Showing posts with label PNG International News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PNG International News. Show all posts

Monday, June 1, 2015

The country where rapists are proud and happy to pose for photos

Source: www.news.com.au/pacific

Link:Refer this Link for the original website

June 01, 2015 12:17PM
Members of the Raskol gang 'Dirty Dons 585', Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. The gang com Members of the Raskol gang 'Dirty Dons 585', Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. The gang committed a set of rapes and armed robberies. 'Dirty Dons' admit that two thirds of their victims are women. Photo: Vlad Sokhin/Panos Pictures Source: Supplied

WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT
MARGARET’S husband has used knives, stones, metal and bottles to inflict pain. He has threatened to find boys to pack rape her and told her often that he would kill her. “You see this stone? It is nice and hard and round. If I put it on your head you are dead. When we are home I will really kill you.”
Once, Margaret’s husband tried to punch her in the face, missed and hit their one-month-old baby Sammy instead, knocking him unconscious. While Margaret and Sammy’s story is extreme, sadly it is representative.
Margaret’s husband used to pick her baby up and hit her with him. He would try to punch h Margaret’s husband used to pick her baby up and hit her with him. He would try to punch her in the face when she was breastfeeding. All she wants is to live quietly with her baby and not have him injured by his father. Photo: Vlad Sokhin/ChildFund Australia/Haus Ruth Source: Supplied

Sexual violence is so common in Papua New Guinea that rapists from ‘raskol’ gangs are happy to proudly pose for photos and boast about what they’ve done.
The statistics are horrifying. Two thirds of women are subjected to some kind of physical or sexual violence. Doctors Without Borders have reported that in Papua New Guinea they are dealing with levels of gender violence normally experienced in war zones.
Sadly, the violence doesn’t just extend to women, with children frequently in danger. Children younger than 16 account for half the number of people seeking medical help after being raped. One in four is younger than twelve; one in ten is under eight years old.
Richard Bal shows off the disfigured ear of his wife, Agita. In December 2010, after comi Richard Bal shows off the disfigured ear of his wife, Agita. In December 2010, after coming home drunk, Richard took a bush-knife and cut off half of Agita's left ear. He spent one night in the police station and was released the next morning due to 'insufficient evidence'. Photo: Vlad Sokhin/Panos Pictures Source: Supplied

For Wendy, daddy is a ‘dangerous man’. She has stood and watched in horror as he has whipped and stabbed her mother Kay across her legs and back. Kay’s husband has hit her with a hammer, stabbed her feet with kitchen knives, cut her with bush knives and whipped her with extension cords. Once he belted her from 10pm until Kay escaped at 5am. She hid in the bush before running to the police station.
“Wendy just stands there and stares at us and cries and cries,” says Kay. “It is like a nightmare to her. In the night she doesn’t sleep properly, she’s always calling my name.”
Terrifyingly, Wendy experienced her father’s fury first hand at age five. Kay recalls the ordeal, which resulted in a split lip and injured jaw.
“[He] got the little girl, bashed her up and then lifted her up, face down, and threw her on the concrete.”
For Kay, seeing her children’s life in danger brought her to Haus Ruth, a women’s refuge in Port Moresby. Her husband continued to linger outside the refuge’s security gates and make threats, but Kay refused to give up on the hope of freedom for her family, saying, “I just want to live somewhere where he won’t bother me and the children again.”
Helen was attacked by a stranger who bit her bottom lip off. She is now fighting for wome
Helen was attacked by a stranger who bit her bottom lip off. She is now fighting for women’s rights in Papua New Guinea and is part of Vlad Sokhin’s Crying Meri exhibition. Photo: Vlad Sokhin/ChildFund Australia Source: Supplied
A doctor at an antenatal clinic in Port Moresby examines a 14-year-old girl, who was raped by a 40-year-old lawyer. The victim said that the man was a friend of her family so she didn't suspect anything when he offered her a lift. But he drove the girl to his house, raped her and then left her on the road. The girl's father brought his daughter to the hospital but wasn't sure if he wanted to sue the rapist. Photo: Vlad Sokhin/Panos Pictures Source: Supplied

