers to strike after rejecting pay offer
Greg Presland (Standard): The teachers’ strike
1News: Voting to begin by nurses on whether to accept latest DHB offer
1News: Gender Pay Principles ‘a really significant step’ towards closing gap
Welfare, inequality, poverty
RNZ: Call for review into ministry’s penalities for beneficiaries getting loans
Sam Hurley (Herald): Debt is not income: Solo mum of two wins landmark High Court battle against MSD
Zac Fleming (RNZ): Solo mum’s loans were not income – High Court ruling
Isobel Ewing (Newshub): Woman wins case against Ministry of Social Development over bank loans
Peter McKenzie (Newsroom): No shame in universalist agenda
1News: Winston Peters says he believes ‘in universality’ when asked if he would opt out of Winter Energy Payment
Newsroom: NZ loan sharks ‘a real underbelly’
RNZ: Checkpoint: Soup kitchen open-mic night a big success in South Auckland
International relations and trade
Claire Trevett and Lucy Bennett (Herald): Detained teen’s Australian lawyer pleased with Winston Peters’ comments
Claire Trevett (Herald): Acting PM Winston Peters challenges Australia on Kiwi teen’s detention
RNZ: Winton Peters says Australia is ignoring UN obligations on children
Conor Whitten (RNZ): Government clashes with Australia over New Zealand teen in adult detention
Laura Walters (Stuff): Acting PM Winston Peters says Australia should protect child rights
Laura Walters (Stuff): New $180m fund to help counter NZ’s ‘decreasing influence’ in Pacific
RNZ: Academic questions prominence of Pacific Islands Forum
RNZ: NZ parliamentary press gallery echoes outrage over Nauru ABC ban
Teuila Fuatai and Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): SIS investigates Chinese student in Auckland
Herald: Acting PM unaware of SIS investigation into Chinese student
Dene Mackenzie (ODT): Spreading the word about Asia
Michael Reddell: The debate on PRC influence on Q&A
Education
Claire Trevett (Herald): Education Minister Chris Hipkins’ invitation to secondary principals over NCEA review
Newshub: Education Minister open to meeting principals challenging NCEA review
Herald: Treaty of Waitangi claim lodged over charter school closures
John Gerritsen (RNZ): Teacher union opposes charter school application
Shane Cowlishaw (Newsroom): Crumbling classrooms – how do we fix them?
Liz Gordon (Daily Blog): Who should run schools?
Te Aniwa Hurihanganui (RNZ): Emerging stars of kapa haka take to the stage
Anna Bracewell-Worrall (Newshub): Border arrests for student loan debtors ‘exacerbates the situation’ – Education Minister
ODT Editorial: The tertiary education game
Ruby Macandrew (Stuff): ‘Modest’ number of submissions received for Victoria University name change
Environment
Henry Cooke (Stuff): What is the NZ Government’s Zero Carbon Bill and will it do anything?
Wayne Mapp (Spinoff): National has signed up on zero emissions, but not the map to get there
RNZ: Kauri dieback in Waipoua Forest a ‘tragedy’ – scientist
Alison Mau (Stuf): Tāne Mahuta could soon be infected with fatal Kauri dieback disease
Marty Sharpe (Stuff): Environmental group taking council and winery to High Court over Te Mata Peak track
Anusha Bradley (RNZ): Ruataniwha dam scheme revival raises doubts in Hawke’s Bay
Newshub: Kaikōura earthquake a one-in-5000- to 10,000-year event, new research suggests
Tracy Neal (RNZ): Kaikōura earthquake research details scientific rarity
Local government
Robin Martin (RNZ): Mayoral pay packages now based on full-time role – Remuneration Authority
Nick Truebridge (Stuff): Auckland Council cannot find all online accommodation providers subject to new rates
Suneil Connor (Stuff): Airbnb set to keep growing in New Zealand despite council rules
Tim Murphy (Newsroom): Helen Clark opposes Eden Park charity gig
Herald: Former PM Helen Clark opposes Eden Park charity concert
Newshub: Tokoroa community not satisfied with changes to gambling policy
Kim Gillespie (Wanganui Chronicle): Editorial: South Taranaki fluoride court costs hard to swallow
Logan Church (RNZ): Court Theatre wins big in Performing Arts precinct
Newshub: Dunedin City Council orders family treehouse to be removed
Tim Miller (ODT): Council considers new sites
