WELL over 50,000 square kilometres of land was stolen using illegal SABL leases between 2003 and 2011, since the Commission of Inquiry reported in 2013 the only leases confirmed as cancelled have been on the orders of the court.
It is one of the world’s biggest illegal land grabs, yet more than five years after the government promised to cancel the SABL (special agriculture and business) leases and return the land to its customary owners, the people of Papua New Guinea are still waiting to hear which, if any, leases have been cancelled.
Last month the United Nations wrote to the government for a third-time, accusing ministers of racial discrimination against their own people for not implementing the recommendations of the 2013 Commission of Inquiry and cancelling the leases.
Previous letters from the UN have been ignored by the government and PNG needs to be much more transparent.
We have heard so many excuses and seen so much misinformation from the government for so many years that people have rightly lost all trust in our politicians.
Act Now! is demanding the government immediately publish a full list of SABLs showing the current status of each lease, including which have been surrendered, which have been cancelled and which still remain.
Minister Tkatchenko says he is serious about tackling corruption and wants his department to be honest and transparent. The best way to start is by publishing up-to-date information on all the SABLs.
The government also says it wants to attract foreign investment and has spent billions on APEC, but legitimate investors are not going to come to PNG while issues of corruption like the SABL land grab remain unresolved.
In January 2018, Tkatchenko promised all SABL leases would be reviewed by a joint committee but there have been no updates on progress.
In many areas foreign logging and oil palm companies are still illegally occupying land with tacit approval from Tkatchenko and the government.
Meanwhile, in Solomon Island – PNG’s close neighbor and a Melanesian brother in the Pacific, has refused to issue new licenses for logging and mining in a bid to protect its environment.
The leaders of Central Island province, part of the Solomon Islands in the South Pacific, have decided not to issue new business licenses to logging and mining companies following a local petition and recent reports detailing the lack of sustainability and legality in the country’s logging sector.
Local and international organizations have blamed unsustainable and corrupt logging practices for destroying the islands’ sensitive habitats and creating civil strife among the people who live there.
Provincial governments in the Solomon Islands lack the power to block logging outright, leading Central Island province to take the licensing approach to stop new operations.
Central Island province in the Solomon Islands has blocked new logging and mining operations in an apparent attempt to halt the degradation of the archipelago’s sensitive ecosystems. – Via Garamut News.
PDL7 Hides PNG LNG Owners are with their land owner team leader Mr. Huriba Andago and Mr. Tuguba Eric Hawai. Image: Huriba Andago |
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