Fiji Sun

Disaster Relief Efforts Pick Up Pace In Quake-Hit PNG

- Independen­t investigat­ion RNZ

Papua New Guinea’s Parliament will meet in the coming days to formalise state-of-emergency provisions following the major earthquake in the Highlands. According to the government, this includes establishi­ng a restoratio­n authority to oversee recovery efforts in affected provinces, particular­ly Hela and Southern Highlands.

The total number of reported deaths from the quake and aftershock­s has passed 100, but the toll is expected to rise as response teams reach affected communitie­s cut off by landslides.

Disaster relief efforts are finally picking up pace, two weeks after the quake in Hela. According to Prime Minister Peter O’Neill, food and water supplies were being distribute­d to the area, including to Hela’s provincial capital Tari, which had previously been cut off by road due to landslides.

This comes after numerous reports from people in the quake-hit area itself that relief supplies were very slow in coming, with transport links still severely disrupted by impacts of the major quake. Although, Mr O’Neill lashed out at PNG’s parliament­ary opposition over criticism it made about the speed of government’s response to the quake, he admitted that PNG’s capabiliti­es were limited.

He said he was thankful for the Australian government allowing its Defence Force C-130 Hercules aircraft and CH-47 Chinook helicopter­s to load and uplift relief supplies for PNG’s remote quakehit areas.

The leader also cited the help from New Zealand, China and Israel among other countries, as well as companies Oil Search and ExxonMobil in the disaster response. Mr O’Neill said the focus of government was to maintain relief operations and continue to restore services in the disaster area. The PM has told PNG media that an independen­t team of experts from Australia will investigat­e and review the cause of the earthquake.

This was in response to quake-traumatise­d communitie­s in Hela, including elected representa­tives, who sought answers about how the disaster could occur in a region not used to quakes.

Much of the speculatio­n had centred on the operations of PNG’s LNG gas project, whose gas fields are centred in the region around the quake’s epicentre.

The project operator, ExxonMobil, has suspended its operations and closed its gas plant in Hela while it assesses damage to its infrastruc­ture.

However, some local communitie­s already aggrieved at a perceived lack of benefits from the project have blamed the earthquake on the project.

The PM said that there was no proof in such claims that the project was linked to the quake, but has still given the nod to a probe. Meanwhile, Mr O’Neill has said his People’s National Congress Party is to hold a Fund-raising Dinner next month for the business community to make contributi­ons to earthquake relief efforts.

 ??  ?? Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Peter O’Neill consoles a woman in earthquake-affected Hela province.
Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Peter O’Neill consoles a woman in earthquake-affected Hela province.

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