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Australia must toughen up as well as step up in Papua New Guinea : Comments
By Jeffrey Wall, published 25/6/2020It is therefore galling that the new complex for the supreme and national courts in Port Moresby is being built by a company wholly owned by the government of the People's Republic of China.
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New Courts etc, hmmm complete with bugging in the judges chambers etc ?
Posted by Bazz, Thursday, 25 June 2020 8:25:58 AM
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Australian politicians are proving to be too dumb, too slow, too apathetic to keep up with the sure and steady encroachment in our region by China. 'Rabbits caught in a spotlight' is hackneyed, but it is still the best description for most of our politicians, and certainly our Prime Minister. It's hard to see these fools halting China's gradual takeover of other countries when they can't even keep them out of Australia
Posted by ttbn, Thursday, 25 June 2020 10:05:27 AM
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very scary article. Meanwhile Indonesia is over the border doing whatever it likes to the long-suffering Papuans. And China seems to be having its own way everywhere.
Not sure if this virus will make any difference to things internationally. Posted by Waverley, Thursday, 25 June 2020 10:22:04 AM
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I don't see what we can do? Let China with its huge debt problem spends like a drunken sailor with money an aging China doesn't have. If PNG is to allow this, we should cut off all our funding altogether.
Our best and only option, is to buy some nuclear-armed, nuclear subs off the shelf and now. Other than that I see us needing to beef up a rapid response self-defence capability and get into serious talks with potential allies on defence. My rapid response team would have 100 minimum light tanks armed with armour pricing, self-loading 20 mm and anti-personal 20 mm, with a range from cover, of 2,000 metres. And 200 mm mortars and fifty cal sniper rifles. And enough heavy-lift helicopters to put any of it anywhere as well as spot For the mortars, which have an over the hill range of a very useful 6,000 metres. Yes, it'll cost a pretty penny. But we do not have 30 years to dither just so we can replace a car industry. Better we should start building cars again and they could and should be right-hand drive electric, we can export to several niche markets, via cooperative enterprise. And we need to transition to baseload, nuclear power,i.e., MSR thorium. All that could make an aging, vehicle exporting China stop and consider if it is stirring a hornet's nest with this extremely aggressive posture in the pacific as well as give PNG a message it can ignore at its financial peril. If they PNG, think that economic blackmail is going to work for them? They need to think again. Alan B. Posted by Alan B., Thursday, 25 June 2020 11:44:34 AM
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...over the border doing whatever it likes to the long-suffering Papuans.
Waverley, Where & how long have you spent time there ? Posted by individual, Thursday, 25 June 2020 5:11:25 PM
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What has PNG to show for the 1.2 Million a day Australia is giving since 1975's "Independence" ?
Posted by individual, Thursday, 25 June 2020 5:12:46 PM
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Australian politicians (Labor and Coalition) have stood in the way of having an Australian anti-corruption commission. Until Australia has one how can we insist PNG should have one!?
Bribes using Australian aid to and between PNG project officials and PNG politicians is what this article is about. But the author is careful not to be too specific. The PNG Prime Minister's "example" and record is also not mentioned http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Marape#Political_career because its not crash hot. China's and secretive political-corporate way of doing things gains ground in such an environment of bribery and corruption. Unfortunately PNG politics since independence in 1975 has been culturally all about PNG leaders at the national and provincial level paying off and promoting their own tribe and personal supporters. Too much like much of Australian politics unfortunately. Posted by plantagenet, Thursday, 25 June 2020 6:19:04 PM
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Talking to a PNG-Aust chap last night, I was told that that Australia simply handing PNG back was not in the interest of the people, only in the political interest of the Goaf !
Posted by individual, Friday, 26 June 2020 2:36:23 PM
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Hi individual
Your comment is bit mysterious ie. "Talking to a PNG-Aust chap last night, I was told that that Australia simply handing PNG back was not in the interest of the people, only in the political interest of the Goaf !" "handing PNG back" to who? and what is a "Goaf"? Cheers Pete Posted by plantagenet, Friday, 26 June 2020 5:35:25 PM
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"handing PNG back" to who?
plantagenet, Back to a Stone Age mentality that had ample exposure to modern corruption. and what is a "Goaf"? It's a Portmanteau word. You should have enough imagination to work it out ! Posted by individual, Friday, 26 June 2020 7:47:29 PM
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Nope indi
Reckon, you need to do a course on how to write clearly. How about 1,500 articles and more than 3,866,000 pageviews? Cheers Pete Posted by plantagenet, Friday, 26 June 2020 8:52:45 PM
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plantagenet,
Well, modern education is numbing common sense & stagnates imagination & the art of reading 'between the lines' is deadened by texting ! These factors contribute greatly to the disharmony we're experiencing ! Posted by individual, Saturday, 27 June 2020 7:39:27 AM
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Hi indi
Thats true. Cheers Pete Posted by plantagenet, Saturday, 27 June 2020 10:00:38 AM
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