For women and children seeking help, there are resources available but they are limited. Shelters and refuge centres exist but there are not nearly enough. Support can be found in church groups and in a positive move, there are now family violence units in some hospitals and police stations.
Two years ago, outrage against gender violence in Papua New Guinea reached fever pitch when Kepari Leniata, a 20-year-old mother of one was accused of sorcery, dragged from her home, tortured, stripped naked, doused in petrol and set alight on a pyre of tyres at a local rubbish dump. Police tried to intervene but were stopped by crowds watching the burning.
Prior to the murder, a young boy in the village had complained of stomach pains and later died. The family, finding no explanation for the senseless tragedy, became suspicious of sorcery and witchcraft, and Kepari Leniata quickly became the target of accusations. Leniata ‘confessed’ to the murder while being tortured by her accusers.
While sorcery related torture and murder in Papua New Guinea was once widely unseen and unheard, cameras on mobile phones have enabled documentation from some of the most remote parts of the country, reaching millions of people across the world.
Many people present at Leniata’s death recorded the gruesome burning, and soon it was covered in the world’s most prominent media outlets — sparking domestic and international debate about the crippling gender violence problems facing the Pacific nation.
A mother grieves the death of her daughter, 25, who died in the Emergency section of the A mother grieves the death of her daughter, 25, who died in the Emergency section of the Port Moresby General Hospital after being raped on the street by members of Raskol gang. Photo: Vlad Sokhin/Panos Pictures Source: Supplied

For Cassie Rangip, a Papua New Guinean woman living in Brisbane, the story really shocked to the core.
“Seeing those images was a turning point. I couldn’t stand by while such atrocities took place. Mobile technology has allowed us to see very ugly, violent things, in some of the most remote parts of Papua New Guinea. Now the world can gain an insight into what is happening to our women.
“I knew that violence against women is not an uncommon occurrence in Papua New Guinea, but when those images surfaced, I felt compelled to do something. Sadly violence is not just in remote locations, and related to suspected witchcraft. Gender violence is rife throughout the entire country, in homes and on the streets.”
From tragedy, Leniata Legacy was born. Dedicated to fighting gender violence in Papua New Guinea and Australia, a group of Papua New Guinean women are working tirelessly to provide support, resources and education to women and children in need.
In Papua New Guinea, the current popular opinion is that women are inferior. When marrying, men pay a ‘bride price’ to the woman’s family, meaning a new wife is easily seen as another possession. Gangs known as ‘raskols’ promote a culture of rape, violence and intimidation on the streets of larger towns and cities.
Omsy is an ex-member of the Kips Kaboni gang, with his wife Carol in their house. Omsy wa Omsy is an ex-member of the Kips Kaboni gang, with his wife Carol in their house. Omsy was a rapist and thief but left the gang a few years ago to become a bass guitarist. Omsy says that when he quit the gang he also stopped beating his wife. However he keeps his handmade gun to protect his family, as they live in Kaugeri, a dangerous settlement in Port Moresby. Photo: Vlad Sokhin/Panos Pictures Source: Supplied

Then there is the problem of witchcraft and sorcery accusations in remote areas, leading to the public torture and persecution of randomly selected women and occasionally, men. The accusations breed from a culture of fear and render victims indefensible against whisperings of witchcraft.
Kepari was a high profile case, and her death has spurred a lot of positive change, but many others continue to be accused, living in fear, and helpless.
ChildFund Australia has an active presence in Papua New Guinea and is working with local organisations and communities to improve the situation.
“Even the most basic information about gender violence is lacking, so we are working hard to ensure that women experiencing violence are equipped to make well informed decisions,” said ChildFund Australia CEO Nigel Spence.
“We are in the process of setting up a national hotline that is staffed by trained local counsellors. It’s a free service for women under threat so they can get basic information about their rights, as well as referral services. There is a long way to go and in some areas there is no victim assistance available. Slowly we are seeing positive change.”
For those within reach of a hospital, understanding what their options are legally puts them in a stronger place.
“To file for a medical report, which is required to process any criminal case, costs 20 kina ($A10) which many women do not have. Without the medical report, a case cannot proceed. Knowing such things helps provide a good fighting chance of getting out of an abusive situation,” said Mr Spence.
Rose’s husband attacked her with a knife, so she fled and was too scared to come home for Rose’s husband attacked her with a knife, so she fled and was too scared to come home for two nights. Her husband then abused her baby girl. When she returned and challenged him on the damage done to their baby, her husband said it wouldn’t have happened had she not left for two nights. Photo: Vlad Sokhin / ChildFund Australia / Haus Ruth Source: Supplied

