A 21-year-old man is now behind bars after allegedly stabbing his girlfriend to death.
The attack on the 20-year-old woman happened on Tuesday morning at Lapwing Drive, Gordons in Port Moresby.
A love that blossomed at Fatima Vocational School in Jiwaka ended tragically for the victim, whom police identified as Dorcas Mafu.
According to police reports, the victim and the suspect met at Fatima Vocational School and commenced a relationship.
Dorcas family immediately withdrew her from the school when they found out about the relationship. She then returned home to Port Moresby.
The suspect, identified as Isaac Kuri followed Dorcas to Port Moresby and resided at 6mile.
Acting NCD Metropolitan Superintendent Commander, Rubiang Manzuc said on Tuesday, the 30th of October 2024, the suspect held up late Dorcas and her Aunt at gun point.
“After the shopping they tried to get on a cab to go back to the house when he approached the aunty at knifepoint and ordered her not to go into the taxi.
“The aunt was shocked to see what he was doing.
“Her aunty then asked the other girl who was with them, which she identified him as Dorcas’s boyfriend.”
The deceased then assured her boyfriend that they would not get in the taxi but would walk so they could talk about what was going on between them.
While they were walking up towards Sand Piper Street the suspect, allegedly pulled Dorcas (deceased) towards him and stabbed her three times on her chest then let go of her and ran away.
She collapsed and died instantly.
Her aunt saw what happened and called out to the public who quickly responded and apprehended the suspect.
Manzuc said police soon arrived at the scene and took the suspect to the police station and detained him in a cell.
The NCD police boss extended his condolences to the family and assured the relatives that police will do its best to make sure the suspect faces the full force of the law.
Mei Lin is a prominent member of Papua New Guinea’s business community, with ties to influential locals. She’s also a key player in an audacious drug trafficking plot.
KEY POINTS: ● The owner of an international network of companies, Lin is alleged to have used her cornerstone PNG business, KC 2, to store and transfer over 71 kilograms of methamphetamine from PNG to Australia. ● Born in China, Lin has built business ties to prominent PNG citizens, including a former deputy prime minister and senior members of the local Chinese diaspora. ● She obtained PNG citizenship in 2016, but appears to have falsified key parts of her life story to do so. ● Companies tied to Lin have received Australian government money under a controversial program that is now being probed for corruption.
By Julie Badui Owa, Carmel Pilotti, Kila Wani, Dan McGarry, and Aubrey Belford
Chinese-born businesswoman Mei Lin spent more than a decade building an economic empire in Papua New Guinea, spanning sectors from retail to real estate; and cultivating ties with wealthy and powerful figures in the Pacific nation.
But that world came crashing down on January 16 when Lin, 41, was arrested in the Australian city of Brisbane. Police accuse her of facilitating a “black flight” last year that smuggled over 71 kilograms of methamphetamine from a remote hillside airstrip in PNG to Australia.
The drug smuggling scheme was foiled on March 21 in a coordinated operation by PNG and Australian police, who swooped in as the light plane stopped to refuel in the rural Australian community of Monto. Six people were arrested and charged in Australia, including two pilots. Eight others were charged in PNG, including a police officer and a soldier.
But it took nine months for police to collect enough evidence to arrest and charge Lin. She is alleged to have stored the meth and organized its transportation within PNG; the Australian Federal Police said in a statement after her arrest, as well as paying for fuel for the aircraft and the use of the runway in the town of Bulolo, where it took off.
Inside PNG, in close collaboration with international partner, Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), spent months investigating Lin, who had previously attracted nationwide controversy over dealings unrelated to drugs. Reporters examined thousands of pages of public documents and court records, and spoke to police in both PNG and Australia.
They found that, prior to her arrest, Lin built business ties with some of PNG’s most prominent figures, including the country’s former deputy prime minister, Moses Maladina. Companies linked to Lin appear to have also benefited from Australian government assistance to the country.
Lin is now “the prime suspect” in the methamphetamine smuggling case, said Manu Pulei, the lead PNG police investigator.
