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Wikipedia

Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinea[a] is a country in Oceania that comprises the eastern half of the island of New Guinea and its offshore islands in Melanesia (a region of the southwestern Pacific Ocean north of Australia). Officially the Independent State of Papua New Guinea[13] (Tok Pisin: Independen Stet bilong Papua Niugini; Hiri Motu: Independen Stet bilong Papua Niu Gini), it shares its only land border with Indonesia to the west and it is directly adjacent to Australia to the south and the Solomon Islands to the east. Its capital, located along its southeastern coast, is Port Moresby. The country is the world's third largest island country, with an area of 462,840 km2 (178,700 sq mi).[14]

Independent State of Papua New Guinea
  • Independen Stet bilong Papua Niugini (Tok Pisin)
  • Independen Stet bilong Papua Niu Gini (Hiri Motu)
Motto: 'Unity in diversity'[1]
Anthem: "O Arise, All You Sons"[2]
Location of Papua New Guinea (green)
Capital
and largest city
Port Moresby
09°28′44″S 147°08′58″E / 9.47889°S 147.14944°E / -9.47889; 147.14944
Official languages[3][4]
Indigenous languages
851 languages[5]
Ethnic groups
Religion
(2011 census)[6]
  • 3.1% unspecified
  • 1.4% others / none
Demonym(s)Papua New Guinean
GovernmentUnitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
• Monarch
Charles III
Bob Dadae
James Marape
LegislatureNational Parliament
Independence 
1 July 1949
16 September 1975
Area
• Total
462,840 km2 (178,700 sq mi) (54th)
• Water (%)
2
Population
• 2021 estimate
11,781,559[7] (81st)
• 2011 census
7,257,324[8]
• Density
15/km2 (38.8/sq mi) (201st)
GDP (PPP)2023 estimate
• Total
$41.785 billion[9] (124th)
• Per capita
$3,403[9] (145th)
GDP (nominal)2023 estimate
• Total
$31.692 billion[9] (110th)
• Per capita
$2,581[9] (129th)
Gini (2009)41.9[10]
medium
HDI (2021) 0.558[11]
medium (156th)
CurrencyKina (PGK)
Time zoneUTC+10, +11 (PNGST)
Driving sideleft
Calling code+675
ISO 3166 codePG
Internet TLD.pg

At the national level, after being ruled by three external powers since 1883, including nearly 60 years of Australian administration starting during World War I, Papua New Guinea established its sovereignty in 1975, becoming an independent Commonwealth realm with Elizabeth II as its queen. Since Elizabeth II's death in 2022, Charles III has been the country's king. It is also a member of the Commonwealth of Nations in its own right.

There are 839 known languages of Papua New Guinea, making it the most linguistically diverse country in the world.[5] It is also one of the most rural countries, with only 13.25% of its population living in urban centres in 2019.[15] Most of its people live in customary communities.[16] Although government estimates reported the country's population to be 9.4 million, it was reported in December 2022 that its population was in fact closer to 17 million.[17][18] Papua New Guinea is the most populous Pacific island country.

The country is believed to be the home of many undocumented species of plants and animals.[19]

The sovereign state is classified as a developing economy by the International Monetary Fund;[20] nearly 40% of the population are subsistence farmers, living relatively independently of the cash economy.[21] Their traditional social groupings are explicitly acknowledged by the Papua New Guinea Constitution, which expresses the wish for "traditional villages and communities to remain as viable units of Papua New Guinean society"[22] and protects their continuing importance to local and national community life.

Papua New Guinea has been an observer state in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) since 1976, and has filed its application for full membership status.[23] It is a full member of the Commonwealth of Nations,[24] the Pacific Community, and the Pacific Islands Forum.[25]

Etymology edit

Papua is derived from a local term of uncertain origin.[26] Regarding the islands of New Guinea, the Portuguese captain and geographer António Galvão wrote that:

The people of all these islands are blacke, and have their haire frisled, whom the people of Maluco do call Papuas.[27]

"New Guinea" (Nueva Guinea) was the name coined by the Spanish explorer Yñigo Ortiz de Retez. In 1545, he noted the resemblance of the people to those he had earlier seen along the Guinea coast of Africa. Guinea, in its turn, is etymologically derived from the Portuguese word Guiné. The name is one of several toponyms sharing similar etymologies, ultimately meaning "land of the blacks" or similar meanings, in reference to the dark skin of the inhabitants.

History edit

 
Kerepunu women at the marketplace of Kalo, British New Guinea, 1885
 
Female gable image, Sawos people, Oceanic art in the Bishop Museum
 
British annexation of southeast New Guinea in 1884

Archaeological evidence indicates that humans first arrived in Papua New Guinea around 42,000 to 45,000 years ago. They were descendants of migrants out of Africa, in one of the early waves of human migration.[28] A 2016 study at the University of Cambridge by Christopher Klein et al. suggests that it was about 50,000 years ago that these peoples reached Sahul (the paleocontinent consisting of present-day Australia and New Guinea). The sea levels rose and isolated New Guinea about 10,000 years ago, but Aboriginal Australians and Papuans diverged from each other genetically earlier, about 37,000 years BP.[29] Evolutionary geneticist Svante Pääbo found that people of New Guinea share 4%–7% of their genome with the Denisovans, indicating that the ancestors of Papuans interbred in Asia with these archaic hominins.[30]

Agriculture was independently developed in the New Guinea highlands around 7000 BC, making it one of the few areas in the world where people independently domesticated plants.[31] A major migration of Austronesian-speaking peoples to coastal regions of New Guinea took place around 500 BC. This has been correlated with the introduction of pottery, pigs, and certain fishing techniques.

In the 18th century, traders brought the sweet potato to New Guinea, where it was adopted and became a staple food. Portuguese traders had obtained it from South America and introduced it to the Moluccas.[32] The far higher crop yields from sweet potato radically transformed traditional agriculture and societies. Sweet potato largely supplanted the previous staple, taro, and resulted in a significant increase in population in the highlands.

Although by the late 20th century headhunting and cannibalism had been practically eradicated, in the past they were practised in many parts of the country as part of rituals related to warfare and taking in enemy spirits or powers.[33][34] In 1901, on Goaribari Island in the Gulf of Papua, missionary Harry Dauncey found 10,000 skulls in the island's long houses, a demonstration of past practices.[35] According to Marianna Torgovnick, writing in 1991, "The most fully documented instances of cannibalism as a social institution come from New Guinea, where head-hunting and ritual cannibalism survived, in certain isolated areas, into the Fifties, Sixties, and Seventies, and still leave traces within certain social groups."[36]

European encounters edit

Little was known in Europe about the island until the 19th century, although Portuguese and Spanish explorers, such as Dom Jorge de Menezes and Yñigo Ortiz de Retez, had encountered it as early as the 16th century. Traders from Southeast Asia had visited New Guinea beginning 5,000 years ago to collect bird-of-paradise plumes.[37]

Missionaries edit

Christianity was introduced to New Guinea on 15 September 1847 when a group of Marist missionaries came to Woodlark Island. They established their first mission on Umboi Island. Following that year, they were forced to withdraw their mission endeavour. Five years later on 8 October 1852, the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions, a pontifical institute, reestablished the mission on Woodlark Island, encountering sickness and resistance from local people.

Colonialism edit

 
New Guinea from 1884 to 1919. Germany and Britain controlled the eastern half of New Guinea.

The country's dual name results from its complex administrative history before independence. In the nineteenth century, Germany ruled the northern half of the country for some decades, beginning in 1884, as a colony named German New Guinea. In 1914 after the outbreak of World War I, Australian forces captured German New Guinea and occupied it throughout the war. After the war, in which Germany and the Central Powers were defeated, the League of Nations authorised Australia to administer this area as a League of Nations mandate territory that became the Territory of New Guinea.

Also in 1884, the southern part of the country became a British protectorate. In 1888 it was annexed, together with some adjacent islands, by Britain as British New Guinea. In 1902, Papua was effectively transferred to the authority of the new British dominion of Australia. With the passage of the Papua Act 1905, the area was officially renamed the Territory of Papua, and Australian administration became formal in 1906. In contrast to establishing an Australian mandate in former German New Guinea, the League of Nations determined that Papua was an external territory of the Australian Commonwealth; as a matter of law it remained a British possession. The difference in legal status meant that until 1949, Papua (former British protectorate Territory of Papua) and New Guinea (former German territory German New Guinea) had entirely separate administrations, both controlled by Australia. These conditions contributed to the complexity of organising the country's post-independence legal system.

The highland valleys were first explored by Australians in the 1930s and were found to be inhabited by over a million people.[38]

World War II edit

 
Australian forces attack Japanese positions during the Battle of Buna–Gona, 7 January 1943.

During World War II, the New Guinea campaign (1942–1945) was one of the major military campaigns and conflicts between Japan and the Allies. Approximately 216,000 Japanese, Australian, and U.S. servicemen died.[39] After World War II and the victory of the Allies, the two territories were combined into the Territory of Papua and New Guinea. This was later referred to as "Papua New Guinea."

Australian Rule and independence edit

After World War II, Australia administered the two newly combined territories of Papua and New Guinea. By 1951, a 28 member Legislative Council was instituted, although this was largely dominated by Australian administrative members, with only 3 seats allocated to Papua New Guineans. Sir Donald Cleland, an Australian soldier, became the first administrator of this new council.

In 1964, the council was replaced by the 64 member House of Assembly of Papua and New Guinea, which for the first time had a majority of Papua New Guinean members. The assembly increased to 84 members in 1967 and 100 by 1971. [40]

Rumblings began over Australian rule both in Papua New Guinea and Australia, with the Bougainville independence movement pushing for greater autonomy as Australian mining company Rio Tinto began to exploit minerals from the region. The idea of Australians as colonists was seen as embarrassing in Canberra, due to their own history as a colony of Great Britain.[41]

Australian opposition leader Gough Whitlam visited Papua New Guinea in 1970 and 1971, amid further calls for Independence by the Tolai people in Gazelle Peninsula. He called for self-governance for the territory by as early as 1972.

At the 1972 Papua New Guinean general election in July, Michael Somare is elected as the first Papua New Guinean Chief Minister of the territory. In December, Whitlam was elected as Prime Minister at the 1972 Australian federal election. The Whitlam government then instituted self-governance under the rule of Somare in late 1973.[42]

Over the next two years, further arguments for Independence were forwarded, culminating in the Whitlam government passing the Papua New Guinea Independence Act 1975 in September 1975, citing the 16th of September 1975 as the date of Independence.