Primary industries
Lois Williams (RNZ): Northland sharemilker filmed striking cows loses job, home
Kate Gudsell (RNZ): Mackenzie Basin: Fonterra dairying criticism rejected
RNZ: Fonterra’s support ‘just words’ say Greenpeace
Transport
Todd Niall (Stuff): Analysis: Regional Fuel Tax cash poses the unanswerable question
Megan Sutherland (Newshub): Auckland’s fuel tax: South Islanders have been paying those prices for years
Grant Bradley (Herald): Air New Zealand serves Impossible Burger with no meat
Newstalk ZB: Politicians slam Air NZ over ‘meat free burger’
Gerard Hutching (Stuff): Air NZ’s Impossible Burger criticised by former primary industries minister
Newshub: Bus driver allegedly rams car in Wellington
Millie McCaughan (1News): Wellington taxi driver making it her mission to provide safer transport for women
Health
Tess Brunton (RNZ): Waitaki Plains locals enduring E coli contamination risk
John Boynton (RNZ): Wife of House of Shem founder waiting for apology from DHB
Peter de Graaf (Herald): Whangaroa health trust faces crisis as staff, bosses quit
Jamie Tahana (RNZ): Pacific nations ready for fight with sugar giants
Beck Vass (Herald): Not everyone gets a macaroni midwife like Jacinda’s
Jeremy Rees (Newsroom): Is assisted dying a Pākehā issue?
Government
Anna Bracewell-Worrall (Newshub): Winston Peters ‘understands’ comparison to Donald Trump
Henry Cooke (Stuff): Greens fill top backroom position with Pete Huggins
National Party
Melissa Nightingale (Herald): National Party argue costs for Eminem ‘Lose Yourself’ copyright breach
RNZ: Nats appeal to lower ‘Eminem-esque’ copyright damages
Ben Irwin (Newshub): National Party brings encore in Eminem court battle
Claire Trevett (Herald): New MP Dan Bidois’ tribute to the women who shaped his life
Film industry
Stephen Clarke (Spinoff): Peter Jackson’s war museum reeks of a $12 million indulgence of private passion
David Farrar: Film subsidies
Other
Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): Tax Working Group warned off lowering company tax
Sally Rae (ODT): Husband can stay, wife must go, immigration says
Tom Hunt (Stuff): Defence Force reopens court of inquiry into Wairarapa Unimog death
Charlie Dreaver (RNZ): Rangatahi’s UN trip: ‘The UN is a western-built mechanism’
Melissa Nightingale (Herald): Te Papa collects NopeSisters T-shirts for Women’s Suffrage 125
Bryce Edwards (Newsroom Pro): The battle over transgender rights
Craig McCulloch (RNZ): New legislation clears way for NZ to patrol seas for drug smugglers
Peter Lyons (ODT): Let’s grow up and legalise dope
Jessica Wilson (Spinoff): Product recalls rarely work and it’s time we do something about it
John Boynton (RNZ): US business called out for selling fake mokomokai
Point of Order: Child-welfare question: can non-Maori really cope more comfortably with officials who remove their kids?
Northern Advocate: Well respected father of Northland based MP Shane Jones dies
Laine Moger (Stuff): National MP Nikki Kaye ‘incredibly’ saddened by stepbrother’s murder conviction
Tova O’Brien (Newshub): NZ will intervene if Nikki Kaye’s brother sentenced to death – Winston Peters]]>
Jokowi, Mahathir discuss migrant worker protection, border deal
President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo (right) shakes hands with Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad after giving a joint statement at the Bogor Palace. Image: Puspa Perwitasari/Antara/Jakarta Post
By Marguerite Afra Sapiie in Jakarta
President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo and Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad have met for a bilateral talk, exploring issues ranging from education for Indonesian children in Malaysia to border negotiations.
Jokowi welcomed Mahathir at the Bogor Palace on Friday. This marked the first foreign visit of Mahathir, the world’s oldest elected leader, to an ASEAN country since he was sworn in as prime minister for the sixth time on May 10.
The two leaders held a tete-a-tete followed by a closed meeting between Indonesian and Malaysian delegations, during which they discussed various issues, such as strengthening bilateral relations.