PNG court records obtained by reporters show that the allegations against Lin are centered on her role as owner and boss of KC 2; a wholesale and retail firm in Lae where the meth was allegedly stored. A KC 2 employee arrested last year over the drug smuggling operation, Lin Hezhong, is her uncle.
That business, however, is just one of nearly two dozen companies involving Lin in PNG and Australia, according to corporate documents obtained by reporters.
Documents show that Lin was a manager at one company owned by former Deputy Prime Minister Maladina, Chatswood PNG, which is the subject of an investigation into the alleged abuse of Australian government funding for the care of refugees and asylum seekers in the country under Australia’s “offshore processing” regime.
Maladina and his company are not alleged to be connected to drug trafficking.
A detailed list of questions were sent to Lin’s lawyer. No response was received by press time.
In a written response to reporters’ questions, Maladina denied any wrongdoing in the migration scheme and said Lin had only briefly worked for his company.
“Chatswood is not and has never been involved in any illegal [activity], and we strongly oppose the use of and involvement with drugs in our society. Chatswood and its Directors and staff are NOT in any way associated with the activities of Mei Lin,” Maladina said.
Lin’s other recent business partners have included a prominent Malaysia-born business tycoon, the daughter of a former prime minister, and two prominent ethnic Chinese business figures who have played senior roles in Beijing-backed organizations in the country.
None of those people are accused of any connection to drug smuggling, and the charges against Lin have yet to be tried in court.
Lin’s case comes amid fears that rising drug trafficking through PNG could further destabilize a country that is already rife with poverty and elite corruption. The country is already awash with illegal guns and is frequently gripped by violence, such as urban riots earlier this month that killed 22 people.
Surging demand for narcotics in Australia, one of the world’s most expensive drug markets, makes PNG a natural transit point for international drug traffickers, said Jeremy Douglas, regional representative of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime for Southeast Asia and the Pacific.
“The proximity of PNG to Australia is perfect for staging shipments by small private planes [and] fishing vessels,” Douglas said.
“We’ve seen traffickers fronting as business people to build connections with local elites and power players across the region. It is simply easier to co-opt elites and officials where capacities are lower and activities are not heavily scrutinized,” Douglas said.
Unclear Origins
Lin had been a well-known — and controversial — figure in PNG even before her arrest.
Born in China’s southeastern Fujian province in 1982, Lin — who also goes by the name Gigi — claims to have immigrated to PNG with her family as a teenager, attending two of the country’s most exclusive schools, according to documents submitted to PNG authorities as part of her successful 2016 citizenship application, which were obtained by reporters.
However, the information submitted by Lin to acquire citizenship contains key inconsistencies.
Lin gave PNG authorities a letter written in error-riddled English attesting to her attendance at Port Moresby Grammar School. But school administrator, David Olley told reporters it was a “fraudulent letter” that had been signed by a person who had never worked there.
Lin also told authorities she had studied at the elite Port Moresby International School . But the school’s secretary, Albina Melua, said she could find no record of Lin’s attendance.
Whatever her true life story, public records show that Lin has, over the last decade, become a force in business in her adopted country.
She built her base of power in her adoptive hometown of Lae, a port city that acts as the gateway to PNG’s fabled highlands. Corporate documents show that Lin set up the centerpiece of her network there in 2013, the supermarket and wholesaler KC 2.
Business soon boomed, with company revenues exploding from just 6.4 million kina (US$1.7 million in current value) in 2013, to over 121 million kina ($33 million) by 2022.
Lin soon built a reputation as a local power player who treated even public officials “just like talking to an ordinary friend or colleague or employee,” said Joikere Kusip, a lawyer who has worked for her.
Lin also began to attract critical nationwide attention, after local media reports alleged that she had improperly obtained state-owned land and violently evicted tenants. One of her land deals was ruled illegal, and Lin was questioned by a parliamentary committee in 2021.
Elite Education and ‘Kwik Moni’
Negative publicity doesn’t appear to have slowed Lin’s rise among PNG’s movers and shakers.