Whitlam and Prince Charles attended the Independence ceremony, with Somare continuing as the country's first Prime Minister. PNG remains the only country to have been granted Independence from Australia.[43]

Bougainville edit

 
Australian patrol officer in 1964

A secessionist revolt in 1975–76 on Bougainville Island resulted in an eleventh-hour modification of the draft Constitution of Papua New Guinea to allow for Bougainville and the other eighteen districts to have quasi-federal status as provinces. A renewed uprising on Bougainville started in 1988 and claimed 20,000 lives until it was resolved in 1997. Bougainville had been the primary mining region of the country, generating 40% of the national budget. The native peoples felt they were bearing the adverse environmental effects of the mining, which contaminated the land, water and air, without gaining a fair share of the profits.[44]

The government and rebels negotiated a peace agreement that established the Bougainville Autonomous District and Province. The autonomous Bougainville elected Joseph Kabui as president in 2005, who served until his death in 2008. He was succeeded by his deputy John Tabinaman as acting president while an election to fill the unexpired term was organised. James Tanis won that election in December 2008 and served until the inauguration of John Momis, the winner of the 2010 elections. As part of the current peace settlement, a non-binding independence referendum was held, between 23 November and 7 December 2019. The referendum question was a choice between greater autonomy within Papua New Guinea and full independence for Bougainville, and voters voted overwhelmingly (98.31%) for independence.[45] Negotiations between the Bougainville government and national Papua New Guinea on a path to Bougainville independence began after the referendum, and are ongoing.

Chinese minority edit

Numerous Chinese have worked and lived in Papua New Guinea, establishing Chinese-majority communities. Anti-Chinese rioting involving tens of thousands of people broke out in May 2009. The initial spark was a fight between ethnic Chinese and indigenous workers at a nickel factory under construction by a Chinese company. Native resentment against Chinese ownership of numerous small businesses and their commercial monopoly in the islands led to the rioting.[46][47]

African community edit

There is existing collaboration between Papua New Guinea and African countries. Papua New Guinea is part of the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) forum.[48] There is a thriving community of Africans who live and work in the country.[citation needed]

Earthquakes edit

Papua New Guinea is also famous for its frequent seismic activity, being on the Ring of Fire. On 17 July 1998, a magnitude 7.0 earthquake struck north of Aitape. It triggered a 50 foot high tsunami, which killed over 2,180 people in one of the worst natural disasters in the country.

In September 2002, a magnitude 7.6 earthquake struck off the coast of Wewak, Sandaun Province, killing six people.[49]

From March to April 2018, a chain of earthquakes hit Hela Province, causing widespread landslides and the deaths of 200 people. Various nations from Oceania and Southeast Asia immediately sent aid to the country.[50][51]

Another severe earthquake occurred on 11 September 2022, killing seven people and causing damaging shaking in some of the country's largest cities, such as Lae and Madang, it was also felt in the capital Port Moresby.[52]

Government and politics edit

Papua New Guinea is a Commonwealth realm with Charles III as King of Papua New Guinea. The constitutional convention, which prepared the draft constitution, and Australia, the outgoing metropolitan power, had thought that Papua New Guinea would not remain a monarchy. The founders, however, considered that imperial honours had a cachet.[53] The monarch is represented by the Governor-General of Papua New Guinea, currently Bob Dadae. Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands are unusual among Commonwealth realms in that governors-general are appointed by the Sovereign, the Head of State, upon nomination by the National Parliament, which nomination the Head of State is not obliged to accept.

The Prime Minister heads the cabinet, which consists of 31 members of Parliament from the ruling coalition, which make up the government. The current prime minister is James Marape. The unicameral National Parliament has 111 seats, of which 22 are occupied by the governors of the 22 provinces and the National Capital District. Candidates for members of parliament are voted upon when the prime minister asks the governor-general to call a national election, a maximum of five years after the previous national election.

In the early years of independence, the instability of the party system led to frequent votes of no confidence in parliament, with resulting changes of the government, but with referral to the electorate, through national elections only occurring every five years. In recent years, successive governments have passed legislation preventing such votes sooner than 18 months after a national election and within 12 months of the next election. In 2012, the first two (of three) readings were passed to prevent votes of no confidence occurring within the first 30 months. This restriction on votes of no confidence has arguably resulted in greater stability, although perhaps at a cost of reducing the accountability of the executive branch of government.

Elections in PNG attract numerous candidates. After independence in 1975, members were elected by the first-past-the-post system, with winners frequently gaining less than 15% of the vote. Electoral reforms in 2001 introduced the Limited Preferential Vote system (LPV), a version of the alternative vote. The 2007 general election was the first to be conducted using LPV.

Under a 2002 amendment, the leader of the party winning the largest number of seats in the election is invited by the governor-general to form the government, if they can muster the necessary majority in parliament. The process of forming such a coalition in PNG, where parties do not have much ideology, involves considerable "horse-trading" right up until the last moment. Peter O'Neill emerged as Papua New Guinea's prime minister after the July 2012 election, and formed a government with Leo Dion, the former Governor of East New Britain Province, as deputy prime minister.

 
The Head of State and King of Papua New Guinea:
Charles III
since
9 September 2022

In 2011 there was a constitutional crisis between the parliament-elect Prime Minister, Peter O'Neill (voted into office by a large majority of MPs), and Sir Michael Somare, who was deemed by the supreme court to retain office. The stand-off between parliament and the supreme court continued until the July 2012 national elections, with legislation passed effectively removing the chief justice and subjecting the supreme court members to greater control by the legislature, as well as a series of other laws passed, for example limiting the age for a prime minister. The confrontation reached a peak, with the deputy prime minister entering the supreme court during a hearing, escorted by police, ostensibly to arrest the chief justice. There was strong pressure among some MPs to defer the national elections for a further six months to one year, although their powers to do that were highly questionable. The parliament-elect prime minister and other cooler-headed MPs carried the votes for the writs for the new election to be issued, slightly late, but for the election itself to occur on time, thereby avoiding a continuation of the constitutional crisis.

During the 10th Parliament (2017–2022) there were no women Members, one of only 3 countries worldwide (4 since the Taliban regained control in Afghanistan).

In May 2019, O'Neill resigned as prime minister and was replaced through a vote of Parliament by James Marape. Marape was a key minister in O'Neill's government and his defection from the government to the opposition camp had finally led to O'Neill's resignation from office.[54] Davis Steven was appointed deputy prime minister, justice Minister and Attorney General.[55] After an election widely criticised by observers for its inadequate preparation (including failure to update the electoral roll), abuses and violence, in July 2022, Prime Minister James Marape's PANGU Party secured the most seats of any party in the election, enabling James Marape to be invited to form a coalition government, which he succeeded in doing and he continued as PNG's Prime Minister.[56] In the 2022 Election two women were elected into the eleventh Parliament, one, Rufina Peter, also became Provincial governor of Central Province.[57]

Law edit

The unicameral Parliament enacts legislation in the same manner as in other Commonwealth realms that use the Westminster system of government. The cabinet collectively agrees on government policy, then the relevant minister introduces bills to Parliament, depending on which government department is responsible for implementation of a particular law. Back bench members of parliament can also introduce bills. Parliament debates bills, and (section 110.1 of the Constitution) they become enacted laws when the Speaker certifies that Parliament has passed them. There is no Royal assent.

All ordinary statutes enacted by Parliament must be consistent with the Constitution. The courts have jurisdiction to rule on the constitutionality of statutes, both in disputes before them and on a reference where there is no dispute but only an abstract question of law. Unusually among developing countries, the judicial branch of government in Papua New Guinea has remained remarkably independent, and successive executive governments have continued to respect its authority.

The "underlying law" (Papua New Guinea's common law) consists of principles and rules of common law and equity in English[58] common law as it stood on 16 September 1975 (the date of independence), and thereafter the decisions of PNG's own courts. The courts are directed by the Constitution and, latterly, the Underlying Law Act, to take note of the "custom" of traditional communities. They are to determine which customs are common to the whole country and may be declared also to be part of the underlying law. In practice, this has proved difficult and has been largely neglected. Statutes are largely adapted from overseas jurisdictions, primarily Australia and England. Advocacy in the courts follows the adversarial pattern of other common-law countries. This national court system, used in towns and cities, is supported by a village court system in the more remote areas. The law underpinning the village courts is 'customary law'.

Foreign relations edit

 
APEC 2018 in Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinea is a member of the Commonwealth of Nations, Pacific Community, Pacific Islands Forum, and the Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) of countries. It was accorded observer status within ASEAN in 1976, followed later by special observer status in 1981. It is also a member of APEC and an ACP country, associated with the European Union.

Papua New Guinea has been a member of The Forum of Small States (FOSS) since the group's founding in 1992.[59]

Papua New Guinea supported Indonesia's control of Western New Guinea,[60] the focus of the Papua conflict where numerous human rights violations have reportedly been committed by the Indonesian security forces.[61][62][63]

Military edit

The Papua New Guinea Defence Force is the military organisation responsible for the defence of Papua New Guinea. It consists of three wings.[64] The Land Element has 7 units: the Royal Pacific Islands Regiment, a special forces unit, a battalion of engineers, three other small units primarily dealing with signals and health, and a military academy. The Air Element consists of one aircraft squadron, which transports the other military wings. The Maritime Element consists of four Pacific-class patrol boats, three ex-Australian Balikpapan-class landing craft, and one Guardian-class patrol boat. One of the landing craft is used as a training ship. Three more Guardian-class patrol boats are under construction in Australia, to replace the old Pacific-class vessels. The main tasks of the Maritime Element are to patrol inshore waters and to transport the Land Element. Papua New Guinea has a very large exclusive economic zone because of its extensive coastline. The Maritime Element relies heavily on satellite imagery to surveil the country's waters. Patrolling is generally ineffective because underfunding often leaves the patrol boats unserviceable. This problem will be partially corrected when the larger Guardian-class patrol boats enter service.

Crime and human rights edit

 
Papua New Guinean children, men and women show their support for putting an end to violence against women during a White Ribbon Day march.