Speaking in a joint statement, Jokowi said Indonesia and Malaysia shared the same commitment to promoting good governance and combating corruption.
They both agreed on the importance of connectivity and the settlement of unresolved border problems.
“[Indonesia] in particular called for the protection of Indonesian migrant workers in Malaysia, as well as the development of schools for Indonesian children in Malaysia,” Jokowi said.
Almost 2 million Indonesian migrant workers currently work in Malaysia.
Mahathir acknowledged the need for the children of Indonesian migrant workers in Malaysia to have their rights to education fulfilled. A number of schools had been established in Peninsular Malaysia, though more were needed, he said.
“However, schools for Indonesian children are not yet established in Sabah and Serawak and, therefore, we will improve this [situation],” Mahathir said, adding that his government was committed to working with Jakarta to resolve border issues.
Marguerite Afra Sapiie is a journalist with the Jakarta Post.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>Mendi mayhem destroyed 42,000 vaccine shots for PNG children
By Sally Pokiton in Port Moresby
Papua New Guinea’s mayhem in the Southern Highlands capital of Mendi earlier this month caused destruction of 42,000 vaccine innoculations meant for children aged under 5.
The innoculations were ruined when the Air Niugini Dash 8 aircraft was set alight at Mendi airport.
A disgusted Emergency Controller of the Emergency Disaster Restoration Team, Dr Bill Hamblin, said the rampage also saw supplies stored in two warehouse in Mendi looted.
“Not only were supplies stolen up there and resold on the streets, but the plane that was destroyed was carrying vaccines for under 5-year-old children – 42,000 vaccines destroyed,” he said.
“Now we have no replacement for those in the country where UNICEF is trying to replace those at the moment.
“The people who do those sorts of acts don’t belong in our society, they belong behind bars,” Dr Hamblin said.
“I’ m looking forward to the arrest of those people and that they get to see the full force of the law.”
He thanked all development partners and countries in the region which supported the Emergency Disaster Restoration Team.
“We wholeheartedly thank them for the support they’ve put in, without them, the scale of disaster would have been much worse, people could have died needlessly,” Dr Hamblin added.
Sally Pokiton is a reporter for Loop PNG.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>Former PCF media intern welcomes Pacific newbies on NZ exchange
Adi Anaesini Civavonovono of Fiji (left) and Elizabeth Osifelo of the Solomon Islands (both of the University of the South Pacific) against the green screen in the television studios during their visit to Auckland University of Technology this week. Behind them are the Pacific Cooperation Foundation’s Suzanne Suisuiki (partially hidden) along with AUT students Leilani Sitagata and Pauline Mago-King. Image: Del Abcede/PMC
By Rahul Bhattarai
It was a case of Pacific meets Pacific in AUT’s School of Communication Studies this week as one of the inaugural winners of the Pacific Cooperation Foundation internships welcomed this year’s new batch of four student journalists from Fiji, Samoa and Solomon Islands.
Pauline Mago-King of Papua New Guinea was a final year communication studies student in Madang when the internships began and she visited New Zealand in 2015 thanks to PCF.
Now she is a master’s degree student at Auckland University of Technology doing research into domestic violence and non-government organisation responses in her home country.
She says she knew the flexibility of the AUT programme was just right for her – “especially when you come from a country where there aren’t enough opportunities for a student to gain experience.”
AUT’s Pacific Media Centre hosted the PCF internship students and director Professor David Robie welcomed them, saying “we‘re just a small programme but with quite a reach, we have an audience of up to 20,000 on our Asia Pacific Report website”.
The PMC, with a small part-time team, covers the region with independent news as well as conducting out a discrete media research programme.
Three of the students on the two-week internship in New Zealand come from the University of the South Pacific and the student newspaper Wansolwara – Elizabeth Osifelo (Solomon Islands), Salote Qalubau and Adi Anaesini Civavonovono (both from Fiji). The fourth, Yumi Talaave, is from the National University of Samoa.
The interns toured AUT’s communications facilities, including the state-of-the-art television studies and control room.
Pacific Media Centre student journalist Rahul Bhattarai and University of Samoa’s meet King Kong on the AUT television studio green screen. Image: David Robie/PMC
They then visited AUT’s journalism newsroom and media centre.
