Douglas Tomuriesa, Pope Francis and James Marape

Image
  Opposition Leader Douglas Tomuriesa said he is disappointed and embarrassed over the way His Holiness Pope Francis was treated by Prime Minister James Marape over the last three-days during the Papal visit, and the lack of courtesy and respect shown by the Prime Minister. He said the Prime Minister continuously declares PNG as a ‘Christian country’ and prides himself on being a religious individual but he was surprised when the Pope was continuously snubbed by the PM over the weekend since the Pope’s arrival on Friday. “The Pope is the head of the Catholic church, the largest Christian church in the world and he is also a head of state. “PNG not only being a Christian country, but a country that prides itself as a ‘friend to all, enemy to none’, the PM should be according the Pope with the highest level of respect,” Tomuriesa said. The Opposition Leader pointed out that on Friday, the Prime Minister did not welcome the Pope at the airport, a tradition he had accorded to many other wo

Mori quits Pangu Pati

 


Main Stories

PANGU member and Environment, Conservation and Climate Change Minister Wera Mori has quit the party.
Party leader and Prime Minister James Marape confirmed that Mori, the Chuave MP, had written to him earlier this week informing him of his decision to resign.
Marape said Mori would be released once the process was completed.
“We are a pillar of democracy as a political party and we respect all leaders’ freedom of association and if the MP feels right to leave Pangu Pati, we aren’t going to stop him,” Marape said.
Mori is expected to run under his own Country Party banner in the General Election.
“It is good that he moves as I finalise a trusted team to take to the elections seeking people’s mandate not just for 2022 but for the next generation of leadership that is poised to take the country into the future,” he said.
He also urged party members and affiliates to pause all activities in respect of William Samb, a senior Pangu party member and Commerce and Industry Minister, who died on March 3.
Marape said the party would finalise its list of candidates after Samb’s burial.
Marape said he was confident the party would field a good team of candidates for the General Election.
He said he would make the announcement of the final list as party leader.
“The parliamentary wing will make that announcement with the blessing of the party president and the party council,” Marape said.
He said Pangu had produced several prime ministers and would do so again.
“‘Pangu Save Long Rot’, our slogan in Tok Pisin, translates to ‘Pangu knows the way’,” he said.
“We are taking PNG back from the wrong road we have been travelling and putting it back on the right road, of not just political independence, but economic independence.”


Roll will be ready: Sinai

THE Electoral Commission (PNGEC) says it is bound to prepare the electoral roll before any general election.
Electoral Commissioner Simon Sinai said the commission produced its own required database for elections only.
“It (PNGEC) does not rely on any other database because we are closed in by law to do so before every general election,” he said.
Sinai said the commission had registered over 5 million voters from its database from 2017.
He added that new voters would comprise younger citizens that had reached voting age (18) from 2017 to April 28.
The new total after completion of enrolment is expected to be around six million.
“We are updating the existing 2017 national election roll and not a new role as some think.”


Gelu wants 5 permanent Parlt seats for women

THERE should be five permanent regional seats for women in Parliament and not reserved seats, Registrar of Political Parties Dr Alphonse Gelu says.
He was speaking to The National’s about his thoughts on the shelved plan to have the five regional seats reserved for women.
“We do not want to call them reserved seats,” Gelu said.
“If we call them reserved seats, then there may be such a process that in the next four or three elections, we’ll get rid of the five seats.
“These are permanent seats – that in every elections in Papua New Guinea, we’ll have five women sitting in Parliament; five women representing the five regions that we have in PNG.
“We have run out of time to get those five seats through Parliament at this time.
“I am hoping that we’ll continue this after the election so that the new Parliament that comes in (can look into it).
“I think the good thing is that the members of the (Special) Parliamentary Committee on GBV are very proactive – in pushing for this agenda.
“That is something that we will look forward to after the 2022 General Election.”


About 65 women put hands up to contest election

ABOUT 65 women have put up their hands to contest the General Election.
They announced at the third Practice Parliament for Women in Port Moresby that they were prepared to take on the men.
The initiative is being implemented as a partnership among the Independent Political Parties and Candidates Commission (IPPCC), Parliament, Department for Community Development, Youth and Religion and United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
Registrar of Political Parties Dr Alphonse Gelu took the women participants through their preparation for election campaigning, drawing on resources from the new IPPCC and UNDP training manual on women’s political participation and representation.
“Although candidate numbers are rising, in 2012, we had only 135 women candidates but in 2017, we had 167 women contesting and our research shows that less than 4 per cent of women candidates contested the 2007 and 2012 elections,” he said.
“Historically, women are less likely to be endorsed by political parties to run for Parliament, even though the majority of MPs belong to a political party.
“My office recognises the inherent value of including women’s voices in PNG’s national legislature and other elected local assemblies.
“Because we wanted to help ensure we never again have a situation where no women are elected, the IPPCC and UNDP have been running mentoring programmes in the country to support potential women candidates and to connect them to political parties.
“Practice Parliament is now the culmination of that work as we hope to showcase their skills to the public.”
National Capital District Governor Powes Parkop said the Constitution allowed for 120 seats in the country and that “creating reserve seats for women could easily be done as equally creating 10 new electorates”.
UN resident coordinator and UN Population Fund resident representative Marielle Sander told the participants: “It takes bravery to put your hand up, to actually say you want to participate in public life (and) I commend you all for your courage”.
“I am pleased to offer the support of every UN person in this room,” Sander said.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog