Story and Pictures by Susan Merrell
Greetings from Papua New Guinea.
As Air Nuigini flight PX2 came in for landing at Jacksons Airport in PNG’s capital Port Moresby the PNG national resplendent in his colourful striped beanie sitting behind me let out an excited whoop.
“My country, my Papua New Guinea,” he said very loudly and rapturously
“Expect the unexpected, land of surprises,” he continued enthusiastically citing every tourist board slogan that he could remember in his advanced intoxicated state.
When the aircraft came to a halt on the tarmac, he stood.
“Welcome to Papua New Guinea,” he said to all and sundry, arms outstretched to the applause of a half-empty plane.
While I don’t quite share this man’s unbridled enthusiasm for the country, nevertheless I am somewhat intoxicated by it.
This is my third trip this year.
Those of you who have followed my writing and read my articles (thank you) will have noticed that more and more of my focus has been directed to the Pacific. It started with my association with Sir Trevor Garland, the Honorary Consul-General of the Solomon Islands, through to the Julian Moti affair and beyond.
Much more than Australia, it has been the Pacific countries that have embraced me and my writing and I now find that I am published much more in the Pacific than in Australia. My association with the Pacific has also enabled me to branch out into radio and television. I have contributed to radio in Solomon Islands, PNG, Vanuatu and Fiji and Television in PNG.
So here I am in Port Moresby again, in the foyer of the Crowne Plaza Hotel (which I call the Crowne prison because it’s too dangerous for a woman on her own to venture outside). So what’s the fascination I hear you ask?
And you know, that’s a bloody good question. The place is extremely dangerous, too dangerous even to catch a taxi. In the capital cities it’s best that I have a bodyguard when I venture out, even in broad daylight – can you believe that? Of course I do stand out like the proverbial ‘dog’s balls’ – white skin, blonde hair. Here, I’m exotic – which is something I’ve always aspired to, but in PNG it’s not a good idea to look different or rich – and yes, in PNG I look rich too. Extreme poverty is rife.
But for a journalist the politics and the issues here make the Australian socio-political landscape look like sliced white bread – all a bit bland.
PNG is a country that has been dragged screaming into modernity and only some of it. Over 80% of the country still subsists. Some of the more remote areas (and there are a lot of them) still have no electricity. There are precious few roads and most areas have to be accessed by air. The main highways, such as they are, are often impassable. Health care and education is very piecemeal indeed. Ironically, you really take your life in your hands going to a hospital in PNG. When the Prime Minister, Sir Michael Somare got sick and needed heart surgery, he went to Singapore. No one has ever accused the Grand Chief of being stupid – corrupt, yes, stupid, no.
Which brings us to the subject of corruption. It’s rife in PNG at all levels. Greg Anderson, the head of the Chamber of Mines in Port Moresby likens it to a mafia with tentacles that reach out widely.
Corruption is a by-product of ‘the resources curse’ apparently, and PNG has been surviving on the proceeds of investment in its resources since independence in 1975. Many people are becoming rich on the back of PNG resources – except the people of PNG – although the economy is doing well with PNG’s GDP about to double thanks to the $15 million PNG Liquified Natural Gas project headed by the multi national Exxon Mobil. And the government is managing the economy well with the country experiencing significant economic growth – delivery of services they aren’t so good at – shame about the people still dying of preventable diseases in such a rich country.
It’s not so surprising that in this scenario crime is rife and law and order issues are significant. If the major contributing factor is poverty, the prevailing tribal mentality also contributes. Tribal fights break out with regular monotony at the drop of a hat. Arms hacked off, people killed and this is at a market place in Port Moresby.
Ancient superstitions are still practiced – although now there are laws against them. Not that long back, beyond the 1930s, some of the tribes were cannibals. Eating human flesh was usually a magical ritual. When in February of this year a man was caught eating his baby daughter alive, it was ‘sorcery’ that was blamed. The baby died. Thank goodness it was just a girl. (That was an ironic comment in case anyone believes I was serious!)
Attitudes to women here are disgusting. Many consider a female has less value than a pig. A ‘bride price’ is paid for a wife and she’s a man’s possession and not a very prized one at that. Domestic violence is rife at 70% overall. In some areas it reaches to 100%. It’s accepted and has become normalised. Sexual violence towards all females is high with many women saying that they wouldn’t bother to report rape unless it was a gang rape. Rape is no big deal – not to the men anyway. Police are part of the problem, often perpetrators themselves. There are laws that protect women in PNG it’s just that no one takes notice of them.
When I was last in PNG I spent a day at Bomana prison interviewing 11 women murderers.