Papua New Guinea is often ranked as likely the worst place in the world for violence against women.[65][66] A 2013 study in The Lancet found that 27% of men on Bougainville Island reported having raped a non-partner, while 14.1% reported having committed gang rape.[67] According to UNICEF, nearly half of reported rape victims are under 15 years old, and 13% are under 7 years old.[68] A report by ChildFund Australia, citing former Parliamentarian Dame Carol Kidu, claimed 50% of those seeking medical help after rape are under 16, 25% are under 12, and 10% are under 8.[69] Under Dame Carol's term as Minister for Community Development, Parliament passed the Family Protection Act (2013) and the Lukautim Pikini Act (2015), although the Family Protection Regulation was not approved until 2017, delaying its application in the Courts.[70][71]

The 1971 Sorcery Act imposed a penalty of up to 2 years in prison for the practice of "black" magic, until the act was repealed in 2013.[72] An estimated 50–150 alleged witches are killed each year in Papua New Guinea.[73] A Sorcery and Witchcraft Accusation Related National Action Plan (SNAP) was approved by the Government in 2015, although funding and application has been deficient.[74] There are also no protections given to LGBT citizens in the country. Homosexual acts are prohibited by law in Papua New Guinea.[75]

While tribal violence has long been a way of life in the highlands regions, an increase in firearms has led to greater loss of life. Rival groups had been known to utilise axes, bush knives and traditional weapons. As well as respecting rules of engagement that prevented violence while hunting or at markets. These norms have been changing with a greater uptake in firearms. These are believed to be sourced from smuggling operations over the border into Indonesia, as well as losses from government armouries. With only 1/5th of 5000 Australian made Self Loading Rifles and half of the 2000 M16s delivered to the PNGDF from the 1970s-1990s found in government armouries during an audit in 2004 and 2005. The smuggling and theft of ammunition has also increased violence in these regions, leading to the police force and military finding it difficult to maintain control. Often finding themselves outgunned and only able to retrieve bodies. Village massacres have increased with 69 villagers killed in a single attack in February 2024 in Enga Province, the largest killings since the Bougainville conflict of the 1980s and 90s.[76][77][78]

Papua New Guinea received a score of 5.6 out of 10 for safety from the state from the Human Rights Measurement Initiative.[79]

Royal PNG Constabulary edit

The Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary has been troubled in recent years by infighting, political interference and corruption. It was recognised from early after Independence (and hitherto) that a national police force alone could never have the capacity to administer law and order across the country, and that it would also require effective local level systems of policing and enforcement, notably the village court magisterial service.[80] The weaknesses of police capacity, poor working conditions and recommendations to address them were the subject of the 2004 Royal PNG Constabulary Administrative Review to the Minister for Internal Security.[81] In 2011, Commissioner for Police Anthony Wagambie took the unusual step of asking the public to report police asking for payments for performing their duties.[82] In September 2020, Minister for Police Bryan Jared Kramer launched a broadside on Facebook against his own police department,[83] which was subsequently reported in the international media.[84] In the post, Kramer accused the Royal PNG Constabulary of widespread corruption, claiming that "Senior officers based in Police Headquarters in Port Moresby were stealing from their own retired officers’ pension funds. They were implicated in organised crime, drug syndicates, smuggling firearms, stealing fuel, insurance scams, and even misusing police allowances. They misused tens of millions of kina allocated for police housing, resources, and welfare. We also uncovered many cases of senior officers facilitating the theft of Police land."[83] Commissioner for Police David Manning, in a separate statement, said that his force included "criminals in uniform."[84]

Administrative divisions edit

Papua New Guinea is divided into four regions, which are not the primary administrative divisions but are quite significant in many aspects of government, commercial, sporting and other activities. The nation has 22 province-level divisions: twenty provinces, the Autonomous Region of Bougainville and the National Capital District. Each province is divided into one or more districts, which in turn are divided into one or more Local-Level Government areas. Provinces[85] are the primary administrative divisions of the country. Provincial governments are branches of the national government as Papua New Guinea is not a federation of provinces. The province-level divisions are as follows:

In 2009, Parliament approved the creation of two additional provinces: Hela Province, consisting of part of the existing Southern Highlands Province, and Jiwaka Province, formed by dividing Western Highlands Province.[86] Jiwaka and Hela officially became separate provinces on 17 May 2012.[87] The declaration of Hela and Jiwaka is a result of the largest liquefied natural gas[88] project in the country that is situated in both provinces. The government set 23 November 2019[89] as the voting date for a non-binding[90] independence referendum in the Bougainville autonomous region.[91] In December 2019, the autonomous region voted overwhelmingly for independence, with 97.7% voting in favour of obtaining full independence and around 1.7% voting in favour of greater autonomy.[92]

Geography edit

 
Map of Papua New Guinea
 
Share of forest area in total land area, top countries (2021). Papua New Guinea has the eighth highest percentage of forest cover in the world.

At 462,840 km2 (178,704 sq mi), Papua New Guinea is the world's 54th-largest country and the third-largest island country.[14] Papua New Guinea is part of the Australasian realm, which also includes Australia, New Zealand, eastern Indonesia, and several Pacific island groups, including the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu. Including all its islands, it lies between latitudes and 12°S, and longitudes 140° and 160°E. It has an exclusive economic zone of 2,402,288 km2 (927,529 sq mi). The mainland of the country is the eastern half of New Guinea island, where the largest towns are also located, including Port Moresby (capital) and Lae; other major islands within Papua New Guinea include New Ireland, New Britain, Manus and Bougainville.

Located north of the Australian mainland, the country's geography is diverse and, in places, extremely rugged. A spine of mountains, the New Guinea Highlands, runs the length of the island of New Guinea, forming a populous highlands region mostly covered with tropical rainforest, and the long Papuan Peninsula, known as the 'Bird's Tail'. Dense rainforests can be found in the lowland and coastal areas as well as very large wetland areas surrounding the Sepik and Fly rivers. This terrain has made it difficult for the country to develop transportation infrastructure. This has made it so that air travel is often the most efficient and reliable means of transportation.[93] The highest peak is Mount Wilhelm at 4,509 metres (14,793 ft). Papua New Guinea is surrounded by coral reefs which are under close watch, in the interests of preservation. Papua New Guinea's largest rivers are in New Guinea and include Sepik, Ramu, Markham, Musa, Purari, Kikori, Turama, Wawoi and Fly.

The country is situated on the Pacific Ring of Fire, at the point of collision of several tectonic plates. Geologically, the island of New Guinea is a northern extension of the Indo-Australian tectonic plate, forming part of a single land mass which is Australia-New Guinea (also called Sahul or Meganesia). It is connected to the Australian segment by a shallow continental shelf across the Torres Strait, which in former ages lay exposed as a land bridge, particularly during ice ages when sea levels were lower than at present. As the Indo-Australian Plate (which includes landmasses of India, Australia, and the Indian Ocean floor in between) drifts north, it collides with the Eurasian Plate. The collision of the two plates pushed up the Himalayas, the Indonesian islands, and New Guinea's Central Range. The Central Range is much younger and higher than the mountains of Australia, so high that it is home to rare equatorial glaciers.

There are several active volcanoes, and eruptions are frequent. Earthquakes are relatively common, sometimes accompanied by tsunamis. On 25 February 2018, an earthquake of magnitude 7.5 and depth of 35 kilometres struck the middle of Papua New Guinea.[94] The worst of the damage was centred around the Southern Highlands region.[95] Papua New Guinea is one of the few regions close to the equator that experience snowfall, which occurs in the most elevated parts of the mainland.

The border between Papua New Guinea and Indonesia was confirmed by treaty with Australia before independence in 1974.[96] The land border comprises a segment of the 141° E meridian from the north coast southwards to where it meets the Fly River flowing east, then a short curve of the river's thalweg to where it meets the 141°01'10" E meridian flowing west, then southwards to the south coast.[96] The 141° E meridian formed the entire eastern boundary of Dutch New Guinea according to its 1828 annexation proclamation.[97] By the Treaty of The Hague (1895) the Dutch and British agreed to a territorial exchange, bringing the entire left bank of the Fly River into British New Guinea and moving the southern border east to the Torasi Estuary.[97] The maritime boundary with Australia was confirmed by a treaty in 1978.[98] In the Torres Strait it runs close to the mainland of New Guinea, keeping the adjacent North Western Torres Strait Islands (Dauan, Boigu and Saibai) under Australian sovereignty. Maritime boundaries with the Solomon Islands were confirmed by a 1989 treaty.

Biodiversity edit

 
Mount Tavurvur
 
Papua New Guinea's highlands

Many species of birds and mammals found on New Guinea have close genetic links with corresponding species found in Australia. One notable feature in common for the two landmasses is the existence of several species of marsupial mammals, including some kangaroos and possums, which are not found elsewhere. Papua New Guinea is a megadiverse country.

Many of the other islands within PNG territory, including New Britain, New Ireland, Bougainville, the Admiralty Islands, the Trobriand Islands, and the Louisiade Archipelago, were never linked to New Guinea by land bridges. As a consequence, they have their own flora and fauna; in particular, they lack many of the land mammals and flightless birds that are common to New Guinea and Australia.

 
A tree-kangaroo in Papua New Guinea

Australia and New Guinea are portions of the ancient supercontinent of Gondwana, which started to break into smaller continents in the Cretaceous period, 65–130 million years ago. Australia finally broke free from Antarctica about 45 million years ago. All the Australasian lands are home to the Antarctic flora, descended from the flora of southern Gondwana, including the coniferous podocarps and Araucaria pines, and the broad-leafed southern beech (Nothofagus). These plant families are still present in Papua New Guinea. New Guinea is part of the humid tropics, and many Indomalayan rainforest plants spread across the narrow straits from Asia, mixing together with the old Australian and Antarctic floras. New Guinea has been identified as the world's most floristically diverse island in the world, with 13,634 known species of vascular plants.[99]

Papua New Guinea includes a number of terrestrial ecoregions:

Three new species of mammals were discovered in the forests of Papua New Guinea by an Australian-led expedition in the early 2010s. A small wallaby, a large-eared mouse and shrew-like marsupial were discovered. The expedition was also successful in capturing photographs and video footage of some other rare animals such as the Tenkile tree kangaroo and the Weimang tree kangaroo.[100] Nearly one quarter of Papua New Guinea's rainforests were damaged or destroyed between 1972 and 2002.[101] Papua New Guinea had a Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 8.84/10, ranking it 17th globally out of 172 countries.[102] Mangrove swamps stretch along the coast, and in the inland it is inhabited by nipa palm (Nypa fruticans), and deeper in the inland the sago palm tree inhabits areas in the valleys of larger rivers. Trees such as oaks, red cedars, pines, and beeches are becoming predominant in the uplands above 3,300 feet. Papua New Guinea is rich in various species of reptiles, indigenous freshwater fish and birds, but it is almost devoid of large mammals.[103]

Climate edit

The climate on the island is essentially tropical, but it varies by region. The maximum mean temperature in the lowlands is 30 to 32 °C, and the minimum 23–24 °C. In the highlands above 2100 metres, colder conditions prevail and night frosts are common there, while the daytime temperature exceeds 22 °C, regardless of the season.[103]

Economy edit

Papua New Guinea is richly endowed with natural resources, including mineral and renewable resources, such as forests, marine resources (including a large portion of the world's major tuna stocks), and in some parts agriculture. The rugged terrain—including high mountain ranges and valleys, swamps and islands—and high cost of developing infrastructure, combined with other factors (including law and order problems in some centres and the system of customary land title) makes it difficult for outside developers. Local developers are hindered by years of deficient investment in education, health, and access to finance. Agriculture, for subsistence and cash crops, provides a livelihood for 85% of the population and continues to provide some 30% of GDP. Mineral deposits, including gold, oil, and copper, account for 72% of export earnings. Oil palm production has grown steadily over recent years (largely from estates and with extensive outgrower output), with palm oil now the main agricultural export. Coffee remains the major export crop (produced largely in the Highlands provinces); followed by cocoa and coconut oil/copra from the coastal areas, each largely produced by smallholders; tea, produced on estates; and rubber. The Iagifu/Hedinia Field was discovered in 1986 in the Papuan fold and thrust belt.[104]: 471 

Former Prime Minister Sir Mekere Morauta tried to restore integrity to state institutions, stabilise the kina, restore stability to the national budget, privatise public enterprises where appropriate, and ensure ongoing peace on Bougainville following the 1997 agreement which ended Bougainville's secessionist unrest. The Morauta government had considerable success in attracting international support, specifically gaining the backing of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank in securing development assistance loans.

