Papua
New Guinea is our nearest neighbour, our former colony and the biggest
recipient of our overseas aid – $5 billion in the past decade. The Foreign
Minister Julie Bishop says we have a "unique responsibility" towards
the country because of our shared history.
So if
democracy in Papua New Guinea is struggling, it's Australia's problem too. And
if, because of the Manus Island detention centre, Australia is seen as
participating in a culture of police violence, disregarding the rule of law,
and distributing aid based on domestic political objectives rather than need,
it's a very serious problem indeed.
Shortly
after Peter O'Neill was elected prime minister in 2011, succeeding Michael
Somare with a thumping majority, a memorandum of understanding with Australia
was signed to re-establish the Manus Island detention centre, which had been
dormant since 2004.
Mr O'Neill
at first seemed intent on tackling systemic political corruption. But when the
country's anti-corruption squad issued a warrant for Mr O'Neill's arrest in
June 2014 for allegedly authorising $30 million in fraudulent payments to a law
firm, Paraka, a different picture emerged.
Mr O'Neill
has used every means at his disposal to avoid facing the corruption charges,
which both he and the law firm deny. Within a week of the warrant being issued
he sacked the attorney-general and the police commissioner. Their replacements
were later charged with corruption for conspiring with him to put an end to the
Paraka investigations. Neither has been convicted.
Things came
to a new head earlier this month when police in the capital Port Moresby fired
on unarmed student protesters who have been boycotting their classes in a
campaign to pressure Mr O'Neill to step aside and submit himself to the
corruption investigation. No students were killed but scores were injured in
the protests. Julie Bishop called for calm. She said Prime Minister Malcolm
Turnbull called Prime Minister O'Neill to offer help but the offer had not been
taken up.
Since then
Internal Affairs officers have arrested Chief Superintendent Matthew Damaru,
the head of the National Fraud and Anti-Corruption Directorate, the unit that
has been pursuing the arrest warrant against Mr O'Neill. Mr Damaru's alleged
crime is abuse of office and deprivation of liberty in relation to his arrest in April of Supreme Court Judge
Bernard Sakora. Judicial corruption charges against Justice Sakora
were dismissed on technical grounds.
PNG has been
hit hard by lower gas and commodity prices as well as a severe El-Nino-related
drought. It is an understatement to say government finances are under pressure.
Spending on health and education has been slashed by about 35 per cent.
Meanwhile, Mr O'Neill has used his overwhelming majority to adjourn parliament
until August to protect himself from facing a no-confidence vote before
elections are due in a year's time. With this political safety valve removed,
the risk is that opposition will be played out in the streets.
Australia
purports to exercise its "unique responsibility" to PNG through aid
to support economic and social development and democratic institutions. This includes
56 Australian Federal Police officers in PNG to help train its police force,
and a new School of Governance to train public servants in transparency and
accountability. A dedicated band of Australian public servants, aid workers,
volunteers and others work long and hard.
But a Senate Select Committee report in May
called the effectiveness of our aid to PNG into question. On the evidence, the
aid program has been compromised by the existence of the Manus Island detention
centre.
The
committee report quoted expert views that our interest in Manus has cost us
leverage in the program and created "the risk that Australia will not say
no when it should". Tensions over the burden of processing asylum seekers
have damaged co-operation and contacts at the highest level, the committee
heard, and aid is targeted at Manus Island "on the basis of Australia's
domestic considerations rather than considerations of need".
All the more
shameful, then, that the Australian government is choosing not to disband the
Manus centre despite a clear judgment from the PNG Supreme Court in April that
the centre contravenes human rights provisions in the PNG constitution and
should be closed "forthwith".
Australia's
moral failure in the humanitarian treatment of asylum seekers extends to the
failure to appropriately exercise our acknowledged responsibility towards our
closest neighbour. Our calls for calm and offers of help are hollow indeed if
we fail to uphold PNG's rule of law when it doesn't suit us.
Sydney Morning Herald
editorial
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