Corporate records show that Lin has over the last decade established at least a dozen other PNG-based companies, along with other close family members and partners. The firms have spanned sectors including property, security, nightclubs, gambling, and finance.
Lin’s list of business associates has included some prominent local names.
In 2020, Lin became a founding director of the Raggiana International Academy, an elite school in Lae, partly owned by Vanessa Chan-Pelgen, the daughter of former PNG Prime Minister, Sir Julius Chan. Lin is still a director at the academy. Chan-Pelgen did not respond to questions about Lin’s association with the school.
The following year, Lin co-founded a new financial institution, Kwik Moni, alongside a roster of other well-known figures in PNG.
Kwik Moni bills itself as a lender for personal expenses including “school fees, bride price, funeral expenses… and any worthwhile purposes.”
Lin’s fellow shareholders included Jimmy Poh, a Malaysia-born businessman whose interests include high-profile property developments in the capital, Port Moresby. He was previously a director of a major PNG health supplies company, Borneo Pacific Pharmaceuticals. Founded by his brother, Martin, Borneo Pacific has been a key supplier of medical kits and drugs to the PNG government. Australia reportedly withdrew funding for a PNG health program involving Borneo in 2013, citing concerns over how the company was awarded the contract and allegations by doctors that it had imported substandard drugs into the country.
Poh did not respond to questions about his business ties with Lin.
Other partners in Kwik Moni include two people who have held senior roles in the China and PNG Friendship Association, an advocacy organization for the Chinese diaspora in the country. Although ostensibly aimed at promoting bilateral relations and the interests of overseas Chinese, analysts say such organizations ultimately fall under the control of the ruling Chinese Communist Party under a so-called “United Front” strategy to push Beijing’s interests abroad.
One of these Kwik Moni partners, Billy Huaan Lin, also hails from Fujian province and is the owner of a network of companies in PNG including a Port Moresby-based car dealership, 2 Fast Motors Ltd. He has served in several leadership roles in the China and PNG Friendship Association. He has also played an intermediary role in PNG’s security relationship with China, donning a PNG police uniform and traveling with PNG officers to China for training, according to Chinese media coverage.
Another partner in Kwik Moni, Irene Wan Xia Seeto, has been identified in local media as recently as 2021 as chapter head of the China-PNG association in the township of Rabaul.
Neither Billy Lin nor Irene Seeto responded directly to requests for comment from OCCRP, but after questions were sent to them and Poh, Kwik Moni issued a press release saying that Mei Lin had been “requested to resign from the board and dispose of her shareholdings” in March 2023, after the company became aware of allegations against her. Indeed, corporate records obtained by reporters show that Lin relinquished her stake in the company last April, about three weeks after the meth flight. The shares were transferred to her father and another person, who appears to be a relative.
But Lin’s alleged involvement in the flight did not deter her Kwik Moni business partner, Seeto, from continuing their business relationship. Corporate records from Australia show that Seeto and Lin opened a new company together in August 2023, called IG Developments Pty Ltd, which lists its place of business as what appears to be an empty lot in suburban Brisbane. It is unclear what the company does.
Lin and the Malaysian-born businessman Poh have also remained partners in a Port Moresby-based company, Arabica Coffee Exports (PNG) Ltd, according to company filings.
OCCRP and Inside PNG are not alleging any wrongdoing by Poh, Seeto, or Billy Lin.
Immigration Deals
Some of Lin’s most consequential dealings relate to her business relationship with the former PNG deputy prime minister, Maladina.
That relationship was first reported by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) on January 20, but OCCRP and Inside PNG have uncovered additional documents that provide further detail on the ties between Maladina and Lin.
Maladina has recently faced scrutiny over allegations that the company he founded, Chatswood PNG, has mismanaged funds granted by Australia under a secret deal to care for migrants left in the country by Australia’s much-criticized policy of turning back boats carrying asylum seekers.
