Alert ! Bougainville: Referendum Or War
15 December 2000
Kia ora,
the Bougainville peace process is falling apart. This is primarily because of the intransigence of the Papua New Guinea government - recent weeks have seen a total lack of commitment to keep the promises they have made in the past, particularly with regard to the key issue of an independence / autonomy referendum. The PNG parliament has just gone into recess until July 2001 to avoid a no confidence vote, and it is not clear if it could be recalled before then to ratify any agreement on Bougainville's future should the peace talks resume.
The lack of commitment by the Australian government to progressing the peace process has not helped the situation - their announcement in mid October of an additional Aus$15 million one-off 'aid' package to the PNG armed forces was particularly disturbing to the people of Bougainville. The Australian government justified this spending (their 'defence aid' to PNG this year will amount to nearly Aus$25 million) as being necessary to pay for soldiers' rations and unpaid allowances; and to try to get a grip on the PNG armed forces discipline, corruption and management problems. It doesn't seem to have occurred to the Australian government that the money could more usefully be spent on disbanding and retraining the PNG armed forces; and that this would be one of the greatest contributions to peace they could make in the region.
*** What you can do ***
Bougainville leaders have called in the past week for the New Zealand and Australian governments to help break the deadlock and get the peace process back on track.
Please contact the NZ politicians listed below and urge them to do all they can to get the Papua New Guinea and Australian governments moving forward positively on the peace process. Given their role in arming and supporting PNG, the Australian government has not only the power but also the moral responsibility to put pressure on the PNG government to ensure progress is made as soon as possible.
If you only have time for one letter or fax, please contact Phil Goff.
* Phone calls and faxes (all to be prefixed by 04 by those of you out of Wellington, by + 64 4 for those of you receiving this alert overseas): Helen Clark, Prime Minister, office - tel 471 9998, fax 473 3579; Jim Anderton, Deputy Prime Minister, office - tel 471 9011, fax 495 8441; Phil Goff, Minister of Foreign Affairs, office - tel 471 9370, fax 495 8444; The Cabinet (collectively), office - tel 471 9743, fax 472 6332; Matt Robson, Associate Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade, tel (04) 470 6561, fax (04) 495 8462.
Letters should be addressed to the relevant person and posted (no stamp needed) to Parliament Buildings, Wellington.
Ideally you should send a copy of your correspondence to Keith Locke, Green Party Spokesperson for Foreign Affairs, tel 470 6709, fax 472 6003; and a copy of your correspondence and of any replies to PMA for our files.
For more information about the recent developments
in the peace process, there are two articles included below.
For previous alerts about Bougainville, and for updates on
the current situation, check out the Bougainville index page
on the PMA website at
The index page
will be updated over the weekend.
______________________________________ Bougainville
Media Release 10 December 2000 Government 'a
failure' in peace talks shambles The eleventh round of
talks in the Bougainville peace process ended in deadlock
and disarray on Saturday. Bougainville leaders Governor
John Momis and President Joseph Kabui described the
government's approach to negotiations as a sham. "These
people seem to want endless talks but refuse to make
decisions about the key issues on referendum on
Independence and autonomy". Time and time again the
Government has promised to talk about referendum on
Independence - to find the words to accommodate the joint
Bougainville policy for that referendum. We started over
two years ago. They acknowledged the importance of
Referendum on Independence at Loloata. They agreed to it in
Rabaul. They promised to take the issue to Parliament and
now they have done a backflip. There is no willingness to
compromise. It seems that they just don't care about the
fact that their failure is pushing Bougainville back to
conflict." “On the Bougainville side we have been prepared
to compromise. From a demand for Independence we compromised
and agreed to a referendum by Bougainvilleans. Then we fell
back to a deferred referendum. Then we agreed that it would
be no sooner than ten years. Finally we said we would accept
conditions.” “We have bent over backwards to make
concessions and the Government has failed to meet the
challenge.” "The simple reality is that a deferred
referendum on Independence is the key to disarmament.
Without that referendum there can be no disposal of
arms." This will mean that a negotiated settlement becomes
impossible. The government will fiddle at the edges to
impose the existing provincial government reforms on
Bougainville. That is a recipe for renewed conflict. It is
the measure of the Morauta government's failure to deal with
Bougainville crisis. It is easy for politicians and public
servants to sit in Waigani and to ignore the suffering and
pain of war. But the failure of these talks can have an
enormous economic cost for the whole of Papua New
Guinea." If the Prime Minister is sincere in his promises
to resolve the Bougainville issue then, quite frankly, he
should urgently recall Cabinet to find sensible solutions
including Referendum on Independence for the sake of
Bougainville and Papua New Guinea. We appeal to Australia
and New Zealand to play a much more active role to break the
deadlock in these talks as they did when they convinced the
Bougainville rebels to leave the jungles and come to the
table. Perhaps only the outside world can convince this
government that stubborn intransigence will only lead back
to the battlefield and the referendum on Independence opens
the door to weapons disposal and lasting peace. It also
holds the key to Autonomy. Referendum on Independence is
our passport to peace." _________________ Bougainville
warns: referendum or war 15 December 2000 The
Australian, From AAP A renewed war of secession could
erupt on Bougainville island unless the Papua New Guinea
Government addresses the issue of a referendum on
independence, Bougainville leaders have warned. "The risk
of renewed war will remain unless the issue is resolved,
once and for all," John Momis and Joseph Kabui said in a
joint statement yesterday. "The BRA (Bougainville
Revolutionary Army) will not support the peace process
unless there is a guaranteed referendum (on independence)."
Three weeks of projected "final" peace talks between Port
Moresby and the Bougainville leaders were adjourned without
resolution last Saturday night. Foreign Minister and
Bougainville Affairs Minister Michael Somare said then that
the talks would resume in the new year, but did not set a
date. A nine-year civil war, sparked by longstanding
landowner grievances against the Australian-operated CRA
copper mine at Panguna on Bougainville, ended in a ceasefire
in 1997 and peace negotiations in 1998. At least 20,000
people died of gunshot wounds or preventable illness and
disease during the war. In March this year, there was a
seeming breakthrough in the protracted rounds of peace talks
when Sir Michael agreed to the notion of a referendum on
Bougainville, not only for greater autonomy within PNG, but
also on the option of independence. But cabinet later
reaffirmed its opposition to an independence option, and
this remained the sticking point up until last Saturday. Mr
Momis, the Governor of the island province, and Mr Kabui, a
former BRA leader and incumbent president of the
Bougainville People's Congress, appealed yesterday for
negotiations to resume before the end of this month.
"January is emerging as the date when the BRA could
change their support (for the peace process)," they said.
"All Bougainville groups know that the referendum is the key
to peace." Panguna landowners at Guava village first opposed
the mine when it was being prospected in 1964. It opened in
1972, three years before PNG's independence, when many
Bougainvilleans opposed being included in PNG. "Between
1989 and 1997, many people died pursuing that (independence)
goal," Mr Momis and Mr Kabui said. "As a result, there
will be no disposal of weapons if the peace process closes
the door on the independence issue, without having a
democratic choice on the issue." Australian Foreign
Minister Alexander Downer will visit unarmed Australian, New
Zealand, Fijian and Vanuatu peace monitors on Bougainville
on Wednesday and Thursday, when he is also expected to
confer with Mr Momis and Mr Kabui before talking to Sir
Michael in Port Moresby on Friday. Peace Movement
Aotearoa the national networking peace group
PO Box 9314, Wellington, Aotearoa / New Zealand. tel +64
4 382 8129, fax 382 8173,