As of 2019, PNG's real GDP growth rate was 3.8%, with an inflation rate of 4.3%[105] This economic growth has been primarily attributed to strong commodity prices, particularly mineral but also agricultural, with the high demand for mineral products largely sustained even during the crisis by the buoyant Asian markets, a booming mining sector and by a buoyant outlook and the construction phase for natural gas exploration, production, and exportation in liquefied form (liquefied natural gas or "LNG") by LNG tankers, all of which will require multibillion-dollar investments (exploration, production wells, pipelines, storage, liquefaction plants, port terminals, LNG tanker ships).

The first major gas project was the PNG LNG joint venture. ExxonMobil is operator of the joint venture, also comprising PNG company Oil Search, Santos, Kumul Petroleum Holdings (Papua New Guinea's national oil and gas company), JX Nippon Oil and Gas Exploration, the PNG government's Mineral Resources Development Company and Petromin PNG Holdings.[106] The project is an integrated development that includes gas production and processing facilities in the Hela, Southern Highlands and Western Provinces of Papua New Guinea, including liquefaction and storage facilities (located northwest of Port Moresby) with capacity of 6.9 million tonnes per year. There are over 700 kilometres (430 mi) of pipelines connecting the facilities.[106] It is the largest private-sector investment in the history of PNG.[107] A second major project is based on initial rights held by the French oil and gas major TotalEnergies and the U.S. company InterOil Corp. (IOC), which have partly combined their assets after TotalEnergies agreed in December 2013 to purchase 61.3% of IOC's Antelope and Elk gas field rights, with the plan to develop them starting in 2016, including the construction of a liquefaction plant to allow export of LNG. TotalEnergies has separately another joint operating agreement with Oil Search.

Further gas and mineral projects are proposed (including the large Wafi-Golpu copper-gold mine), with extensive exploration ongoing across the country.[108]

The PNG government's long-term Vision 2050 and shorter-term policy documents, including the 2013 Budget and the 2014 Responsible Sustainable Development Strategy, emphasise the need for a more diverse economy, based upon sustainable industries and avoiding the effects of Dutch disease from major resource extraction projects undermining other industries, as has occurred in many countries experiencing oil or other mineral booms, notably in Western Africa, undermining much of their agriculture sector, manufacturing and tourism, and with them broad-based employment prospects. Measures have been taken to mitigate these effects, including through the establishment of a sovereign wealth fund, partly to stabilise revenue and expenditure flows, but much will depend upon the readiness to make real reforms to effective use of revenue, tackling rampant corruption and empowering households and businesses to access markets, services and develop a more buoyant economy, with lower costs, especially for small to medium-size enterprises. One major project conducted through the PNG Department for Community Development suggested that other pathways to sustainable development should be considered.[109]

The Institute of National Affairs, a PNG independent policy think tank, provides a report on the business and investment environment of Papua New Guinea every five years, based upon a survey of large and small, local and overseas companies, highlighting law and order problems and corruption, as the worst impediments, followed by the poor state of transport, power and communications infrastructure.[110][111]

Land tenure edit

 
The Ok Tedi Mine in southwestern Papua New Guinea

The PNG legislature has enacted laws in which a type of tenure called "customary land title" is recognised, meaning that the traditional lands of the indigenous peoples have some legal basis to inalienable tenure. This customary land notionally covers most of the usable land in the country (some 97% of total land area);[112] alienated land is either held privately under state lease or is government land. Freehold title (also known as fee simple) can only be held by Papua New Guinean citizens.[113]

Only some 3% of the land of Papua New Guinea is in private hands; this is privately held under 99-year state lease, or it is held by the State. There is virtually no freehold title; the few existing freeholds are automatically converted to state lease when they are transferred between vendor and purchaser. Unalienated land is owned under customary title by traditional landowners. The precise nature of the seisin varies from one culture to another. Many writers portray land as in the communal ownership of traditional clans; however, closer studies usually show that the smallest portions of land whose ownership cannot be further divided are held by the individual heads of extended families and their descendants or their descendants alone if they have recently died.[citation needed]

This is a matter of vital importance because a problem of economic development is identifying the membership of customary landowning groups and the owners. Disputes between mining and forestry companies and landowner groups often devolve on the issue of whether the companies entered into contractual relations for the use of land with the true owners. Customary property—usually land—cannot be devised by will. It can only be inherited according to the custom of the deceased's people.[citation needed] The Lands Act was amended in 2010 along with the Land Group Incorporation Act, intended to improve the management of state land, mechanisms for dispute resolution over land, and to enable customary landowners to be better able to access finance and possible partnerships over portions of their land, if they seek to develop it for urban or rural economic activities. The Land Group Incorporation Act requires more specific identification of the customary landowners than hitherto and their more specific authorisation before any land arrangements are determined; (a major issue in recent years has been a land grab, using, or rather misusing, the Lease-Leaseback provision under the Land Act, notably using 'Special Agricultural and Business Leases' (SABLs) to acquire vast tracts of customary land, purportedly for agricultural projects, but in an almost all cases as a back-door mechanism for securing tropical forest resources for logging—circumventing the more exacting requirements of the Forest Act, for securing Timber Permits (which must comply with sustainability requirements and be competitively secured, and with the customary landowners approval). Following a national outcry, these SABLs have been subject to a Commission of Inquiry, established in mid-2011, for which the report is still awaited for initial presentation to the Prime Minister and Parliament.[as of?][citation needed]

Gold discovery edit

Traces of gold were first found in 1852, in pottery from Redscar Bay on the Papuan Peninsula.[114]

Demographics edit

Population[115][116]
Year Million
1950 1.7
2000 5.6
2021 9.9

Papua New Guinea is one of the most heterogeneous nations in the world[117] with an estimated 8.95 million inhabitants as of 2020.[118] There are hundreds of ethnic groups indigenous to Papua New Guinea, the majority being from the group known as Papuans, whose ancestors arrived in the New Guinea region tens of thousands of years ago. The other indigenous peoples are Austronesians, their ancestors having arrived in the region less than four thousand years ago.

There are also numerous people from other parts of the world now resident, including Chinese,[119] Europeans, Australians, Indonesians, Filipinos, Polynesians, and Micronesians (the last four belonging to the Austronesian family). Around 50,000 expatriates, mostly from Australia and China, were living in Papua New Guinea in 1975, but most of these had moved by the 21st century.[120] Data from the World Bank indicates that about 0.3% of the Papua New Guinean population is made up of international migrants as of 2015.[121]

With the National Census deferred during 2020/2021, ostensibly on the grounds of the COVID-19 pandemic, an interim assessment was conducted using satellite imagery. In December 2022, a report by the UN, based upon this survey was conducted with the University of Southampton using satellite imagery and ground-truthing, suggested a new population estimate of 17 million, nearly double the country's official estimate.[17]

Urbanisation edit

According to the CIA World Factbook (2018),[122] Papua New Guinea has the second lowest urban population percentage in the world, with 13.2%, only behind Burundi. The geography and economy of Papua New Guinea are the main factors behind the low percentage. Papua New Guinea has an urbanisation rate of 2.51%, measured as the projected change in urban population from 2015 to 2020.

 
 
Largest cities and towns in Papua New Guinea
www.geonames.org/PG/largest-cities-in-papua-new-guinea.html
Rank Name Province Pop.
 
Port Moresby
 
Lae
1 Port Moresby National capital district 513,918
2 Lae Morobe 110,911
3 Mount Hagen Western Highlands 47,064
4 Kokopo East New Britain 40,231
5 Popondetta Northern Province 28,198
6 Madang Madang 27,419
7 Arawa Bougainville 33,623
8 Mendi Southern Highlands 26,252
9 Kimbe West New Britain 18,847
10 Goroka Eastern Highlands 18,503

Languages edit

 
The language families of Papua New Guinea, according to Timothy Usher
 
The language families in Ross's conception of the Trans-New Guinea language family. The affiliation of some Eastern branches is not universally accepted.
 
Huli wigman from the Southern Highlands

Papua New Guinea has more languages than any other country,[123] with over 820 indigenous languages, representing 12% of the world's total, but most have fewer than 1,000 speakers. With an average of only 7,000 speakers per language, Papua New Guinea has a greater density of languages than any other nation on earth except Vanuatu.[124][125] The most widely spoken indigenous language is Enga, with about 200,000 speakers, followed by Melpa and Huli.[126] Indigenous languages are classified into two large groups, Austronesian languages and non-Austronesian, or Papuan, languages. There are four languages in Papua New Guinea with some statutory recognition: English, Tok Pisin, Hiri Motu,[127] and, since 2015, sign language (which in practice means Papua New Guinean Sign Language).

English is the language of government and the education system, but it is not spoken widely. The primary lingua franca of the country is Tok Pisin (commonly known in English as New Guinean Pidgin or Melanesian Pidgin), in which much of the debate in Parliament is conducted, many information campaigns and advertisements are presented, and a national weekly newspaper, Wantok, is published. The only area where Tok Pisin is not prevalent is the southern region of Papua, where people often use the third official language, Hiri Motu. Although it lies in the Papua region, Port Moresby has a highly diverse population which primarily uses Tok Pisin, and to a lesser extent English, with Motu spoken as the indigenous language in outlying villages.

Health edit

As of 2019, life expectancy in Papua New Guinea at birth was 63 years for men and 67 for women.[128] Government expenditure health in 2014 accounted for 9.5% of total government spending, with total health expenditure equating to 4.3% of GDP.[128] There were five physicians per 100,000 people in the early 2000s.[129] The 2010 maternal mortality rate per 100,000 births for Papua New Guinea was 250. This is compared with 311.9 in 2008 and 476.3 in 1990. The under-5 mortality rate, per 1,000 births is 69 and the neonatal mortality as a percentage of under-5s' mortality is 37. In Papua New Guinea, the number of midwives per 1,000 live births is 1 and the lifetime risk of death for pregnant women is 1 in 94.[130]

The Human Rights Measurement Initiative finds that Papua New Guinea is achieving 71.9% of what should be possible for the right to health, based on their level of income.[131]

Religion edit

Citizen population in Papua New Guinea by religion, based on the 2011 census[6]

  Catholicism (26%)
  Pentecostal (10.4%)
  Evangelical Alliance Papua New Guinea (5.9%)
  Baptist (2.8%)
  Salvation Army (0.4%)
  Kwato Church (0.2%)
  Other Christian (5.1%)
  Non Christian (1.4%)
  Not stated (3.1%)

The government and judiciary uphold the constitutional right to freedom of speech, thought, and belief, and no legislation to curb those rights has been adopted. The 2011 census found that 95.6% of citizens identified themselves as Christian, 1.4% were not Christian, and 3.1% gave no answer. Virtually no respondent identified as being nonreligious. Religious syncretism is high, with many citizens combining their Christian faith with some traditional indigenous religious practices.[132] Most Christians in Papua New Guinea are Protestants, constituting roughly 70% of the total population. They are mostly represented by the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Papua New Guinea, the Seventh-day Adventist Church, diverse Pentecostal denominations, the United Church in Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands, the Evangelical Alliance Papua New Guinea, and the Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea. Apart from Protestants, there is a notable Roman Catholic minority with approximately 25% of the population.

There are approximately 5,000 Muslims in the country. The majority belong to the Sunni group, while a small number are Ahmadi. Non-traditional Christian churches and non-Christian religious groups are active throughout the country. The Papua New Guinea Council of Churches has stated that both Muslim and Confucian missionaries are highly active.[133][134] Traditional religions are often animist. Some also tend to have elements of veneration of the dead, though generalisation is suspect given the extreme heterogeneity of Melanesian societies. Prevalent among traditional tribes is the belief in masalai, or evil spirits, which are blamed for "poisoning" people, causing calamity and death, and the practice of puripuri (sorcery).[135][136]

The first Bahá’í in PNG was Violete Hoenke who arrived at Admiralty Island, from Australia, in 1954. The PNG Bahá’í community grew so quickly that in 1969 a National Spiritual Assembly (administrative council) was elected. As of 2020 there are over 30,000 members of the Bahá’í Faith in PNG. In 2012 the decision was made to erect the first Bahá’í House of Worship in PNG. Its design is that of a woven basket, a common feature of all groups and cultures in PNG. It is, therefore, hoped to be a symbol for the entire country. Its nine entrances are inspired by the design of Haus Tambaran (Spirit House). Construction began in Port Moresby in 2018.

Culture edit

 
Bilum bag from Goroka, Eastern Highlands Province
 
A resident of Boga-Boga, a village on the southeast coast of mainland Papua New Guinea
 
Asaro Mudmen
 
A 20th-century wooden Abelam ancestor figure (nggwalndu)

It is estimated that more than one thousand cultural groups exist in Papua New Guinea. Because of this diversity, many styles of cultural expression have emerged. Each group has created its own expressive forms in art, dance, weaponry, costumes, singing, music, architecture and much more. Most of these cultural groups have their own language. People typically live in villages that rely on subsistence farming. In some areas people hunt and collect wild plants (such as yam roots and karuka) to supplement their diets. Those who become skilled at hunting, farming and fishing earn a great deal of respect.

Seashells are no longer the currency of Papua New Guinea, as they were in some regions—sea shells were abolished as currency in 1933. This tradition is still present in local customs. In some cultures, to get a bride, a groom must bring a certain number of golden-edged clam shells[137] as a bride price. In other regions, the bride price is paid in lengths of shell money, pigs, cassowaries or cash. Elsewhere, it is brides who traditionally pay a dowry.

People of the highlands engage in colourful local rituals that are called "sing sings." They paint themselves and dress up with feathers, pearls and animal skins to represent birds, trees or mountain spirits. Sometimes an important event, such as a legendary battle, is enacted at such a musical festival.

The country possesses one UNESCO World Heritage Site, the Kuk Early Agricultural Site, which was inscribed in 2008. The country, however, has no elements inscribed yet in the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists, despite having one of the widest array of intangible cultural heritage elements in the world.[138][139]

Media edit

Sport edit

Sport is an important part of Papua New Guinean culture, and rugby league is by far the most popular sport.[140] In a nation where communities are far apart and many people live at a minimal subsistence level, rugby league has been described as a replacement for tribal warfare as a way of explaining the local enthusiasm for the game. Many Papua New Guineans have become celebrities by representing their country or playing in an overseas professional league. Even Australian rugby league players who have played in the annual State of Origin series, which is celebrated every year in PNG, are among the most well-known people throughout the nation. State of Origin is a highlight of the year for most Papua New Guineans, although the support is so passionate that many people have died over the years in violent clashes supporting their team.[141] The Papua New Guinea national rugby league team usually plays against the Australian Prime Minister's XIII (a selection of NRL players) each year, normally in Port Moresby.

Although not as popular, Australian rules football is significant in another way, as the national team is ranked second, only after Australia. Other major sports which have a part in the Papua New Guinea sporting landscape are netball, association football, rugby union, basketball and, in eastern Papua, cricket.

Education edit

A large proportion of the population is illiterate,[142] with women predominating in this area.[142] Much of the education in PNG is provided by church institutions.[143] This includes 500 schools of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Papua New Guinea.[144] Papua New Guinea has six universities as well as other tertiary institutions. The two founding universities are the University of Papua New Guinea, based in the National Capital District,[145] and the Papua New Guinea University of Technology, based outside of Lae, in Morobe Province.

The four other universities were once colleges but have since been recognised by the government. These are the University of Goroka in the Eastern Highlands province, Divine Word University (run by the Catholic Church's Divine Word Missionaries) in Madang Province, Vudal University in East New Britain Province, and Pacific Adventist University (run by the Seventh-day Adventist Church) in the National Capital District.

The Human Rights Measurement Initiative reports that Papua New Guinea is achieving 68.5% of what should be possible for the right to education, based on their level of income.[146]

Science and technology edit

Papua New Guinea's National Vision 2050 was adopted in 2009. This has led to the establishment of the Research, Science and Technology Council. At its gathering in November 2014, the Council re-emphasised the need to focus on sustainable development through science and technology.[147]

Vision 2050's medium-term priorities are:[147]

  • emerging industrial technology for downstream processing;
  • infrastructure technology for the economic corridors;
  • knowledge-based technology;
  • science and engineering education; and
  • to reach the target of investing 5% of GDP in research and development by 2050. (Papua New Guinea invested 0.03% of GDP in research and development in 2016.[148])

In 2016, women accounted for 33.2% of researchers in Papua New Guinea.[148]

According to Thomson Reuters' Web of Science, Papua New Guinea had the largest number of publications (110) among Pacific Island states in 2014, followed by Fiji (106). Nine out of ten scientific publications from Papua New Guinea focused on immunology, genetics, biotechnology and microbiology. Nine out of ten were also co-authored by scientists from other countries, mainly Australia, the United States of America, United Kingdom, Spain and Switzerland.[147] In 2019, Papua New Guinea took second place among Pacific Island states with 253 publications, behind Fiji with 303 publications, in the Scopus (Elsevier) database of scientific publications.[148] Health sciences accounted for 49% of these publications.[148] Papua New Guinea's top scientific collaborators over 2017 to 2019 were Australia, the United States of America, United Kingdom, France and India.[148]

Forestry is an important economic resource for Papua New Guinea, but the industry uses low and semi-intensive technological inputs. As a result, product ranges are limited to sawed timber, veneer, plywood, block board, moulding, poles and posts and wood chips. Only a few limited finished products are exported. Lack of automated machinery, coupled with inadequately trained local technical personnel, are some of the obstacles to introducing automated machinery and design.[147]

Renewable energy sources represent two-thirds of the total electricity supply.[147] In 2015, the Secretariat of the Pacific Community observed that, 'while Fiji, Papua New Guinea, and Samoa are leading the way with large-scale hydropower projects, there is enormous potential to expand the deployment of other renewable energy options such as solar, wind, geothermal and ocean-based energy sources'.[149] The European Union funded the Renewable Energy in Pacific Island Countries Developing Skills and Capacity programme (EPIC) over 2013 to 2017. The programme developed a master's programme in renewable energy management, accredited in 2016, at the University of Papua New Guinea and helped to establish a Centre of Renewable Energy at the same university.[148]

Papua New Guinea is one of the 15 beneficiaries of a programme on Adapting to Climate Change and Sustainable Energy worth €37.26 million. The programme resulted from the signing of an agreement in February 2014 between the European Union and the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat. The other beneficiaries are the Cook Islands, Fiji, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Niue, Palau, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Timor-Leste, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.[147]

Transport edit

The country's mountainous terrain impedes transport. Aeroplanes opened up the country during its colonial period and continue to be used for most travel and for most high density/value freight. The capital, Port Moresby, has no road links to any of PNG's other major towns. Similarly, many remote villages are reachable only by light aircraft or on foot.

Jacksons International Airport is the major international airport in Papua New Guinea, located 8 kilometres (5 mi) from Port Moresby. In addition to two international airfields, Papua New Guinea has 578 airstrips, most of which are unpaved.[3] The national airline is Air Niugini, operating out Jacksons International.[150]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ abbreviated PNG; /ˈpæp(j)uə ...ˈɡɪni, ˈpɑː-/ , also US: /ˈpɑːpwə-, ˈpɑːp(j)ə-/[12]

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Sources edit

  This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC BY-SA IGO 3.0. Text taken from UNESCO Science Report: towards 2030​, 535–555, UNESCO, UNESCO Publishing.