Of the thirty-eight inmates, thirty-six were in for murder. Yet, murder is not a female crime. But all of these women had been the victims of prolonged domestic violence before the worst of circumstances created murderers of them.
All had either killed their husbands or the other wives or girlfriends of the husband, hoping getting rid of their rivals would stop the man beating them– (polygamy and promiscuity is rife). All had the scars that proved their stories. When, in the telling, their stories came to the part where they’d killed, especially if it was their husband, “what took you so long?” was my usual question. I suggest that many of these women would have been found innocent by way of justifiable homicide were they tried elsewhere and not in PNG.
The great irony and shame of all this is that PNG is, geo-physically, one of the most beautiful countries. With Port Moresby being just a three-hour flight from Sydney and less than an hour from Cairns, tourism ought to be flourishing. Even the ‘Crowne Prison’ in the centre of grotty downtown Port Moresby is on a hill at the centre of a peninsular with the port on one side and the beach on the other – stunning. Sunsets to die for.
You just need to look past the mean streets that are stained with bright red ‘Buai’ spittle (Betelnut – a national past time.) The habit of chewing and spitting “buai’ is responsible for the spread of Tuberculosis which has had a few break-outs recently. Apparently the spittle evaporates in the heat and rises and people breathe in the contaminated air.
On Tuesday, I’ll be going to Madang on the north coast to hear the judgment in a court case involving mining and the environment handed down. I could stay in Port Moresby and get the information second hand but Madang is so gob-smackingly beautiful that you’d have to be mad to miss any opportunity to spend time there.
So many stories, so many surprising contrasts. Papua New Guinea, expect the unexpected. (Oh my God, I think I’m channelling my bright-beanied fellow air passenger).



These women also killed they’re abusive husbands but were not so lucky.
http://www.paclii.org//cgi-bin/disp.pl/pg/cases/PGNC/1995/6.html?query=lucy%20moro
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Susan, you are right to highlight social problems in relation to violence against women, lack of respect for women and lack of women’s rights. It has been said that an important measure of a country’s success is how women are treated. As I understand it, there is only one female member of parliament in PNG, which is another indication of lack of progress in this area.
However, there are people who are working for women’s rights in PNG. I met some while I was there. In addition, there are men in PNG who do respect women. Not all PNG men are misogynists. One of the principles of the Baha’i Faith is the equality of women and men. Although the Baha’i community is still relatively small there (about 28,000), violence against women is strictly forbidden in the Baha’i community, as is polygamy and infidelity. In addition, Baha’is do not drink alcohol. I am not trying to portray the community as perfect, but there are principles and rules which we all know exist and are working towards. The equality of men and women and respect for women’s rights is one of them.
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Thank you Susan for posting some interesting information about PNG and particularly for highlighting important socio-political issues, such as violence against women, crime and corruption in high places, as well as mentioning how beautiful the country is.
I travelled to PNG for the first time this year for 5 weeks. I am UK born and bred. As a member of the Baha’i Faith (www.bahai.org), a worldwide religious community, I am lucky to have a ready-made family in many different parts of the world I travel to. The Encyclopaedia Britannica lists the Baha’i Faith as the second largest religion in the world after Christianity, in terms of its geographical spread. I understand that the Baha’i community in PNG now stands at about 28,000.
The Baha’i community tends to be very diverse, perhaps partly due to Baha’i teachings about unity, which form the bedrock of the faith – “The earth is but one country and mankind its citizens”, “so powerful is the light of unity that it can illuminate the whole earth”. While there, I was able to attend Baha’i meetings, spend time and stay with Baha’i friends from many different cultural backgrounds (as you are no doubt aware, PNG is a very diverse country).
I had the good fortune to spend one week staying in a remote village. That was a truly amazing experience! There was no electricity, running water or toilet paper. We washed every day in the clean river water, drank spring water and rain water, visited the toilet (which was a deep hole in the ground inside a hut made from local materials) and ate locally grown organic food (which was delicious). It was like entering a completely different world compared to England. There was a real sense of community and belonging, people were very hospitable and welcoming, eager to share their thoughts, ideas, skills (and lovely dishes) and also to learn from me. I noticed there to be a complete lack of the type of materialism, consumerism, advertising and celebrity worship which now exist in the UK. Many had no shoes, or just one pair of flip-flops (compared to our wardrobes full of clothes and shoes) and I didn’t see a single mirror while I was there (although there might have been some tucked away). I noticed that people appeared to relate to and judge themselves and one another by more civilised standards than those which now often prevail in the UK. It appeared that who you were and what you did was more important than what you look like or what you have, for example, which was like a breath of fresh air. I doubt whether the people there had even heard of boob jobs, liposuction and botox, and they appeared infinitely superior for it! In terms of respect for the environment, these people lived in harmony with their surroundings. Their lifestyle was an almost perfect example of very low carbon footprint, eco-living.
The conclusion I reached was that I have much to learn from these people: about the corrosive pervasive tentacles of consumerism and materialism which have pervaded our minds and our culture here in the UK, how this can impact negatively on us, the ways we relate to ourselves and one another, about truly co-operative eco-living and about the respect and the sense of community which nowadays we often lack. These supposedly simple people I found to be infinitely more civilised than us in many ways. As regards crime, there was no crime in the village I was told. Some years back a woman had “stolen another man’s husband”, but this had been amicably resolved by the agreed upon exchange of gifts. All parties had since remarried.
My experience in the village taught me that different ways of thinking, feeling and being are possible, that I have much to learn from these people and that we would do well here to incorporate many of these social, community and spiritual values back into our own culture.
My experience I found to be even more instructive when, on returning to the UK, the riots took place in London and elsewhere.
It is right and proper to comment on the difficulties faced by other countries and cultures, and to warn of the potential pitfalls. Like Susan, my Baha’i friends would not let me go out and about alone in Port Moresby and I was accompanied everywhere I went. This I found strange (although the company was welcome). However, it is also important to highlight the positives of my trip, of which there were many. I fell in love with PNG while there, the place and the people, and would definitely like to visit again.
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Thank you for your story Susan, even if it is an extremely sad one. It saddens me whenever I read such stories as this, which seem to prove just how stupid and barbaric human beings can be… but they need to be told, and read. More power to you for being one of the few who care enough and are brave enough risk their own lives in order to tell such stories… and the very best of luck!
🙂
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Thankyou for this interesting story, Susan. Realistically speaking, they aren’t going to be getting on well together in a hurry.
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P.S. Clearly you haven’t sold out to the PNG tourist industry. 🙂
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Great story. Keep up the good work. Everyone needs to read these stories!
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My neighbor did the Kokoda trail, a few years back, followed great uncle’s trip, as written down in his diary, went to ANZAC Day, etc. What he wasn’t prepared fro was the horrific violence right in the middle of Port Moresby, so much so that the hotel staff would not let a guest go anywhere unaccompanied. He said that things seemed to be more relaxed on the trail. There were tribes that, in spite of their stone age lifestyle, would greet the Kokoda travellers, and regale them with stories about the war.
We do get some New Guinean students who study at Newcastle Uni. Like many overseas students, they want to stay here, where it is relatively safe and secure, and, for some reason, we don’t inter migrants who arrive via this mechanism!!!
Good on you Susan, keep the stories coming, Merv will even try and get the fax machine and photocopier working to expedite their distribution.
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Nice yarn Susan. The place sounds bloody awful to me. Good on you for having the guts to go there. I would really love to hear more of your pacific adventures. Please keep them coming.
Cheers
Mark
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Good on’ya Susan, good that you are brave enough to go to these horrible places, horrible even if they are beautiful…
You tell it as it is, PNG women need someone like you Susan to tell their story.
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Very well told tale of the effects of poverty mixed with the exploitation of its wealth for just a few. It seems the further east one travels in that area the more the brutality emerges.
From peaceful Bali to Lombok, Sumba, Sumbawa, Flores, Timor with the next step to Papua coming to Australia, where tribal fighting is also rather rife.
Mix tribal fighting with alcohol and hacking off limbs and brutalizing women soon becomes the norm. Education of the young has to be the answer. It might well mean giving up on the present adults and concentrate on the children, even if it means taking them away from their violence and alcohol sodden families.
Nothing ever prepared me for the dreadful sights of travelling to remote aboriginal communities some years back whereby I wondered why nothing was done when adults, totally drunk from morning till night, were brawling and bashing each other while around them people walked about as if nothing was going on. It was accepted as being ‘totally the norm.’ Once the welfare cheques came in they would pile into a utility go to the nearest steel container filled with grog and load up for their next fortnightly stash.
I can’t for the life of me understand why those remote aboriginal communities that are so totally hopelessly without any future are not merged into larger more viable communities where there is at least a change for employment and above all, education for children with good health and nutrition.
They did this with the aboriginals of northern Europe, the Samis who had very similar problems of remoteness, poverty and severe climatic conditions with alcohol also rearing its head..
Anyway, Susan. Thanks for your story, please keep plugging away.
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