To understand why such atrocities occur, an understanding of Papua New Guinea certainly helps, and an integral part of that is the Wantok system. The country is a rich tapestry of unique cultures and over 800 languages that have developed due to the remote nature of most tribes. The terrain in large parts of the country is challenging to traverse, with steep highlands resulting in isolated communities.
Wantok means ‘one talk’ and a strong social mechanism called ‘the Wantok system’ promotes a communal culture within the tribes where resources are shared and responsibility is divided between those in the community. It also means that issues within the community are dealt with within the community, rather than through Government enforced laws of the country. For this reason, it is strongly frowned upon for women to turn to police.
A lack of community intervention is a key area for targeted change. Abuse victim Regina was often hit in front of other people. She remembers the humiliation of her husband ripping her dress off and hitting her, naked in front of their home. “People watched. There are a million other women facing the same problem,” she recalled. Neighbours, friends and extended family are often unwilling to meddle in what is seen as private family business. There is also the fear they will be assaulted too.
Jessica and Molly grieve for their big sister Margaret while sitting on her grave. When M Jessica and Molly grieve for their big sister Margaret while sitting on her grave. When Margaret tried to escape her husband he killed her. Jessica says: “He found her and smashed her head on a car. No one stopped him. He belted her too much ... There was blood running from her eyes and nose and mouth when she died.” Photo: Vlad Sokhin / ChildFund Australia / Haus Ruth Source: Supplied
Companies and communities are working hard to promote change and encourage a gender violence mentality shift. Pacific telecommunications company Digicel aims to break the cycle of violence through focusing on positive behaviour for affirmative action through their ‘Men of Honour’ Award campaign.
 
“Papua New Guinean men have been vilified for decades, but there are honourable men who are alleviating suffering and preserving human dignity in the roles they play. Through the award, communities are encouraged to look within their communities to identify male role models and positive behaviour and nominate ordinary men who are doing extraordinary things,” said Beatrice Mahuru, CEO of Digicel Foundation PNG.
 
“These men have a greater ability to mentor and encourage other men to act courageously and take a stand against gender violence. Such initiatives highlight how communities and companies are working hard to make a change in PNG.”
There has been progress tackling this issue within government, although not as quickly as many would like. Last year the Family Protection Bill was passed, criminalising domestic violence and giving power to the police to remove perpetrators from their homes to protect the victim.

For Cassie at Leniata Legacy and many others fighting this omnipresent epidemic, the fight will never end.
“As long as there is gender violence in PNG, we will be working. We’re seeing positive change and communities rallying together, but there is a long way to go.”
Taina is an elder in his community. He has transformed to a peaceful man from being viole Taina is an elder in his community. He has transformed to a peaceful man from being violent in his younger years. He has come to see that life is better if men and women walk alongside each other as equal partners. Photo: Vlad Sokhin / ChildFund Australia Source: Supplied

Join the conversation online by using the hashtag: #stopviolencePNG

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Asylum Seekers Raped, More Harrowing Details Revealed from Manus Island

By Athena Yenko: July 26, 2013 7:40 AM IST
 
Asylum Seekers Raped, More Harrowing Details Revealed from Manus Island (VA Papua New Guinea national detention guard in Manus Island revealed more harrowing details of rape in the men's facility. The guard refused to be named in the fear of losing his job.
His revelation came after whistleblower, Rod St George, spoke of the same hapless condition in the Manus Island facility.In an interview with Fairfax Media, the guard detailed of what he saw inside the facility involving a Pakistani victim who was raped by six Middle Eastern men. "We had to go into the tent and he was there, and it was very bad. There was excrement all over the tent."The guard said that the victim was given medical aid in the camp clinic for two weeks. BUT, the victim was sent back to the same facility where his rapists were roaming freely - something that was hard to understand.According to the guard, there had been documents reporting the incident but there were no further investigations made and the PNG police remained clueless of what had happened.Another rape case in May 2013 had compelled PNG nationals working for G4S to attend to the men's facility where another victim was raped and badly injured. But after that, the PNG nationals seemed still 'unaware' of what's happening.One recent incident involved a brutal attack where a victim was slashed from shoulder to buttocks with a sharp object, "He had to go to the clinic. The cut went from his shoulder down to his buttocks."But again, even with reports already filed, there were no investigations that took place. The guard also revealed that G4S were guilty of exploitation for paying salaries of $40 a day. In an answer to the issue, Immigration Minister Tony Burke said that officials were having a hard time investigating because witnesses and victims were not willing to name the culprits. Mr Burke said, "There are challenges for the police in dealing with an allegation where no complainant has come forward and the only person who it is thought might have been a complainant that has left the country voluntarily some time ago. In an interview with The Age, Mr Burke expressed confidence that current conditions in Manus Island will be improve by the Australian Labor Party's new policy. He said that under the new policy, there will be separation of aggressive detainees from the vulnerable ones. Mr Burke said, "I'm very confident that the accommodation on Manus will be able to keep well and truly in front of any attempts by people smugglers to test our resolve."