Further reading edit

  • Biskup, Peter, B. Jinks and H. Nelson. A Short History of New Guinea (1970)
  • Connell, John. Papua New Guinea: The Struggle for Development (1997) online 8 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • Dorney, Sean. Papua New Guinea: People, Politics and History since 1975 (1990)
  • Dorney, Sean. The Sandline Affair: Politics and Mercenaries and the Bougainville Crisis (1998)
  • Dorney, Sean. The Embarrassed Colonialist (2016)
  • Gash, Noel. A Pictorial History of New Guinea (1975)
  • Golson, Jack. 50,000 years of New Guinea history (1966)
  • Griffin, James. Papua New Guinea: A political history (1979)
  • James, Paul; Nadarajah, Yaso; Haive, Karen; Stead, Victoria (2012). Sustainable Communities, Sustainable Development: Other Paths for Papua New Guinea. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. from the original on 9 August 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  • Institute of National Affairs. PNG at 40 Symposium: Learning from the Past and Engaging with the Future (2015)
  • Knauft, Bruce M. South Coast New Guinea Cultures: History, Comparison, Dialectic (1993) excerpt and text search 30 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • McCosker, Anne. Masked Eden: A History of the Australians in New Guinea (1998)
  • Mckinnon, Rowan, et al. Papua New Guinea & Solomon Islands (Country Travel Guide) (2008) excerpt and text search 26 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Rynkiewich, Michael and Roland Seib eds. Politics in Papua New Guinea. Continuities, Changes and Challenges (2000)
  • Swadling, Pamela (1996). Plumes from Paradise. Papua New Guinea National Museum. ISBN 978-9980-85-103-1.
  • Waiko. John. Short History of Papua New Guinea (1993)
  • Waiko, John Dademo. Papua New Guinea: A History of Our Times (2003)
  • Zimmer-Tamakoshi, Laura. Modern Papua New Guinea (1998) online 8 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine

Primary sources edit

  • Jinks, Brian, ed. Readings in New Guinea history (1973)
  • Tim Flannery Throwim' Way Leg: Tree-Kangaroos, Possums, and Penis Gourds (2000) memoir excerpt and text search 13 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  • Malinowski, Bronislaw. Argonauts of the Western Pacific: An Account of Native Enterprise and Adventure in the Archipelagoes of Melanesian New Guinea (2002) famous anthropological account of the Trobriand Islanders; based on field work in 1910s online 8 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • Visser, Leontine, ed. Governing New Guinea: An Oral History of Papuan Administrators, 1950–1990 (2012)
  • Whitaker, J.L. et al. eds. Documents and readings in New Guinea history: Pre-history to 1889 (1975)

External links edit

Government edit

  • Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea 11 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • National Parliament of Papua New Guinea
  • National Economic & Fiscal Commission 25 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine

General information edit

6°S 147°E / 6°S 147°E / -6; 147

papua, guinea, this, article, about, country, oceania, island, general, guinea, indonesian, western, half, island, western, guinea, other, uses, papua, guinea, disambiguation, single, future, sound, london, song, country, oceania, that, comprises, eastern, hal. This article is about the country in Oceania For the island in general see New Guinea For the Indonesian western half of the island see Western New Guinea For other uses see Papua and Guinea disambiguation For the single by the Future Sound of London see Papua New Guinea song Papua New Guinea a is a country in Oceania that comprises the eastern half of the island of New Guinea and its offshore islands in Melanesia a region of the southwestern Pacific Ocean north of Australia Officially the Independent State of Papua New Guinea 13 Tok Pisin Independen Stet bilong Papua Niugini Hiri Motu Independen Stet bilong Papua Niu Gini it shares its only land border with Indonesia to the west and it is directly adjacent to Australia to the south and the Solomon Islands to the east Its capital located along its southeastern coast is Port Moresby The country is the world s third largest island country with an area of 462 840 km2 178 700 sq mi 14 Independent State of Papua New GuineaIndependen Stet bilong Papua Niugini Tok Pisin Independen Stet bilong Papua Niu Gini Hiri Motu Flag National emblemMotto Unity in diversity 1 Anthem O Arise All You Sons 2 source source track track track track track Royal anthem God Save the King source source track track track track track track track track track track track track track track Location of Papua New Guinea green Capitaland largest cityPort Moresby09 28 44 S 147 08 58 E 9 47889 S 147 14944 E 9 47889 147 14944Official languages 3 4 EnglishHiri MotuPNG Sign LanguageTok PisinIndigenous languages851 languages 5 Ethnic groupsPapuanReligion 2011 census 6 95 5 Christianity 64 3 Protestantism 26 0 Catholicism 5 2 other Christian3 1 unspecified1 4 others noneDemonym s Papua New GuineanGovernmentUnitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy MonarchCharles III Governor GeneralBob Dadae Prime MinisterJames MarapeLegislatureNational ParliamentIndependence from Australia Papua and New Guinea Act 19491 July 1949 Declared and recognised16 September 1975Area Total462 840 km2 178 700 sq mi 54th Water 2Population 2021 estimate11 781 559 7 81st 2011 census7 257 324 8 Density15 km2 38 8 sq mi 201st GDP PPP 2023 estimate Total 41 785 billion 9 124th Per capita 3 403 9 145th GDP nominal 2023 estimate Total 31 692 billion 9 110th Per capita 2 581 9 129th Gini 2009 41 9 10 mediumHDI 2021 0 558 11 medium 156th CurrencyKina PGK Time zoneUTC 10 11 PNGST Driving sideleftCalling code 675ISO 3166 codePGInternet TLD pg At the national level after being ruled by three external powers since 1883 including nearly 60 years of Australian administration starting during World War I Papua New Guinea established its sovereignty in 1975 becoming an independent Commonwealth realm with Elizabeth II as its queen Since Elizabeth II s death in 2022 Charles III has been the country s king It is also a member of the Commonwealth of Nations in its own right There are 839 known languages of Papua New Guinea making it the most linguistically diverse country in the world 5 It is also one of the most rural countries with only 13 25 of its population living in urban centres in 2019 15 Most of its people live in customary communities 16 Although government estimates reported the country s population to be 9 4 million it was reported in December 2022 that its population was in fact closer to 17 million 17 18 Papua New Guinea is the most populous Pacific island country The country is believed to be the home of many undocumented species of plants and animals 19 The sovereign state is classified as a developing economy by the International Monetary Fund 20 nearly 40 of the population are subsistence farmers living relatively independently of the cash economy 21 Their traditional social groupings are explicitly acknowledged by the Papua New Guinea Constitution which expresses the wish for traditional villages and communities to remain as viable units of Papua New Guinean society 22 and protects their continuing importance to local and national community life Papua New Guinea has been an observer state in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations ASEAN since 1976 and has filed its application for full membership status 23 It is a full member of the Commonwealth of Nations 24 the Pacific Community and the Pacific Islands Forum 25 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 European encounters 2 2 Missionaries 2 3 Colonialism 2 4 World War II 2 5 Australian Rule and independence 2 6 Bougainville 2 7 Chinese minority 2 8 African community 2 9 Earthquakes 3 Government and politics 3 1 Law 3 2 Foreign relations 3 3 Military 3 4 Crime and human rights 3 5 Royal PNG Constabulary 3 6 Administrative divisions 4 Geography 4 1 Biodiversity 4 2 Climate 5 Economy 5 1 Land tenure 5 2 Gold discovery 6 Demographics 6 1 Urbanisation 6 2 Languages 6 3 Health 6 4 Religion 7 Culture 7 1 Media 7 2 Sport 8 Education 9 Science and technology 10 Transport 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Sources 15 Further reading 15 1 Primary sources 16 External links 16 1 Government 16 2 General informationEtymology editPapua is derived from a local term of uncertain origin 26 Regarding the islands of New Guinea the Portuguese captain and geographer Antonio Galvao wrote that The people of all these islands are blacke and have their haire frisled whom the people of Maluco do call Papuas 27 New Guinea Nueva Guinea was the name coined by the Spanish explorer Ynigo Ortiz de Retez In 1545 he noted the resemblance of the people to those he had earlier seen along the Guinea coast of Africa Guinea in its turn is etymologically derived from the Portuguese word Guine The name is one of several toponyms sharing similar etymologies ultimately meaning land of the blacks or similar meanings in reference to the dark skin of the inhabitants History editMain article History of Papua New Guinea nbsp Kerepunu women at the marketplace of Kalo British New Guinea 1885 nbsp Female gable image Sawos people Oceanic art in the Bishop Museum nbsp British annexation of southeast New Guinea in 1884 Archaeological evidence indicates that humans first arrived in Papua New Guinea around 42 000 to 45 000 years ago They were descendants of migrants out of Africa in one of the early waves of human migration 28 A 2016 study at the University of Cambridge by Christopher Klein et al suggests that it was about 50 000 years ago that these peoples reached Sahul the paleocontinent consisting of present day Australia and New Guinea The sea levels rose and isolated New Guinea about 10 000 years ago but Aboriginal Australians and Papuans diverged from each other genetically earlier about 37 000 years BP 29 Evolutionary geneticist Svante Paabo found that people of New Guinea share 4 7 of their genome with the Denisovans indicating that the ancestors of Papuans interbred in Asia with these archaic hominins 30 Agriculture was independently developed in the New Guinea highlands around 7000 BC making it one of the few areas in the world where people independently domesticated plants 31 A major migration of Austronesian speaking peoples to coastal regions of New Guinea took place around 500 BC This has been correlated with the introduction of pottery pigs and certain fishing techniques In the 18th century traders brought the sweet potato to New Guinea where it was adopted and became a staple food Portuguese traders had obtained it from South America and introduced it to the Moluccas 32 The far higher crop yields from sweet potato radically transformed traditional agriculture and societies Sweet potato largely supplanted the previous staple taro and resulted in a significant increase in population in the highlands Although by the late 20th century headhunting and cannibalism had been practically eradicated in the past they were practised in many parts of the country as part of rituals related to warfare and taking in enemy spirits or powers 33 34 In 1901 on Goaribari Island in the Gulf of Papua missionary Harry Dauncey found 10 000 skulls in the island s long houses a demonstration of past practices 35 According to Marianna Torgovnick writing in 1991 The most fully documented instances of cannibalism as a social institution come from New Guinea where head hunting and ritual cannibalism survived in certain isolated areas into the Fifties Sixties and Seventies and still leave traces within certain social groups 36 European encounters edit Little was known in Europe about the island until the 19th century although Portuguese and Spanish explorers such as Dom Jorge de Menezes and Ynigo Ortiz de Retez had encountered it as early as the 16th century Traders from Southeast Asia had visited New Guinea beginning 5 000 years ago to collect bird of paradise plumes 37 Missionaries edit Christianity was introduced to New Guinea on 15 September 1847 when a group of Marist missionaries came to Woodlark Island They established their first mission on Umboi Island Following that year they were forced to withdraw their mission endeavour Five years later on 8 October 1852 the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions a pontifical institute reestablished the mission on Woodlark Island encountering sickness and resistance from local people Colonialism edit nbsp New Guinea from 1884 to 1919 Germany and Britain controlled the eastern half of New Guinea The country s dual name results from its complex administrative history before independence In the nineteenth century Germany ruled the northern half of the country for some decades beginning in 1884 as a colony named German New Guinea In 1914 after the outbreak of World War I Australian forces captured German New Guinea and occupied it throughout the war After the war in which Germany and the Central Powers were defeated the League of Nations authorised Australia to administer this area as a League of Nations mandate territory that became the Territory of New Guinea Also in 1884 the southern part of the country became a British protectorate In 1888 it was annexed together with some adjacent islands by Britain as British New Guinea In 1902 Papua was effectively transferred to the authority of the new British dominion of Australia With the passage of the Papua Act 1905 the area was officially renamed the Territory of Papua and Australian administration became formal in 1906 In contrast to establishing an Australian mandate in former German New Guinea the League of Nations determined that Papua was an external territory of the Australian Commonwealth as a matter of law it remained a British possession The difference in legal status meant that until 1949 Papua former British protectorate Territory of Papua and New Guinea former German territory German New Guinea had entirely separate administrations both controlled by Australia These conditions contributed to the complexity of organising the country s post independence legal system The highland valleys were first explored by Australians in the 1930s and were found to be inhabited by over a million people 38 World War II edit nbsp Australian forces attack Japanese positions during the Battle of Buna Gona 7 January 1943 During World War II the New Guinea campaign 1942 1945 was one of the major military campaigns and conflicts between Japan and the Allies Approximately 216 000 Japanese Australian and U S servicemen died 39 After World War II and the victory of the Allies the two territories were combined into the Territory of Papua and New Guinea This was later referred to as Papua New Guinea Australian Rule and independence edit After World War II Australia administered the two newly combined territories of Papua and New Guinea By 1951 a 28 member Legislative Council was instituted although this was largely dominated by Australian administrative members with only 3 seats allocated to Papua New Guineans Sir Donald Cleland an Australian soldier became the first administrator of this new council In 1964 the council was replaced by the 64 member House of Assembly of Papua and New Guinea which for the first time had a majority of Papua New Guinean members The assembly increased to 84 members in 1967 and 100 by 1971 40 Rumblings began over Australian rule both in Papua New Guinea and Australia with the Bougainville independence movement pushing for greater autonomy as Australian mining company Rio Tinto began to exploit minerals from the region The idea of Australians as colonists was seen as embarrassing in Canberra due to their own history as a colony of Great Britain 41 Australian opposition leader Gough Whitlam visited Papua New Guinea in 1970 and 1971 amid further calls for Independence by the Tolai people in Gazelle Peninsula He called for self governance for the territory by as early as 1972 At the 1972 Papua New Guinean general election in July Michael Somare is elected as the first Papua New Guinean Chief Minister of the territory In December Whitlam was elected as Prime Minister at the 1972 Australian federal election The Whitlam government then instituted self governance under the rule of Somare in late 1973 42 Over the next two years further arguments for Independence were forwarded culminating in the Whitlam government passing the Papua New Guinea Independence Act 1975 in September 1975 citing the 16th of September 1975 as the date of Independence Whitlam and Prince Charles attended the Independence ceremony with Somare continuing as the country s first Prime Minister PNG remains the only country to have been granted Independence from Australia 43 Bougainville edit nbsp Australian patrol officer in 1964 A secessionist revolt in 1975 76 on Bougainville Island resulted in an eleventh hour modification of the draft Constitution of Papua New Guinea to allow for Bougainville and the other eighteen districts to have quasi federal status as provinces A renewed uprising on Bougainville started in 1988 and claimed 20 000 lives until it was resolved in 1997 Bougainville had been the primary mining region of the country generating 40 of the national budget The native peoples felt they were bearing the adverse environmental effects of the mining which contaminated the land water and air without gaining a fair share of the profits 44 The government and rebels negotiated a peace agreement that established the Bougainville Autonomous District and Province The autonomous Bougainville elected Joseph Kabui as president in 2005 who served until his death in 2008 He was succeeded by his deputy John Tabinaman as acting president while an election to fill the unexpired term was organised James Tanis won that election in December 2008 and served until the inauguration of John Momis the winner of the 2010 elections As part of the current peace settlement a non binding independence referendum was held between 23 November and 7 December 2019 The referendum question was a choice between greater autonomy within Papua New Guinea and full independence for Bougainville and voters voted overwhelmingly 98 31 for independence 45 Negotiations between the Bougainville government and national Papua New Guinea on a path to Bougainville independence began after the referendum and are ongoing Chinese minority edit Main article Chinese people in Papua New Guinea Numerous Chinese have worked and lived in Papua New Guinea establishing Chinese majority communities Anti Chinese rioting involving tens of thousands of people broke out in May 2009 The initial spark was a fight between ethnic Chinese and indigenous workers at a nickel factory under construction by a Chinese company Native resentment against Chinese ownership of numerous small businesses and their commercial monopoly in the islands led to the rioting 46 47 African community edit There is existing collaboration between Papua New Guinea and African countries Papua New Guinea is part of the African Caribbean and Pacific ACP forum 48 There is a thriving community of Africans who live and work in the country citation needed Earthquakes edit Papua New Guinea is also famous for its frequent seismic activity being on the Ring of Fire On 17 July 1998 a magnitude 7 0 earthquake struck north of Aitape It triggered a 50 foot high tsunami which killed over 2 180 people in one of the worst natural disasters in the country In September 2002 a magnitude 7 6 earthquake struck off the coast of Wewak Sandaun Province killing six people 49 From March to April 2018 a chain of earthquakes hit Hela Province causing widespread landslides and the deaths of 200 people Various nations from Oceania and Southeast Asia immediately sent aid to the country 50 51 Another severe earthquake occurred on 11 September 2022 killing seven people and causing damaging shaking in some of the country s largest cities such as Lae and Madang it was also felt in the capital Port Moresby 52 Government and politics editMain article Politics of Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea is a Commonwealth realm with Charles III as King of Papua New Guinea The constitutional convention which prepared the draft constitution and Australia the outgoing metropolitan power had thought that Papua New Guinea would not remain a monarchy The founders however considered that imperial honours had a cachet 53 The monarch is represented by the Governor General of Papua New Guinea currently Bob Dadae Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands are unusual among Commonwealth realms in that governors general are appointed by the Sovereign the Head of State upon nomination by the National Parliament which nomination the Head of State is not obliged to accept The Prime Minister heads the cabinet which consists of 31 members of Parliament from the ruling coalition which make up the government The current prime minister is James Marape The unicameral National Parliament has 111 seats of which 22 are occupied by the governors of the 22 provinces and the National Capital District Candidates for members of parliament are voted upon when the prime minister asks the governor general to call a national election a maximum of five years after the previous national election In the early years of independence the instability of the party system led to frequent votes of no