The Borneo Post (Sabah)

PNG’s parliament re-elected O’Neill as prime minister amid voter unrest

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SYDNEY: Papua New Guinea's parliament yesterday re-elected Peter O'Neill as prime minister, ending a chaotic election campaign marred by violence, which analysts fear may continue amid widespread voter unrest.

While O'Neill's ruling People's National Congress party was unable to win enough seats to form a government outright in elections last month, in which counting continues, he secured enough support from minor parties and independen­t lawmakers to be reelected prime minister, a job he has held since 2011.

O'Neil was declared the winner of the vote by newly-elected speaker Job Pomat after securing 60 votes. O'Neill's re-election marks a rare period of political stability in the resource-rich South Pacific nation that has seen four different leaders in the last six years.

But with the election tainted by poor organisati­on and opposition accusation­s of electoral roll irregulari­ties, voter frustratio­n, already high, looms over O'Neill's tenure.

“Emotions are running high and there is a lot of dissatisfa­ction with the way that O'Neill managed his first term. I think at some point that emotion will boil over,” said Jonathan Pryke, a research fellow at Australian think-tank the Lowy Institute.

O'Neill's government has promised to improve education and health care but his fiscal gamble in his previous term limits his ability to meet those commitment­s, analysts said.

O'Neill's government borrowed heavily in the expectatio­n that Exxon Mobil's US$20-billion LNG plant would unleash a new wave of economic prosperity, but a slide in energy prices saw the 2016 budget deficit balloon to 34 per cent of GDP, more than double what it was in 2012.

“The economy is a mess. The numbers from treasury show anaemic growth but in reality when you look at the data, the country is in recession,” said a former PNG economic advisor to the government who spoke on condition for anonymity.

To meet mounting interest repayments, O'Neill's government cut services to its near 8 million population, stoking civil unrest.

Corruption, which has plagued PNG for decades, has also acted a lightening rod for anti-O'Neill supporters. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Photo shows O’Neill (left) signing his oath of office before Governor-General Bob Dadae (right) in Port Moresby. — AFP photo
Photo shows O’Neill (left) signing his oath of office before Governor-General Bob Dadae (right) in Port Moresby. — AFP photo

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