New Straits Times

64 KILLED IN PNG TRIBAL CLASHES

Influx of automatic weapons makes clashes more deadly

- PORT MORESBY

SIXTY-FOUR bloodied bodies have been found in Papua New Guinea’s highlands, police said yesterday, as officers reported gun battles between rival tribes. Assistant Commission­er of police Samson Kua said the bodies had been found after what is believed to be an ambush in the early hours of Sunday.

“We believe there are still some bodies out there in the bush.”

The incident occurred near the town of Wabag, 600km northwest of the capital Port Moresby here.

Police received graphic videos and photos purporting to be from the scene.

They showed stripped and bloodied bodies lying by the side of the road and piled up on the back of a flatbed truck.

The incident is thought to be linked to a conflict between Sikin, Ambulin and Kaekin tribesmen.

Highland clans have fought each other in Papua New Guinea for centuries, but an influx of automatic weapons has made clashes more deadly and escalated the cycle of violence.

Kua said the gunmen had used a veritable armoury as well as pump-action shotguns and home-made firearms.

It is believed that fighting is ongoing in a remote rural area nearby.

Papua New Guinea’s highlands have been the scene of persistent tribal violence, with several mass killings in recent years.

Papua New Guinea’s government has tried suppressio­n, mediation, amnesties and a range of other strategies to control the violence, with little success.

The military had deployed about 100 troops to the area, but their impact has been limited and the security services remain outnumbere­d and outgunned.

The killings often take place in remote communitie­s, with clansmen launching raids or ambushes in revenge for previous attacks.

Civilians, including pregnant women and children, have been targeted in the past.

The murders are often extremely violent, with victims hacked with machetes, burned, mutilated or tortured.

Police privately complain that they do not have the resources to do the job, with officers so badly paid that some of the weapons that end up in the hands of

tribesmen have come from the police force.

Opponents of Prime Minister James Marape’s government yesterday called for more police to be deployed and for the

force’s commission­er to resign.

Papua New Guinea’s population has more than doubled since 1980, placing increasing strain on land and resources and deepening tribal rivalries.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Officials patrolling near the town of Wabag, Papua New Guinea, yesterday, amid clashes between rival tribes.
AFP PIC Officials patrolling near the town of Wabag, Papua New Guinea, yesterday, amid clashes between rival tribes.

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