San Francisco Chronicle

After summit, police storm Parliament

- By Ciaran McQuillan Ciaran McQuillan is an Associated Press writer.

PORT MORESBY, Papua New Guinea — Disgruntle­d police, military and prison guards stormed Papua New Guinea’s Parliament on Tuesday in a violent pay dispute stemming from an internatio­nal summit hosted by the impoverish­ed South Pacific island nation over the weekend, a lawmaker said.

Images posted by opposition lawmaker Bryan Kramer on social media showed broken windows, smashed furniture, pictures torn from walls and plants tipped over.

Parliament’s security check point including a metal detector was trashed and doors were destroyed along with their fingerprin­t-reading locking systems, Kramer said.

He said the protesters had not been paid their promised allowances for their security work at the Pacific Rim leaders’ summit held in Port Moresby, a city described by the World Bank as among the world’s most violent due to high unemployme­nt and brazen criminal gangs known as “raskols.”

The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n meeting was attended by Vice President Mike Pence, Chinese President Xi Jinping, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and others.

When the protesters tried to enter Parliament, “there was a confrontat­ion between Parliament security and members of the security forces,” Kramer said. “It erupted into a scuffle, several staff were assaulted as they made their way into Parliament.”

Kramer said he did not see anyone use a weapon in the conflict and he was not aware of any serious injuries, although there were spots of blood throughout the building.

Kramer and his opposition colleagues remained in a meeting room within the Parliament building throughout the 30-minute attack.

Following the rampage, more than 100 police, military personnel and prison guards waited outside Parliament demanding to be addressed by the government about their allowances, Kramer said. But they eventually left the area.

Working police later provided security for parliament­ary staff in the building and patrolled surroundin­g streets.

The violence at Parliament coincided with reports of looting of surroundin­g businesses, as criminals apparently took advantage of the breakdown in law and order.

Neither Prime Minister Peter O’Neill’s office nor police chief Superinten­dent Dominic Kakas immediatel­y responded to requests for comment.

Papua New Guinea is a largely undevelope­d Pacific nation of more than 8 million mostly subsistenc­e farmers with widespread poverty, corruption and lawlessnes­s.

The annual APEC summit brought together representa­tives of 21 nations that account for 60 percent of the world economy.

 ?? Brian Kramer / Associated Press ?? Police and soldiers guard Parliament in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, after disgruntle­d police, military and prison guards assailed the building.
Brian Kramer / Associated Press Police and soldiers guard Parliament in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, after disgruntle­d police, military and prison guards assailed the building.

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