Australia’s Home Affairs Department in late 2021 handed over to PNG authorities responsibility for the accommodation and welfare of previously detained migrants living in the country and awaiting refugee resettlement. The agreement came with a commitment by Australia to provide an undisclosed amount of funding, in an arrangement known as the PNG humanitarian program (PHP).
Maladina’s Chatswood PNG, which was designated a key service provider under the deal, soon faced allegations from migrants that it was failing to provide services like food deliveries. PNG’s immigration minister pledged an investigation last October after whistleblower complaints from within PNG’s Immigration and Citizenship Authority alleged that millions of dollars had likely gone missing under the scheme, and that Chatswood PNG was allegedly involved in fraudulent billing.
Maladina told reporters that Chatswood PNG was just one of several contractors on the PHP and that “the person named as Mei Lin has absolutely no association with the company in its Ownership, Shareholding or Directorship,” he said. Lin had only worked for the company’s property division for two months “on a casual basis,” he said. He gave a similar statement to the ABC.
However, OCCRP and Inside PNG have obtained documents that appear to show that Mei Lin did in fact play a senior role in Chatswood PNG. These include a February 2022 letter bearing the company’s seal and signed by Lin, in which she identified herself as the “property manager” of Chatswood PNG, and a Chatswood PNG corporate visa card in her name.
Namora Niugini, a Lin family business, is also alleged by the whistleblower to have been involved in fraudulently charging the PHP in concert with Chatswood PNG.
PNG’s chief migration officer, Stanis Hulahau, has previously told local media that Namora Niugini was a contractor on the project, while Chatswood PNG was the program case manager. The company “provided groceries/vouchers and an allowance for the refugees,” Hulahau was quoted as saying.
A third company, bearing the name PNG Humanitarian Program Ltd was established by Maladina in October 2021, two months before the bilateral agreement was inked, corporate records show. It was transferred to Lin’s ownership five months later and subsequently renamed ABC Enterprises. It is unclear if the firm has played a role in the administration of the migration scheme.
Maladina told OCCRP and Inside PNG that his company had no direct relationship to Namora Niugini.
Maladina also said that although he had “assisted” in the establishment of PNG Humanitarian Program Ltd, he “had no involvement whatsoever [in] the subsequent creation of ABC Enterprises Ltd… [and] no knowledge of its business and functions.”
Australia’s Department of Home Affairs said in a written response that reporters’ questions were “a matter for the PNG government.”
Hulahau did not respond to questions.
New Evidence
Despite Lin’s growing prominence in PNG, law enforcement appeared to have been unaware of any alleged connection between Lin and drugs prior to last year’s meth flight.
Inside PNG and OCCRP reconstructed the investigation using public documents, PNG court records, and interviews with police in both PNG and Australia.
Australian police arresting Mei Lin in her Brisbane home on January 16. [[Picture credit: Australian Federal Police]]
The investigation that foiled the flight started in late 2022 in Australia’s commercial capital, Sydney, where AFP narcotics investigators picked up intelligence that a group including local pilots and their associates allegedly intended to fly meth into Australia from PNG.
At least one similar scheme had been attempted before. In 2020, a light plane weighed down by a reported half-tonne of cocaine crashed in PNG’s forests while attempting to reach Australia.
The following year, a raid on a hotel in PNG’s capital of Port Moresby reportedly uncovered a meth lab operated by an Australian citizen. The suspect was released after local authorities made the embarrassing discovery that methamphetamine had not yet been added to the country’s list of controlled substances.
So, after getting wind last year that a group of Australians including pilots were allegedly plotting to import meth by plane from PNG, the AFP put the group under surveillance. They worked with other Australian law enforcement and PNG police to spring a trap on both sides of the Torres Strait, which separates Australia from its northern neighbor.
At the time, they were still unaware of the identity of Mei Lin or her alleged accomplices in PNG, AFP Eastern Command investigations head Kate Ferry told OCCRP.
“The AFP and [PNG police] were investigating who was involved in the drug import plot in PNG but we did not identify the alleged offenders until the day of the flight,” Ferry said.
Arrests in PNG on March 21 led police to a warehouse owned by Lin’s KC 2 that served as a storage point for the meth, which a chemical analysis found was similar to drugs produced by Mexican cartels.
Officers found that Lin had left Lae for Australia the day before the meth flight. Two days after that, she was questioned at Brisbane airport as she prepared to fly to Taiwan. She was allowed to depart after insufficient evidence was found to arrest her. She subsequently returned to Australia and lived in Brisbane until her arrest.
But back in PNG, the investigation into the eight suspects arrested there eventually produced evidence –– including CCTV footage and testimony –– that allegedly implicated Lin.
That investigation is ongoing and authorities will release only “limited information” until it is complete, PNG’s police minister Peter Tsiamalili said in a January 22 statement.
“These international criminal networks, particularly from parts of Asia, are organized and the damage they cause to people in our countries is devastating,” Tsiamalili said.
Police in NCD have been directed to identify a man who was seen in a video circulating on social media poorly dressed in a police uniform and carelessly carrying a weapon around Downtown Port Moresby.
NCD and Central Police Commander, Anthony Wagambie Jnr, who gave the directive said the actions of this man whether or not he is a police officer is a total disgrace to hard-working members of the RPNGC.
“This is unprofessional and unbecoming. I have directed the Metropolitan Superintendent and his officers to find out who this person is and have him dealt with if he in fact is a serving member of the Constabulary.
Wagambie said when he first took up the position as Divisional Commander NCD/Central, he made it a point in his first parade that police would have no room for ill disciplined , unethical and unprofessional behavior from serving members.
“I also said I will make it my business to get rid of criminals in police uniform,” Wagambie stated in his social media post.
Since then the NCD Command made significant improvement, with quick attendance to public complaints, instilling command and control, and general operations. There is still room for improvement.
Wagambi said however, such actions by individuals become a hindrance to progress.
“I am seeking assistance from members of the public who may have witnessed this incident to make contact with us and assist us to identify this man. Let us help to make the Constabulary better by weeding out such.
There is no room for “Raskol , Mafia or gangster Police!”. We will get rid of them like others who have been previously dealt with, “ Wagambie said.
PNG Air has temporarily suspended its flights into Tokua airport after the terminal building was ransacked by more that 25 criminals who broke into the terminal this morning.
The airline released a statement at 10am today saying the suspension remains indefinite until the airline can determine safe operation back into the province.
East New Britain Police Commander, Januarius Vosivai said the criminals entered the airport terminal from the airside and vandalized both PNG Air and Air Niugini Officers inside the terminal building.
“Until the NAC (National Airport Corporation) gives a report, we can know the extent of damage. But the incident that happened paints a bad picture for the province,” said PPC Vosivai
Police say the criminals entered the airport premises with bush knives and attacked a security guard in the process.
The ransacking incident occurred in the early hours of this morning and properties destroyed include computers, scanning machines and check-in counters.
In December 2020, police reported a similar attack where 20 armed criminals from a nearby settlement, attacked and robbed students from the University of Natural Resources and Environment who were at the Tokua airport waiting to check-in.
The security breached in 2020 had forced authorities to close Tokua airport but was reopened shortly. In this incident, the extent of damages on airport properties is estimated to be more and may take longer for flights to be resumed.
Police say they have identified six suspects involved in the raid and are working on arresting them.
Meanwhile national flag carrier, Air Niugini has offloaded a number of its passengers who purchased tickets to fly out of Tokua since last Saturday 9th September 2023.
With the airport now vandalized those passengers offloaded may be spending Independence away from their families.
A significant breakthrough has been reached in the long-standing probe into the controversial 2014 state loan from the Union Bank of Switzerland (UBS). The Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary (RPNGC) is set to issue arrest warrants for a number of individuals implicated in the case, following an exhaustive 18-month investigation spanning multiple jurisdictions, including Papua New Guinea, Singapore, and Australia.