The students also watched the final editing stages of a short current affairs documentary by two AUT students involved in the PMC’s Bearing Witness climate change project.
Hele Ikimotu and Blessen Tom travelled to Rabi Island in the north of Fiji in April and filmed the documentary Banabans of Rabi: A Story of Survival in the hope of spreading awareness about the impact of climate change in the Pacific.
Their lecturers, Jim Marbrook and David Robie, hope to enter the documentary into film festivals and an earlier video by the students as part of the project gives a glimpse of life on the island.
Suzanne Suisuiki, communications manager of PCF, says these kinds of internships provide the opportunity for Pacific students to gain wider exposure and better understanding of media.
“We wanted interns who had a sense of appreciation of the media industry,” she said.
She plans to next year expand to the wider Pacific region, including Tonga and Papua New Guinea.
Two students were also selected from New Zealand to go to Fiji and Samoa.
The Pacific Cooperation Foundation internship students with Pacific Media Centre students and staff at AUT this week. Image: Del Abcede/PMC
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>Where in the world is the Pacific? NZ researchers talk strategy reset
A diverse group of scholars discuss resetting New Zealand’s Pacific-oriented foreign policy agenda. Video: NZ Institute of Pacific Research
By Sri Krishnamurthi
Debate has been lively and vigorous in response to the New Zealand government signalling a shift in foreign policy towards the Pacific Islands region.
To have a look closer at that debate the New Zealand Institute for Pacific Research (NZIPR) has brought together a diverse group of scholars from the University of Auckland who have research experience in the Pacific to discuss New Zealand’s Pacific-oriented foreign policy agenda, but more broadly to consider “where in the world is the Pacific?”
Associate Professor Yvonne Underhill-Sem (director of NZIPR and Development Studies, University of Auckland) chaired the discussion aptly titled “NZIPR Critical Conversation seminar”.
READ MORE: Browse RNZPR’s Lali blog
It was introduced by Professor Jenny Dixon (Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Strategic Engagement, University of Auckland) and featured Georgina Roberts (Ngāti Porou, Director of Pacific Connections at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade – MFAT), Associate Professor Damon Salesa (Pacific Studies at the Centre for Pacific Studies, University of Auckland), Dr Mark Busse (senior lecturer in Anthropology, University of Auckland), Dr Lisa Uperesa (senior lecturer in Pacific studies at the Centre for Pacific Studies, University of Auckland) and Associate Professor Chris Noonan (associate dean postgraduate international in the Faculty of Law, University of Auckland).
“The New Zealand government has invited everybody to think differently about how they do development in the Pacific and it came under this Pacific reset strategy. Winston Peters (Foreign Minister) took himself off to Australia to announce that this is what New Zealand is going to do,” Associate Professor Underhill-Sem said in her opening remarks.
“Since then there has been a lot of fabulous articles, discussion, blogs written about what does this all mean? What do we mean by a reset? And what are we resetting from – but more importantly what do we imagine the Pacific to be, how do we understand the Pacific?
“The question I’m asking [of the researchers] is what are the most meaningful boundaries that they undertake their research in, and hopefully we get an idea of how we can deal with some of the substantive development issues that really haven’t changed regardless of what the New Zealand government has done.
“We still have enduring development issues that need to be addressed.”
‘Shifting the dialogue’
Georgina Roberts of MFAT defined the Pacific reset as “shifting the dialogue” as the perspective of the Pacific changed.
“Statements were made at the beginning of March by the minister around needing to change the approach New Zealand takes with our region and moving from more of a donor-recipient relationship to one of partnership.
“It was about doing things differently, and that was to be underpinned by five key principles that was the basis of the reset, understanding, friendship, mutual benefit, collective ambition and sustainability.”
She said that meant the government had to interact, engage and collaborate with all the parties and stakeholders who had an interest in doing things better with their Pacific partners.
In the budget, the government had decided to allocate $714 million over the next four years in additional overseas assistance to mostly support the “Pacific reset”.
“Where will that money be spent? Climate change is a significant one, human development and this is an area of health and education for example, inclusive development and that means doing more to support youth and women in political representation and value issues, things like human rights, governance and democracy promotion – these are areas that haven’t gained as much attention in the previous years,” she said.