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

The Koroway Tribe of West Papua

Source:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news

The Koroway in pictures: tribe living in remote Indonesian forest officially recognised as 'tree-dwellers'


A member of the Koroway tribe stands on a ladder leading to his house
A group of hunter gatherers living in a remote Indonesian forest are thought to have become the first tribe to be officially recognised as tree-dwellers. The Korowai, or Koroway, from Indonesia's easternmost region of Papua, live in tree houses, speak their own tribal language, and live off forest animals and plants
A member of the Koroway tribe stands on a ladder leading to his house



A stone axe gets re-wrapped in rattan. The Koroway say they don't know where the axe stones come from, but ethnologists assume they were quarried in the highlands and then traded down through generations of exchange relationships
 Almost 3,000 members of the nomadic clan, whose people wear only banana leaves, were recorded for the first time in the country's census this year.
A stone axe gets re-wrapped in rattan. The Koroway say they don't know where the axe stones come from, but ethnologists assume they were quarried in the highlands and then traded down through generations of exchange relationships

Aerial view of a recently abandoned tree house. The photographer estimated it to be 50 metres tall
Members of the tribe skilfully climb ladders to their wooden homes often as high as 164ft (50m) from the forest floor where they usually live in a family of up to eight. Homes are built at different heights depending on how well they get on with their fellow tribe members
Aerial view of an abandoned tree house. The photographer estimated it to be 50 metres tall
Picture: GEORGE STEINMETZ / CORBIS
 

A Koroway man carries a juvenile cassowary killed after it was trapped in a snare
The horticultural tribesmen excel at hunting and fishing
A Koroway man carries a juvenile cassowary killed after it was trapped in a snare
 
Koroway arrows, each having a different name, and used for different types of prey. The large barbed arrow in the centre is made from cassowary leg bone and used for killing people. The one to the left of that has a four-pointed tip for fish. The one with the wide blunt tip is used for lizards, and the one with the broad bamboo tip is for wild pigs
Koroway arrows, each having a different name, and used for different types of prey. The large barbed arrow in the centre is made from cassowary leg bone and used for killing people. The one to the left of that has a four-pointed tip for fish. The one with the wide blunt tip is used for lizards, and the one with the broad bamboo tip is for wild pigs
 

A Koroway man carrying a stone axe crosses a flooded area of the forest that has been bridged with a network of rattan-tied poles
Until the late 1970s, when anthropologists embarked on a study of the tribe, the Korowai were unaware of the existence of any peoples other than themselves
A Koroway man carrying a stone axe crosses a flooded area of the forest that has been bridged with a network of rattan-tied poles


A Koroway woman processes pulverised sago palm trunk into the starchy food that is the staple for almost every meal
They have engaged in cannilbalism but anthropologists believe that exposure to the outside world has put an end to this practice in recent years. Korowai people mainly eat wild boar, deer, sago and bananas
A Koroway woman processes pulverised sago palm trunk into the starchy food that is the staple for almost every meal

