The Fiji Times

January riots in PNG

- www.fijitimes.com editor@fijitimes.com.fj By ANDREW ANTON MAKO 3304111 3301521

THE 2024 started terribly for Papua New Guinea as civil riots rocked the nation. What started as a protest by law enforcemen­t officers (police, defence force and correction­s staff) on January 10.

It was over high deductions from their first pay of the year quickly escalated to looting and destructio­n of shops in Port Moresby as people took advantage of the security vacuum in the city.

The violence quickly spread the next day to Lae, Goroka, Bulolo, Kavieng and Kokopo, albeit on a smaller scale, but was quelled by the rapid interventi­on of law enforcemen­t in those locations.

Prime Minister James Marape convened an emergency cabinet meeting, declared a 14-day state of emergency (SOE), and suspended the secretarie­s of the department­s of finance, treasury and personnel management.

The police commission­er was also suspended, and an acting commission­er appointed to oversee the SOE.

Police reinforcem­ents and soldiers were deployed to restore and maintain security in Port Moresby. An investigat­ion was initiated. The government also threatened to shut down access to social media.

In terms of costs, more than 20 people died and many more were injured during the riot. Many retail companies suffered millions of kina worth of damage in goods and property.

The Gerehu shopping district, which serves a large suburb in Port Moresby, was devastated.

Hundreds of jobs were lost and many small businesses, including those of farmers who supply the supermarke­ts in the city, were badly affected. It will take time and investment for the many businesses, large and small, that suffered extensive damage to recover.

Then there are the negative impacts on the country’s reputation and the insecurity felt by thousands caught up in the riots.

The political fallout from the riot is already evident. Seven backbench MPs have left government. The prime minister still has a huge majority, but his leadership has been challenged by a member of his own Pangu Pati.

The timing could not have been worse for Marape: next month the 18-month grace period ends – the period in which an attempt to remove a prime minister following a general election is forbidden by law. For now, Marape looks safe, but he has already said he will be reshufflin­g his cabinet, so others might have to pay the political price.

According to the government, ‘a technical glitch’ inadverten­tly increased the tax deducted from public service salaries.

That this happened, that it was not quickly communicat­ed to all affected, and that the security forces thought they were justified going on strike on account of it, are all symptoms of governance dysfunctio­nality.

Most concerning of all are the suggestion­s that some police actually encouraged the looting and burning of buildings.

Clearly there were deeper social causes at play as well. The riots brought to the surface the simmering social tensions among the people caused by the country’s high cost of living, high unemployme­nt, crime and corruption.

Annual inflation of about five per cent over the past 10 years (2024 National Budget, page 41) has eroded take-home pay. Cost of living adjustment­s for public servants have typically been around three per cent.

The minimum wage has not been increased since 2013, and today is only worth half of what it was then, after inflation (2024 National Budget).

The other problem is the lack of jobs. Formal sector employment peaked at 300,000 in 2013, and is now at less than 270,000 (PNG Economic Database). Over this same period, the population would have grown by about 30 percent.

The government tells people to return to the countrysid­e, but it is the lack of employment in the countrysid­e and rural decay that brings people to the cities in the first place.

The government has put in place temporary measures to alleviate cost of living pressures by, for instance, increasing the taxfree income threshold to K20,000 ($F12075.75) from K12,500 ($F 7547.34) and once again abolishing school fees.

However, only real wage growth and job creation can turn things around for PNG. Successive government­s have failed to broaden the country’s economic base in a meaningful way in the last twenty years.

Lip service has been paid to job creating sectors such as agricultur­e, fisheries, forestry and tourism, but not much effort has been directed to structural reforms.

Recent actions by the government, such as the creation of additional ministeria­l portfolios for the agricultur­e sector, are misguided. Increased investment­s in roads are welcome, but the allocation of large sums of public monies (including to constituen­cy developmen­t funds) without strong accountabi­lity and governance mechanisms is ineffectiv­e and liable to cause waste.

The focus of the government must be on enacting reforms to address the underlying drivers of the high cost of living in the country. It’s a big agenda. Here are three immediate and muchneeded reforms.

First, the job-destroying madness of foreign exchange rationing which has persisted for a decade needs to be ended. This is a policy that condemns the country to low growth and high unemployme­nt.

Second, state-owned enterprise reforms are urgently needed, with electricit­y and air travel services both in crisis.

Police reform has to be the third priority. PNG has said that it will be hiring 50 internatio­nal police officers with Australian funding into leadership positions. This will surely help, but it doesn’t seem obvious that the riots resulted from a failure of leadership.

The fact that five police officers were detained for a break-in at a Port Moresby bottle shop on New Year’s Eve speaks to the problems the police force faces with its rank and file.

Since the riots, Marape has said that he will ‘clean up the police force’. Whether he will – and can – follow through on this will be crucial.

None of this will be easy. But PNG has to get out of its lowgrowth slumber. Waiting for the next big resource project is not good enough.

The whole country has been given an extremely painful wakeup call. Is the political class listening? Disclosure: This research was undertaken with the support of the ANU-UPNG Partnershi­p, an initiative of the PNG-Australia Partnershi­p, funded by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. The views are those of the author only.

This article appeared first on Devpolicy Blog (devpolicy.org), from the Developmen­t Policy

Centre at The Australian National University.

■ ANDREW ANTON MAKO is a visiting lecturer and project coordinato­r for the ANU-UPNG Partnershi­p. He has worked as a research officer at the Developmen­t Policy Centre and as a research fellow at the PNG National Research Institute. The views expressed are the authors and not necessaril­y shared by this newspaper.

Police reinforcem­ents and soldiers were deployed to restore and maintain security in Port Moresby. An investigat­ion was initiated. The government also threatened to shut down access to social media

– Andrew Anton Mako –

 ?? Picture: (PNG NATIONAL INFORMATIO­N CENTER/FACEBOOK) ?? Prime Minister James Marape declares a 14-day state of emergency.
Picture: (PNG NATIONAL INFORMATIO­N CENTER/FACEBOOK) Prime Minister James Marape declares a 14-day state of emergency.
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