The charges are a direct result of the work of the Proceeds of Crime Task Force, a special unit established by the RPNGC to investigate the UBS loan.
“The charges that are about to be laid are covered by the Criminal Code Act and the Proceeds of Crime Act,” said Commissioner of Police, David Manning. The alleged offences are described as “extremely serious”, depriving Papua New Guinea citizens of substantial public funds.
Former Prime Minister, Peter O’Neill was arrested following the Inquiry into the UBS loan in June on allegations of giving false information during the inquiry.
InsidePNG has reached out to Peter O’Neill who said he will not comment as the case is before the court.
In a stern warning, Commissioner Manning stated that any attempts to spark social unrest in response to these arrests would be met with swift and resolute action, potentially leading to additional charges. He called on the public to act responsibly and be prepared for potential disturbances.
He also emphasised that those charged would have their day in court, allowing justice to take its course. “Individuals charged will have the opportunity to defend themselves in court as part of due process,” Manning said.
The individuals involved in the UBS loan scandal stand accused of a massive breach of public trust and abuse of government office. “No one is above or beyond the reach of the law,” the Commissioner declared, adding that the police will “fearlessly execute their constitutional duties in the service of our country.”
The Proceeds of Crime Task Force, made up of members of the Fraud Squad, forensic auditors, and other specialist experts, has been instrumental in uncovering the alleged offences.
The upcoming arrests follow the completion of the ‘Royal Commission of Inquiry into processes and procedures followed by the Government of Papua New Guinea in obtaining the offshore loan from the Union Bank of Switzerland and related transactions,’ which concluded in March 2022 with a final report.
The news of police senior sergeant, Ludwig Dondo’s passing came as a shock to his wife, Miriam Dondo and daughter, Ludwina.
Wife, Miriam Dondo who is employed with the Department of Justice and Attorney General, said she was on lunch break when she learned that her husband was shot.
She rushed to the hospital only to be told that her husband had died.
Meanwhile, three men are now in police custody, in relation to the killing.
But police say the prime suspect who launched the bow and arrow that killed Dondo is still on the run.
NCD and Central Divisional Commander, Anthony Wagambie said three suspects were brought in by Central police after community leaders at ATS gathered them at 7am this morning.
“I condemn those responsible for the death of my policeman and I am calling on the community at ATS to stand up together and find the prime suspect responsible for this heinous crime.
“You must give him to me, so he can face the law,” said Wagambie.
The Secretary for the Department of Justice and Attorney General, Dr Eric Kwa was charged this afternoon at the Boroko Police Station for Dangerous Driving causing Death.
National Capital District’s Metropolitan Commander, Silva Sika said the charges fall under section 328, subsection 2 and subsection 5 of the Criminal Code Act.
DANGEROUS DRIVING OF A MOTOR VEHICLE.
(2) A person who drives a motor vehicle on a road or in a public place dangerously is guilty of a misdemeanour.
(5) If the offender causes the death of or grievous bodily harm to another person he is liable on conviction on indictment to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years.
Sika explained that this is usual process for arresting a person alleged to have committed a crime.
“He is still innocent until proven guilty. Everything will be determined by the court but it’s just a due process that we have to follow. Every one of us is subject to the law regardless of our status in the community.”
Bail has also been refused for PNG’s top lawyer.
“Because of the severity of the offence he has committed under the Criminal Code Act, bail has been refused.”
Bail will now be determined by the National Court.
In a press conference hosted by the NCD police boss following the arrest, police acknowledged Dr Kwa’s understanding of the legal process.
Dr Kwa will appear at the Waigani Traffic Court for his court hearings.
If found guilty, Section 328, subsection 2 of the Criminal Code Act also states that the penalty will include;
On summary conviction–a fine not exceeding K200.00 or imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months, or both.
On conviction on indictment–a fine not exceeding K1,000.00 or imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or both.
On the 17th of October 2022, Dr Kwa and some of his staff were involved in a car accident along the Hiritano Highway.
They were enroute to Bereina Station for official work with Constitutional and Law Reform Commission.
