To some Papua New Guineans, the above examination remains their K64 million Kina question.
The topic of endless conversational debate that never really
accumulates with a sound conclusion – while each year, usually around
the time of Independence, it resurfaces yet again for another round.
I have blogged before about some of the underlying sentiments that revolve around this issue,
particularly in regards to expressed nostalgic sentiments of “how
things used to be”. Personally, I have never found this point of view
nor that which answers the above question in the negative, in agreeance
with my own opinions.
I must say that those of us who believe
that PNG was ready for Independence in 1975 are in the minority – and
fewer still believe this from my generation (Generation Y). One reason
why I think Generation Y is quite negative about PNG’s journey since
Independence is the severe lack of understanding in terms of the
historical context of our early years.
PNG kids need to understand where we
came from, and how far we have come – this is something that our
education system needs to carefully address. The inter-generational
bridging of our history as a nation-state is imperative for a unified
future.
John Greenwell
(Director of the Papua New Guinea Office in 1974 – the office which was
the body responsible for advising the Minister charged with bringing
Papua New Guinea to Independence) has written a well-constructed
argument on the K64 million question:
It is sometimes said that Australia granted independence too soon and should have deferred it until Papua New Guinea was ready.This is quite wrong — and is so at various levels. First, it assumes that independence could be delayed until the rate of all the various strands necessary for Papua New Guinea to be ‘ready’ — political, economic, administrative and social could be controlled and determined by Australia. What this overlooks is that the ‘political’ strand in the evolution of the colonial state necessarily has a life of its own. Being ‘ready’ means there are political leaders sufficiently experienced by involvement in government to be able to assume leadership. But that very process naturally leads those indigenous leaders to make increasing demands for further involvement in the leadership of the country and hence for it to be granted self-government and independence.There would be a number of consequences if Australia had sought to stifle these demands. First, it would have meant rejecting the will of the very institutions it had established for self-government. The House of Assembly was set up in 1964 to enable to engage in government and by self-government in 1973, indigenous Ministers were effectively adsministering most of the Departments of State. The House of Assembly thus represented the will of the people and a United Nations Mission to the 1972 elections endorsed this and found those elections to be free and fair. The dates for self-government and independence were subsequently decided by the House of Assembly constituted by those elections . To have rejected the House of Assembly resolutions on the ground the country was not ‘ready’ would have amounted to a rejection of the will of the people. More ominous consequences were likely. It is now forgotten that there was a quite serious rebellion on the Gazelle Peninsula seeking separate independence. It was sufficiently serious for the Australian Government to undertake the rare action of ’calling out’ the armed forces. Without question any unilateral deferral would have enhanced Mataungan demands on the Gazelle. There was also Bougainville.In short, unlilateral deferral, in defiance of the House of Assembly, could have both resulted in disorsders and have threatened national unity. In addition, we have proceeded in these comments on the assumption that it was in Australia’s ‘gift’ to decide the date of independence. It was not. Papua New Guinea was administered as a ‘union’ on trust for the United Nations. The Trusteeship Agreement required termination when the inhabitants wanted independence. I went to New York in 1972 and in discussions with the UN Under Secretary General secured UN agreement to the House of Assembly as representing the wishes of the people and that a date resolved upon by it would be determinative of ‘the wishes of the inhabitants’.But the overriding error in the Hasluckian view of delay until the country was ‘ready’ is the assumption that the political strand in Papua New Guinea could evolve without conferring real power on indigenous politicians or by denying that power when exercised.
Tavurvur
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