Papua New Guinea violence leaves between 20 and 50 people dead, UN
official says
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[September 16, 2024]
By ROD McGUIRK
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Violence among illegal miners in Papua New
Guinea has left between 20 and 50 people dead, a United Nations official
said Monday.
The fighting started days ago and is continuing in the Porgera Valley,
near the site of a landslide in May estimated to have killed more than
2,000 people, according to the South Pacific island nation’s government.
The U.N.'s humanitarian adviser for Papua New Guinea, Mate Bagossy, said
the death toll of at least 20 as of Sunday was based on information from
community members and local authorities in Enga province in the nation’s
mountainous inland.
“We have confirmed that at least 20 people have been killed, but as per
the last news that I have, it’s likely up to 50 people,” Bagossy told
The Associated Press. “The fighting is continuing.”
“Today some security forces have started moving in ... so it remains to
be seen what effect this will have,” Bagossy said, referring to the army
and police.
Bagossy did not have information on the numbers wounded.
Papua New Guinea police did not respond to a request on Monday for
tallies of dead and wounded in the valley.
National Police Commissioner David Manning said an emergency had been
declared on Saturday after the violence escalated, with police
mobilizing to protect residents and infrastructure.
“The deteriorating situation has been caused by illegal miners and
illegal settlers who are victimizing traditional landowners and using
violence to terrorize local communities,” Manning said in a statement.
The nearby New Porgera gold mine has halted most of its operations
because of the violence until at least Thursday.
“Over the past 24 hours a significant escalation in tribal fighting has
impacted many of our local employees. Homes have been destroyed, family
and friends injured or killed, and people have been unable to sleep
while living in fear,” New Porgera General Manager James McTiernan said
in a statement on Sunday.
“I am incredibly saddened by these devastating events and sincerely hope
that the government will soon restore peace to the valley,” McTiernan
added.
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Enga Governor Peter Ipatas described the violence in the valley as
unprecedented.
“This situation is dire. We have witnessed innocent lives being claimed
and properties destroyed within days. The current situation can't
continue," Ipatas said in a statement.
A disaster management team led by the national government and the U.N.
Development Program will meet in the national capital, Port Moresby, on
Tuesday to coordinate a humanitarian response in a dangerous and remote
environment.
Tribal warfare is a growing security problem across Papua New Guinea and
is rife in Enga, where recovery has been slow since the May 24
landslide.
The United Nations conservatively estimated 670 villagers had died,
while the Papua New Guinea government said more than 2,000 people had
been buried.
An unknown number of refugees from tribal violence in neighboring areas
are thought to be among the casualties, adding to the complications in
calculating a credible death toll.
Continued fighting on the road from the disaster area to the provincial
capital Wabag delayed the emergency response. Relief workers required
army escorts to keep them safe.
Pope Francis called for an end to tribal violence during a recent visit
to this majority-Christian nation of an estimated 12 million people.
Four months after the disaster, the main highway through the province
remains buried under the collapsed mountainside.
No heavy earthmoving equipment has been used on the huge expanse of
boulders, splintered trees and mud for fear of triggering a second
landslide, the U.N.’s International Organization for Migration said.
But a 4.7-kilometer (3-mile) bypass road that would be safe from
landslides was half-finished, the IOM said.
Around 5,000 people remain in the pathway of a potential second
landslide in what authorities describe as a high-risk zone downhill from
the disaster.
The provincial government is attempting to buy land outside the danger
area to resettle those villagers, but complex negotiations have yet to
be finalized, IOM said.
Elsewhere in Papua New Guinea on Monday the nation was celebrating 49
years since the country gained independence from neighboring Australia.
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