Kwa had alleged that the accident was planned and that they were attacked by another vehicle.
While Dr Kwa and his other officers recovered from their injuries, they lost a female colleague.
A Police Criminal Investigation team has been deployed to Kiriwina in the Milne Bay Province to investigate and prepare for a coronial inquest into the fight on October 24 which has since resulted in the deaths of 24 people.
Milne Bay Provincial Police Commander (PPC) Superintendent Peter Barkie said 22 people were killed initially in a three-hour fight that broke out after an argument between the coastal and inland villages over a soccer match. Two recently succumbed to the wounds they received during the fight thereby increasing the death toll to 24.
Mr. Barkie said the police CID investigation team was deployed after the Quick Reaction Force (QRP) completed its assessment of the situation on the ground on Kiriwina Island.
Mr. Barkie said he wants the coroner to be involved because of the large number of deaths. He said this is a first of its kind on the island so he wants the court to be involved and not just the police.
“I have spoken to the senior provincial magistrate about that. My team is up in Kiriwina doing that now. Hopefully, they will get all the necessary paperwork done within 14 days,” Mr. Barkie said.
Mr. Barkie said the people from the affected villages in Kiriwina are cooperating well. Police have discussed with the villagers the need to have all the suspects surrender and they have agreed to do so.
Mr. Barkie said the villages did not destroy any government, private properties, or business houses when they fought and the fight did not involve the entire Kiriwina Island.
He said the villages affected were from the Southern part of Kiriwina Island and around Louisa station. The Central and Northern part of Kiriwina was not involved.
Mr. Barkie said that normalcy has been restored, all shops are open, government businesses continue and people are carrying on with their usual daily chores.
The increasing rural to urban drift has caused a population boom in settlements throughout Port Moresby.
Among many problems that come with an increased population are law and order.
Commander NCD-Central Assistant Commissioner Anthony Wagambie Jnr said ethnic fights at settlements in the nation’s capital are now becoming very common.
He said the disputes within the settlements are caused by urban drift, population growth, misunderstanding of cultural barriers, high rate of illiteracy, unemployment and so forth.
He said these ills of society, can only be addressed through a concerted effort by the government and all other stakeholders.
“For now the Constabulary is dealing with the law and order issues created by all these contributing factors,” Wagambie said.
“I am pleased with the way my men and women are responding to these issues within the settlements but we need the support of the community, our elected leaders and the relevant state agencies.”
The NCD and Central police boss said police effort is commendable but there is a need to address the core issues.
“We need a concerted effort and intervention by the community, the government and all other stakeholders.
“As a nation, we must address, unemployment and housing and we must encourage the communities to put in place workable peace-keeping initiatives inside the communities.
Wagambie describes the current law and order situation as “covering the wound with a big plaster”, adding, “there is a need for proper medication and treatment from the clinic”.
Commander NCD and Central, Assistant Commissioner Anthony Wagambie Jnr said ethnic fights resulting from trivial disputes are becoming common, especially among the settlement communities in the Nation’s Capital, Port Moresby.
The long Independence weekend was no exception with fighting at Tete settlement and Morata.
Police were commended for quickly stepping in at both sites and effectively containing the situation.
There were two deaths reported over the long weekend.
The death of a PMV bus driver and a man from Western Province.
The death of the PMV bus driver caused public transport issues when all PMV operators refused to carry passengers.
“Police and ambulance workers recovered the corpse of a PMV crew who was reportedly chased and killed near the Kone Tigers oval on Independence Day, ” Wagambi said in a statement.
He said the lifeless body of a Western Province man was also found near Vabukori village on the outskirts of Port Moresby city on September 17th.
Both deaths are from separate incidents.
Wagambi said detectives are now investigating these two deaths.
The Police Chief said armed robberies and motor vehicle thefts rarely occur because of the effective policing strategies put in place by the NCD/Central Command.
Therefore the primary focus and attention now are the intermittent fights especially within the settlement communities because of the city’s rapid growth and expansion of new settlements.