The Borneo Post

A month after PNG quake, cash-strapped govt struggles to help the hardest-hit

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SYDNEY: Almost a month after a deadly earthquake, Papua New Guinea ( PNG) is struggling to get aid to desperate survivors, having allocated just a fraction of its relief funds, while a rent dispute left disaster officials briefly locked out of their offices.

The scale of the emergency is testing the finances and capacity of one of the world’s poorest countries, disaster and relief officials say, after the magnitude 7.5 quake rocked its remote mountainou­s highlands on February 26, killing 100 people.

Thousands of survivors have walked to remote airstrips and jungle clearings, awaiting helicopter­s bringing supplies of food, water and medicines, aid agencies and authoritie­s say.

“To date, we do not have any money to do all the necessary things,” Tom Edabe, the disaster coordinato­r for the hardest-hit province of Hela, said by telephone from Tari, its capital.

“( The) government is trying to assist and have budgeted some money, but to date we have not received anything...we have only been given food, and non-food items supplied by other NGOs.”

Continuing aftershock­s rattle residents, who have to collect water brought by daily rainstorms to ensure adequate supplies, Edabe, the disaster coordinato­r, said.

“The biggest thing that people need, apart from food, is water,” said James Pima, a helicopter pilot and flight manager at aviation firm HeliSoluti­ons in the Western Highlands capital of Mt. Hagen, about 170 kilometres (100 miles) from the disaster zone.

“They don’t have clean water to cook or drink ... they are standing there staring. The expression on their faces is blank.”

His firm’s three helicopter­s fly relief missions “fully flat- out every day,” Pima added.

Destructio­n to roads and runways means authoritie­s must rely on helicopter­s to fly in relief. But while nimble, the craft can only carry smaller loads than fixed-wing aircraft and cannot fly during the afternoon thundersto­rms.

The logistics problems wind all the way to PNG’s disaster centre, where officials told Reuters they had been locked out of their office in Port Moresby, the capital, for two days last week after the government missed a rental payment.

“That was correct, Monday and Tuesday,” a spokeswoma­n said.

In a joint report with the United Nations (UN) published on Friday, the agency cited “lack of quality data” about food shortages, limited aircraft assets and “significan­t gaps” in sanitation support as being the biggest problems it faced.

The office of Prime Minister Peter O’Neill did not respond to emailed questions from Reuters.

On his website, O’Neill has previously said, “There will be no quick fix, the damage from this disaster will take months and years to be repaired.”

The government had approved relief funds amounting to 450 million kina (US$130 million), O’Neill said initially, but a later statement mentioned only three million kina in initial relief - or less than one per cent - had been allocated to the worst-hit areas.

In its November budget, the government made plans to rein in spending and trim debt projected to stand at 25.8 billion kina in 2018.

The impoverish­ed country is also missing its largest revenue earner, after the quake forced a shutdown of Exxon Mobil Corp’s liquefied natural gas ( LNG) project, which has annual sales of US$ 3 billion at current LNG prices. The firm is still assessing quake damage at its facilities.

O’Neill last week hit out at critics of the aid effort for playing ‘political games’, while thanking Australia and New Zealand for military aircraft that provided assistance beyond the capacity of PNG’s own defence forces.

His political opponent, former Prime Minister Mekere Morauta, had called the government’s response ‘tardy’ and inadequate.

“Relief sources say mobile medical centres and operating theatres are needed urgently, and that only internatio­nal partners can supply them,” Morauta said last week.

Foreign aid pledges of about US$ 49 million have come in from Australia, China, the European Union, Japan, New Zealand and the US, says the UN, most of it provided by private companies.

Exxon and its partner, Oil Search Ltd, say they have provided US$ 6 million in cash and kind for quake relief. — Reuters

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