“There are a lot of challenges in our region.”
Working collectively
There were 30 government agencies that were involved in the Pacific and it was the government’s ambition to have them working collectively.
That led the discussion to the historical perspectives of the Pacific and what were the meaningful boundaries both geographically and temporally in the region, presented by Associate Professor Damon Salesa.
“New Zealanders don’t understand what New Zealand is. There are two New Zealands constitutionally – there is the New Zealand proper which is the New Zealand that most New Zealanders think of, that is North Island, South Island, Stewart Island and the Chatham Islands.
“But there is another constitutional entity called the realm of New Zealand which goes as far south as the Ross Territory and Antarctica and as far north as Tokelau, and includes the Cook Islands and Niue.
“So, part of that points out this other history of the New Zealand dollar, New Zealand language and New Zealand passport – those complexities remind us that even New Zealand is a contested, misunderstood concept for New Zealanders,” he said.
That meant there was a lot at stake with how New Zealanders defined the Pacific, and it was particularly important in terms of foreign policy.
It took in the definition of New Zealand’s Pacific, it was very specific in what the Pacific was.
“What New Zealand isn’t is, as seen by the Pacific people who live here.”
‘Two New Zealands’
“If we think about New Zealand as a nation the two most distinctive things about it, are Tangata Whenua (Māori ) and Tangata Pasifika (Pacific peoples). They are what make New Zealand not Australia or Canada. That is something very powerful about that way of being New Zealanders.
“For me the last frontier is finding a place for the Treaty (Treaty of Waitangi) in our foreign policy,” Associate Professor Salesa said.
Dr Mark Busse spoke about anthropological ways of defining the Pacific. He said there were two things that were important to consider – that even small communities, such as the one he lived in, in Papua New Guinea, were affected by international politics and international capitalism.
He said they had a profound impact on the lives of people living in those communities.
“I would suggest that the Pacific is less a geographical space or area, than a set of deep social and historical relationships, its people face large challenges, but I expect they will face those challenges by using values and knowledge that has been passed down over generations,” Dr Busse summed up.
What countries and territories, and their moving demographics and diaspora were considered around the Pacific to be in the Pacific, was Dr Lisa Uperesa’s discourse.
She said from the vantage point of the United States, ongoing migration of Pacific peoples, Micronesians, was shifting with people moving to Guam and Hawai’i.
Largest Pacific city
In the eyes of Americans, they would be surprised to hear that Auckland was the largest Pacific city in the world, the anthropologist and Pacific Studies senior lecturer said.
Her studies concentrated on Samoa and the fact that approximately 400,000 Samoans live abroad, primarily in the US, Australia and New Zealand, compared to 250,000 in American Samoa and independent Samoa.
“I focus on Samoan migration and mobility looking specifically at sport, and this has provided new boundaries of the definition of Pacific peoples and the way they move,” she said.
This project, she said, used sport to think about the history of migration and the place of sport in education and it also helped to reinforce the importance of place and importance of community history and agenda.
“The new Polynesian triangle includes cities like Auckland, Sydney, Honolulu, Los Angeles and Salt Lake City and in this vision the Pacific encompasses geographies and cartographies of presence, it is where Pacific people are,” she said.
Associate Professor Chris Noonan said that from a legal and trade perspective, the Pacific region didn’t exist.
“In the Pacific, the Pacific negotiations were supported by the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat and funding from Europe through the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat and negotiations took place because of institutional structures that were in place and not necessarily because the Pacific had a huge commonality,” said Associate Professor Noonan.
He outlined how and why the Pacific region negotiated both as a bloc and as individual countries.
Associate Professor Underhill-Sem said it was important that research in the Pacific was allowed to flourish and be given exposure through discussions like this “critical conversation”, which will be an on-going event on the NZIPR calendar.
Postgraduate AUT Pacific Media Centre students Sri Krishnamurthi and Blessen Tom (video) reported on the seminar in partnership with the NZ Institute for Pacific Research.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>Indonesia beefing up disputed Papua border force in bid for minerals
By Albert Agua in Waigani
Indonesia is driving towards the Papua New Guinea border because of a recent discovery of huge mineral deposits in the Star Mountain regency just at the back of Tabubil Ok Tedi mine.