The grubs are larvae of the Capricorn beetle, and move like someone trying to wiggle out of a sleeping bag. Sago trees are felled four to six weeks before a feast, and left to rot in the swampy forest where they become infested with larvae. When the grubs are at the right stage of development (4-6 weeks later), the trees are opened up and pulled apart with a stone axe or pointed stick. The grubs are a favourite food, and are eaten both raw and cooked. They taste fatty, with a vague nutty taste, like soggy overcooked walnuts. In the protein-deficient world of the Koroway, Sago grubs are one of the few sources of fat
Only a handful of Korowai are thought to be able to read and write. A total of 2,868 of them were interviewed by census workers through missionary translators using sign language. Suntono, the head of Indonesia's statistics agency for Papua, said: "It's as if they're still living in the Stone Age. They don't wear any clothes and they live in trees in the jungles....
The grubs are larvae of the Capricorn beetle, and move like someone trying to wiggle out of a sleeping bag. Sago trees are felled four to six weeks before a feast, and left to rot in the swampy forest where they become infested with larvae. When the grubs are at the right stage of development (4-6 weeks later), the trees are opened up and pulled apart with a stone axe or pointed stick. The grubs are a favourite food, and are eaten both raw and cooked. They taste fatty, with a vague nutty taste, like soggy overcooked walnuts. In the protein-deficient world of the Koroway, Sago grubs are one of the few sources of fat


A man climbs down an ironwood tree after knocking loose a nest of black ants that he uses for fish bait
"...Now that we know who they are, their numbers and characteristics, they won't be isolated anymore. We can ensure they get access to education and health care just like any other Indonesian."
A man climbs down an ironwood tree after knocking loose a nest of black ants that he uses for fish bait


The hosts of a sago grub feast stand in a circle in the foreground, and exchange mock attacks with their guests (not pictured) before entering the feast house
The hosts of a sago grub feast stand in a circle in the foreground, and exchange mock attacks with their guests (not pictured) before entering the feast house
 

Preparation of a lizard for a meal in the forest where it was caught
Preparation of a lizard for a meal in the forest where it was caught 
 

A group of dwellings belonging to a clan comprised of three brothers who live in the same clearing
A group of dwellings belonging to a clan comprised of three brothers who live in the same clearing
 
A man works on the roof of a tree house
A man works on the roof of a tree house
 

Houses belonging to the Koroway tribe stand in a forest near Merauke city in Indonesia's Papua province
Houses belonging to the Koroway tribe stand in a forest near Merauke city in Indonesia's Papua province

Australia used to launder PNG's dirty money

By PNG correspondent Liam Fox
 
Australia has been singled out as the money-laundering destination of choice for corrupt Papua New Guinea politicians and officials.
The head of PNG's anti-corruption taskforce says stolen government funds are being washed clean in Australia, and authorities here are doing little to stop it.
Sam Koim, who leads PNG's Task Force Sweep, says his job gets all the more difficult when ill-gotten gains disappear south to Australia.
"There appears to be a lot of monies being transferred by people who have stolen money from the PNG coffers," he said.
"They have been moving money to Australia and we have evidence to show that they have been depositing those monies in Australian bank accounts, and also translating those monies into Australian real estate."
Mr Koim estimates half of the PNG government's annual budget is lost to fraud and corruption through a "mobocracy" of unscrupulous politicians, public servants, lawyers and business people.
He believes tens of millions of dollars of that loss has been sent to Australia, with Cairns the most popular spot to clean dirty money.
Mr Koim says six PNG politicians, who he cannot name because of ongoing investigations, have bought million-dollar properties in the city.
"I think it's common knowledge that Cairns is a hotspot that most of Papua New Guinean proceeds have been invested in. It's a convenient place - just one hour flight [away]," he said.
Last week Mr Koim delivered his message to a major reporters' meeting of the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC) in Sydney.
He says Australia must do more to prevent the laundering of funds that are supposed to be spent on schools, hospitals and roads in PNG.
"What Australia should be doing is helping us put more scrutiny on those kinds of transactions," he said.
"Ultimately we want to see is that [money] suspected to have been derived from proceeds of corruption must be repatriated back to PNG."

No commitment

Dr David Chaikin, an expert on money laundering at the University of Sydney's business school, says the issue "doesn't seem to be a matter of high priority."
He says AUSTRAC monitors international funds transfers and banks are required to report suspicious transactions.
But he says there appears to be little will to tackle the problem in Australia, unlike other developed countries.
"The main problem, I think, is enforcement and to what extent there is a prioritisation and the spending of resources to deal with the problem of foreign corrupt proceeds being in Australia," he said.
"For example, the United Kingdom has taken anti-money laundering action against senior government officials in countries such as Zambia and Nigeria.
"This includes criminal prosecutions for money laundering and millions and millions of pounds being frozen and ultimately confiscated and sent back to those countries in Africa."
The ABC put Mr Koim's concerns to Attorney-General Nicola Roxon, but she has been unavailable for comment

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