ECOLOGICAL INTERNET PRESS/SOCIAL MEDIA RELEASE
Papua New Guineans Protest World Bank's Ill-Conceived Expansion of Pacific Tuna 
Fish Harvest

Peaceful protestors make clear PMIZ ecologically unsustainable, corruption is 
epidemic and democracy threatened in Papua New Guinea

October 20, 2009
>From Asples PNG and Earth's Newsdesk, projects of Ecological Internet (EI)
http://www.ecoearth.info/newsdesk/

Continue Taking Action Online at: http://bit.ly/png_tuna

(MADANG, PAPUA NEW GUINEA) -- Over 500 people gathered at the Madang Provincial 
Government Headquarters on Thursday, October 15th, to protest Papua New Guinea 
governments' support for the Pacific Marine Industrial Zone (PMIZ). The PMIZ, 
at Vidar along the North Coast Road, is expected to be one of the biggest tuna 
developments in the Asia-Pacific region. Local peoples rallied to express 
strong opposition to PMIZ and presented a petition to the Government calling on 
them to halt the project.  Online, thousands of global protesters from around 
the world supported local peoples' demands [1].  

Men, women and children sat in front of the Madang provincial government 
building with placards that read 'No more PMIZ', 'We want our land back – think 
about our future', while others proclaimed 'We do not want PMIZ –  it will 
destroy our sea [2]'. The crowd was peaceful but frustrated. They also informed 
the government that a formal complaint has begun with the World Bank's 
International Finance Corporation (IFC), and that legal actions are imminent 
against all parties involved.

The planned US$300 million (K990m) PMIZ project will greatly increase 
industrial harvest of Madang, PNG and the Pacific Islands' rich tuna resources. 
Canneries and dock and storage facilities are to be constructed to service 
foreign fishing vessels that would dump their tuna catch. It will bring tens of 
thousands of unskilled Asians into Papua New Guinea when local unemployment is 
high.  And it most certainly will lead to fishery depletion and collapse. 
Unless PMIZ is resisted, overfishing and piracy will destroy PNG and much of 
the world's remaining tuna fisheries.

PMIZ would build 10 tuna factories and processing facilities like the current 
Filipino RD Tuna cannery. The existing plant has previously been shut down for 
birds defecating into tuna cans fined for poor waste disposal, and employee 
relations are poor.  Benefits have been limited to assembly line jobs for women 
who make K80 a fortnight (~ $USD26). Villagers have been affected by the "sex 
for tuna trade" where local women trade sex for fish by-catches. 

The PMIZ project is being strongly driven from Port Moresby, the ruling 
National Alliance and their Chinese partners.  The PNG national government, 
which is rushing the project through despite local opposition, tried to revoke 
permission for this democratic assembly and expression of concerns.  The march 
had been approved by the provincial police authorities, but a government 
minister complained to Police Headquarters, who overturned the decision and 
banned the march.  Still, people bravely marched.

This led Opposition leader Sir Mekere Morauta to ask "In whose interests is the 
country being governed?  A foreign power?  Foreign business interests?  Illegal 
immigrants?  Certainly not for Papua New Guineans. Section 46 of our 
Constitution expressly provides for freedom of expression; Section 47 provides 
for the right to freedom of assembly and association; Section 57 provides for 
enforcement of these guaranteed rights and freedoms… This is yet another 
example of the trend of this Government of turning PNG into a Mugabe-type 
regime." 

Local people are increasingly expressing a sense of distance from the 
government, and are becoming angry. It is widely thought that PMIZ is for the 
overseas companies, the Chinese, the corrupt politicians and those few locals 
they have bought off.  Said one young person, "the government doesn't give a 
****. They just want the money for themselves. They are not thinking of us or 
our future or what damage this project will do to the people of Madang. Hell 
they don't even think we have a brain . What do they think we're going to do - 
just listen to their **** and accept it? They better not make that mistake."

Plans are to follow the same foreign investment driven development model, to 
quickly industrially over-develop the tuna resource, which has exhausted 
fisheries globally wherever practiced.  It is not clear how PMIZ can benefit 
local peoples, as they will be left with no options but to work for the cannery 
under whatever conditions it chooses. Following the legally questionable ground 
breaking ceremony in June of 2009, the Madang Lagoon communities have begun 
holding meetings to explore collective organized actions to permanently block 
PMIZ.

 Local communities are concerned about environment, pollution and land issues. 
More ecologically sustainable management -- such as a locally owned and 
controlled mid-size purse-seine fish industry -- could provide fish and income 
in perpetuity for the people of Madang.  A deeply corrupt political system is 
selling out the land rights, resources and future ecological sustainability of 
its peoples for a small group to enjoy short-term profit and bribery. This 
industrial export model enjoys tax holidays, enriches primarily the 
Chinese-owned trade stores with the small amounts of wage money entering the 
economy, pollutes local seas, disturbs coastal fisheries and threatens Madang's 
tourism industry.

Over 75% of the world's ocean fisheries -- some 19 out of 24 -- are being, or 
have already been, overexploited. Billions of people depend upon wild caught 
fish protein, and Pacific and PNG fisheries are some of the last healthy wild 
fish stocks on the planet.  Many Asian and European industries and consumers 
are in need of Pacific fish now, as their own fisheries are collapsing.  The EU 
is RD Tuna's biggest market, with Germany and Ireland the primary export 
markets. 

###ENDS###

[1] Still current at http://bit.ly/png_tuna

[2] Pictures can be found at: http://www.nancysullivan.typepad.com/

Discuss release: 
http://www.ecoearth.info/blog/2009/10/ei_release_papua_new_guineans.asp

---
You are subscribed to ecological_internet as [email protected].

Before unsubscribing, please consider modifying your list profile at:
http://www.ecoearth.info/shared/subscribe/[email protected]

To unsubscribe, send a blank email to [email protected]
Or click here:
http://email.ecoearth.info:81/u?id=84041H&n=T&c=F&l=ecological_internet

To subscribe visit:
http://www.ecoearth.info/shared/subscribe/


---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]
For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]

Reply via email to