“Reportedly, there is gold, copper, coal, and thorium – a safer radioactive chemical than uranium,” says president-director of PT Antam Tato Miraza, who was then Director of Development, reports Pusaka.
“Geological Survey shows its potential is good and promising.”
READ MORE: West Papua Liberation Army behind deadly Nduga attack
The core of the deposit is, however, found in the disputed area of the border between PNG and Indonesia.
The claimed Papua border “shift” – the red zone near Ok Tedi mine. Source: PNG Blogs
Recently, Indonesian troops patrolled to Korkit and surveyed the land just around 40km from Ok Tedi, less than 10km from the border marker in the Korkit village to build another military base.
The citizens from Korkit village who are PNG citizens are moving into the new Indonesian village.
This is just 20km from the mineral deposit area.
Thorium, a weakly radioactive element that can be used as fuel in a nuclear power reactor, has been discovered in the disputed area and this has been the sole driver for Indonesians to force themselves into the disputed territory.
Also the “explorers” are actually the military carrying out the exploration.
The Indonesians have been transporting mining supplies to the area and the locals are prepared to wage war if the exploration continues under heavy military security.
Wutung border improvements
Meanwhile, major improvements in infrastructure and capacity are planned for the PNG-Papua border at Wutung, reports Loop PNG.
The improvements are planned as part of the PNG government’s West Sepik Special Economic Zone (SEZ).
National Planning Minister Richard Maru and delegates of a fact-finding mission to West Sepik visited the border area last week.
Loop PNG also reports that an international bus service and terminal are planned for the Wutung border post.
Albert Agua is an academic at the University of Papua New Guinea.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
]]>Bainimarama attacks opposition ‘lies’ for promoting Fiji ethnic hatred
By RNZ Pacific
Fiji’s prime minister Voreqe Bainimarama has again hit out at opposition parties, calling them liars and accusing them of sowing division in the ethnically diverse country.
Bainimarama devoted much of his speech at the opening of a provincial council meeting in Fiji’s west to sharp criticism of his opponents.
He accused them of infighting, peddling lies and promoting hatred between different religious and ethnic communities.
In his most critical speech yet during election year, Bainimarama spoke out against talk of a Muslim or Chinese “takeover” of Fiji.
He said it made him angry to hear of Muslims being pitted against Hindus and provincialism in the indigenous iTaukei community.
Sayed-Khaiyum defended
He defended the Muslim Attorney-General, Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum, who he said had made great contributions to Fiji’s development and was a trusted partner and friend.
Bainimarama said Fiji Muslims, like every other citizen, were an integral part of the nation.
He said there was no chance of a Chinese takeover in Fiji and Fiji owed China only 10.6 percent of total national debt.
The prime minister said his government had delivered genuine change and that would be seen in the budget due to be delivered today.
With the election date still to be announced, Bainimarama urged people to use their vote wisely.
The Pacific Media Centre has a content sharing partnership with RNZ Pacific.
Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz
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Muhammad Yusuf’s death … “credibility of rule of law in Indonesia at stake,” says RSF. Image: RSF







Days after Cyclone Winston made landfall on Fiji’s largest island Viti Levu in February 2016, this was what was left of the Rakiraki Market. It used to house more than 200 vendors, but was devastated by the cyclone’s record-breaking winds. Pacific Islanders fear global warming will yield even more frequent and devastating storms in the future. Image: Anna Parinicbnd/UN Women
University of the South Pacific’s Professor Elisabeth Holland. Image: 2°C







“Tambay” Genesis Argoncillo died in police custody from “multiple blunt force trauma”. Image: Rappler cellphone



PNG Prime Minister Peter O’Neill (centre left) meets Premier Li Keqiang in Beijing , China. Image: EMTVNews






Part of the excavated road in the Angore area. Image: Michael Passingan/PNG News


The MAG 58 Model 60-20 machine gun … “robust, deadly and effective”. Image: My Land, My Country blog
Machine guns mounted on a cabin-top truck in the Southern Highlands. Image: PNGAttitude


PNG Defence Force troops in the Southern Highlands after the Mendi rioting last week. Image: PNG Blogs


The late Bernhard Marjen as a child in West Papua. Image: Sincha Dimara/My Land, My Country blog