confidence in parliament with resulting changes of the government but with referral to the electorate through national elections only occurring every five years In recent years successive governments have passed legislation preventing such votes sooner than 18 months after a national election and within 12 months of the next election In 2012 the first two of three readings were passed to prevent votes of no confidence occurring within the first 30 months This restriction on votes of no confidence has arguably resulted in greater stability although perhaps at a cost of reducing the accountability of the executive branch of government Elections in PNG attract numerous candidates After independence in 1975 members were elected by the first past the post system with winners frequently gaining less than 15 of the vote Electoral reforms in 2001 introduced the Limited Preferential Vote system LPV a version of the alternative vote The 2007 general election was the first to be conducted using LPV Under a 2002 amendment the leader of the party winning the largest number of seats in the election is invited by the governor general to form the government if they can muster the necessary majority in parliament The process of forming such a coalition in PNG where parties do not have much ideology involves considerable horse trading right up until the last moment Peter O Neill emerged as Papua New Guinea s prime minister after the July 2012 election and formed a government with Leo Dion the former Governor of East New Britain Province as deputy prime minister nbsp The Head of State and King of Papua New Guinea Charles IIIsince9 September 2022 nbsp The Governor General of Papua New Guinea Bob Dadaesince28 February 2017 nbsp The Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea James Marapesince30 May 2019 In 2011 there was a constitutional crisis between the parliament elect Prime Minister Peter O Neill voted into office by a large majority of MPs and Sir Michael Somare who was deemed by the supreme court to retain office The stand off between parliament and the supreme court continued until the July 2012 national elections with legislation passed effectively removing the chief justice and subjecting the supreme court members to greater control by the legislature as well as a series of other laws passed for example limiting the age for a prime minister The confrontation reached a peak with the deputy prime minister entering the supreme court during a hearing escorted by police ostensibly to arrest the chief justice There was strong pressure among some MPs to defer the national elections for a further six months to one year although their powers to do that were highly questionable The parliament elect prime minister and other cooler headed MPs carried the votes for the writs for the new election to be issued slightly late but for the election itself to occur on time thereby avoiding a continuation of the constitutional crisis During the 10th Parliament 2017 2022 there were no women Members one of only 3 countries worldwide 4 since the Taliban regained control in Afghanistan In May 2019 O Neill resigned as prime minister and was replaced through a vote of Parliament by James Marape Marape was a key minister in O Neill s government and his defection from the government to the opposition camp had finally led to O Neill s resignation from office 54 Davis Steven was appointed deputy prime minister justice Minister and Attorney General 55 After an election widely criticised by observers for its inadequate preparation including failure to update the electoral roll abuses and violence in July 2022 Prime Minister James Marape s PANGU Party secured the most seats of any party in the election enabling James Marape to be invited to form a coalition government which he succeeded in doing and he continued as PNG s Prime Minister 56 In the 2022 Election two women were elected into the eleventh Parliament one Rufina Peter also became Provincial governor of Central Province 57 Law edit Main article Law of Papua New Guinea The unicameral Parliament enacts legislation in the same manner as in other Commonwealth realms that use the Westminster system of government The cabinet collectively agrees on government policy then the relevant minister introduces bills to Parliament depending on which government department is responsible for implementation of a particular law Back bench members of parliament can also introduce bills Parliament debates bills and section 110 1 of the Constitution they become enacted laws when the Speaker certifies that Parliament has passed them There is no Royal assent All ordinary statutes enacted by Parliament must be consistent with the Constitution The courts have jurisdiction to rule on the constitutionality of statutes both in disputes before them and on a reference where there is no dispute but only an abstract question of law Unusually among developing countries the judicial branch of government in Papua New Guinea has remained remarkably independent and successive executive governments have continued to respect its authority The underlying law Papua New Guinea s common law consists of principles and rules of common law and equity in English 58 common law as it stood on 16 September 1975 the date of independence and thereafter the decisions of PNG s own courts The courts are directed by the Constitution and latterly the Underlying Law Act to take note of the custom of traditional communities They are to determine which customs are common to the whole country and may be declared also to be part of the underlying law In practice this has proved difficult and has been largely neglected Statutes are largely adapted from overseas jurisdictions primarily Australia and England Advocacy in the courts follows the adversarial pattern of other common law countries This national court system used in towns and cities is supported by a village court system in the more remote areas The law underpinning the village courts is customary law Foreign relations edit Main article Foreign relations of Papua New Guinea nbsp APEC 2018 in Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea is a member of the Commonwealth of Nations Pacific Community Pacific Islands Forum and the Melanesian Spearhead Group MSG of countries It was accorded observer status within ASEAN in 1976 followed later by special observer status in 1981 It is also a member of APEC and an ACP country associated with the European Union Papua New Guinea has been a member of The Forum of Small States FOSS since the group s founding in 1992 59 Papua New Guinea supported Indonesia s control of Western New Guinea 60 the focus of the Papua conflict where numerous human rights violations have reportedly been committed by the Indonesian security forces 61 62 63 Military edit The Papua New Guinea Defence Force is the military organisation responsible for the defence of Papua New Guinea It consists of three wings 64 The Land Element has 7 units the Royal Pacific Islands Regiment a special forces unit a battalion of engineers three other small units primarily dealing with signals and health and a military academy The Air Element consists of one aircraft squadron which transports the other military wings The Maritime Element consists of four Pacific class patrol boats three ex Australian Balikpapan class landing craft and one Guardian class patrol boat One of the landing craft is used as a training ship Three more Guardian class patrol boats are under construction in Australia to replace the old Pacific class vessels The main tasks of the Maritime Element are to patrol inshore waters and to transport the Land Element Papua New Guinea has a very large exclusive economic zone because of its extensive coastline The Maritime Element relies heavily on satellite imagery to surveil the country s waters Patrolling is generally ineffective because underfunding often leaves the patrol boats unserviceable This problem will be partially corrected when the larger Guardian class patrol boats enter service Crime and human rights edit nbsp Papua New Guinean children men and women show their support for putting an end to violence against women during a White Ribbon Day march Main article Human rights in Papua New Guinea See also Sexual violence in Papua New Guinea and Ethnic violence in Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea is often ranked as likely the worst place in the world for violence against women 65 66 A 2013 study in The Lancet found that 27 of men on Bougainville Island reported having raped a non partner while 14 1 reported having committed gang rape 67 According to UNICEF nearly half of reported rape victims are under 15 years old and 13 are under 7 years old 68 A report by ChildFund Australia citing former Parliamentarian Dame Carol Kidu claimed 50 of those seeking medical help after rape are under 16 25 are under 12 and 10 are under 8 69 Under Dame Carol s term as Minister for Community Development Parliament passed the Family Protection Act 2013 and the Lukautim Pikini Act 2015 although the Family Protection Regulation was not approved until 2017 delaying its application in the Courts 70 71 The 1971 Sorcery Act imposed a penalty of up to 2 years in prison for the practice of black magic until the act was repealed in 2013 72 An estimated 50 150 alleged witches are killed each year in Papua New Guinea 73 A Sorcery and Witchcraft Accusation Related National Action Plan SNAP was approved by the Government in 2015 although funding and application has been deficient 74 There are also no protections given to LGBT citizens in the country Homosexual acts are prohibited by law in Papua New Guinea 75 While tribal violence has long been a way of life in the highlands regions an increase in firearms has led to greater loss of life Rival groups had been known to utilise axes bush knives and traditional weapons As well as respecting rules of engagement that prevented violence while hunting or at markets These norms have been changing with a greater uptake in firearms These are believed to be sourced from smuggling operations over the border into Indonesia as well as losses from government armouries With only 1 5th of 5000 Australian made Self Loading Rifles and half of the 2000 M16s delivered to the PNGDF from the 1970s 1990s found in government armouries during an audit in 2004 and 2005 The smuggling and theft of ammunition has also increased violence in these regions leading to the police force and military finding it difficult to maintain control Often finding themselves outgunned and only able to retrieve bodies Village massacres have increased with 69 villagers killed in a single attack in February 2024 in Enga Province the largest killings since the Bougainville conflict of the 1980s and 90s 76 77 78 Papua New Guinea received a score of 5 6 out of 10 for safety from the state from the Human Rights Measurement Initiative 79 Royal PNG Constabulary edit The Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary has been troubled in recent years by infighting political interference and corruption It was recognised from early after Independence and hitherto that a national police force alone could never have the capacity to administer law and order across the country and that it would also require effective local level systems of policing and enforcement notably the village court magisterial service 80 The weaknesses of police capacity poor working conditions and recommendations to address them were the subject of the 2004 Royal PNG Constabulary Administrative Review to the Minister for Internal Security 81 In 2011 Commissioner for Police Anthony Wagambie took the unusual step of asking the public to report police asking for payments for performing their duties 82 In September 2020 Minister for Police Bryan Jared Kramer launched a broadside on Facebook against his own police department 83 which was subsequently reported in the international media 84 In the post Kramer accused the Royal PNG Constabulary of widespread corruption claiming that Senior officers based in Police Headquarters in Port Moresby were stealing from their own retired officers pension funds They were implicated in organised crime drug syndicates smuggling firearms stealing fuel insurance scams and even misusing police allowances They misused tens of millions of kina allocated for police housing resources and welfare We also uncovered many cases of senior officers facilitating the theft of Police land 83 Commissioner for Police David Manning in a separate statement said that his force included criminals in uniform 84 Administrative divisions edit Main articles Regions of Papua New Guinea Provinces of Papua New Guinea Districts of Papua New Guinea and Local level governments of Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea is divided into four regions which are not the primary administrative divisions but are quite significant in many aspects of government commercial sporting and other activities The nation has 22 province level divisions twenty provinces the Autonomous Region of Bougainville and the National Capital District Each province is divided into one or more districts which in turn are divided into one or more Local Level Government areas Provinces 85 are the primary administrative divisions of the country Provincial governments are branches of the national government as Papua New Guinea is not a federation of provinces The province level divisions are as follows Central Chimbu Simbu Eastern Highlands East New Britain East Sepik Enga Gulf Madang Manus Milne Bay Morobe New Ireland Northern Oro Province Bougainville autonomous region Southern Highlands Western Province Fly Western Highlands West New Britain West Sepik Sandaun National Capital District Port Moresby Hela Jiwaka nbsp Provinces of Papua New Guinea In 2009 Parliament approved the creation of two additional provinces Hela Province consisting of part of the existing Southern Highlands Province and Jiwaka Province formed by dividing Western Highlands Province 86 Jiwaka and Hela officially became separate provinces on 17 May 2012 87 The declaration of Hela and Jiwaka is a result of the largest liquefied natural gas 88 project in the country that is situated in both provinces The government set 23 November 2019 89 as the voting date for a non binding 90 independence referendum in the Bougainville autonomous region 91 In December 2019 the autonomous region voted overwhelmingly for independence with 97 7 voting in favour of obtaining full independence and around 1 7 voting in favour of greater autonomy 92 Geography editMain article Geography of Papua New Guinea nbsp Map of Papua New Guinea nbsp Share of forest area in total land area top countries 2021 Papua New Guinea has the eighth highest percentage of forest cover in the world At 462 840 km2 178 704 sq mi Papua New Guinea is the world s 54th largest country and the third largest island country 14 Papua New Guinea is part of the Australasian realm which also includes Australia New Zealand eastern Indonesia and several Pacific island groups including the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu Including all its islands it lies between latitudes 0 and 12 S and longitudes 140 and 160 E It has an exclusive economic zone of 2 402 288 km2 927 529 sq mi The mainland of the country is the eastern half of New Guinea island where the largest towns are also located including Port Moresby capital and Lae other major islands within Papua New Guinea include New Ireland New Britain Manus and Bougainville Located north of the Australian mainland the country s geography is diverse and in places extremely rugged A spine of mountains the New Guinea Highlands runs the length of the island of New Guinea forming a populous highlands region mostly covered with tropical rainforest and the long Papuan Peninsula known as the Bird s Tail Dense rainforests can be found in the lowland and coastal areas as well as very large wetland areas surrounding the Sepik and Fly rivers This terrain has made it difficult for the country to develop transportation infrastructure This has made it so that air travel is often the most efficient and reliable means of transportation 93 The highest peak is Mount Wilhelm at 4 509 metres 14 793 ft Papua New Guinea is surrounded by coral reefs which are under close watch in the interests of preservation Papua New Guinea s largest rivers are in New Guinea and include Sepik Ramu Markham Musa Purari Kikori Turama Wawoi and Fly The country is situated on the Pacific Ring of Fire at the point of collision of several tectonic plates Geologically the island of New Guinea is a northern extension of the Indo Australian tectonic plate forming part of a single land mass which is Australia New Guinea also called Sahul or Meganesia It is connected to the Australian segment by a shallow continental shelf across the Torres Strait which in former ages lay exposed as a land bridge particularly during ice ages when sea levels were lower than at present As the Indo Australian Plate which includes landmasses of India Australia and the Indian Ocean floor in between drifts north it collides with the Eurasian Plate The collision of the two plates pushed up the Himalayas the Indonesian islands and New Guinea s Central Range The Central Range is much younger and higher than the mountains of Australia so high that it is home to rare equatorial glaciers There are several active volcanoes and eruptions are frequent Earthquakes are relatively common sometimes accompanied by tsunamis On 25 February 2018 an earthquake of magnitude 7 5 and depth of 35 kilometres struck the middle of Papua New Guinea 94 The worst of the damage was centred around the Southern Highlands region 95 Papua New Guinea is one of the few regions close to the equator that experience snowfall which occurs in the most elevated parts of the mainland The border between Papua New Guinea and Indonesia was confirmed by treaty with Australia before independence in 1974 96 The land border comprises a segment of the 141 E meridian from the north coast southwards to where it meets the Fly River flowing east then a short curve of the river s thalweg to where it meets the 141 01 10 E meridian flowing west then southwards to the south coast 96 The 141 E meridian formed the entire eastern boundary of Dutch New Guinea according to its 1828 annexation proclamation 97 By the Treaty of The Hague 1895 the Dutch and British agreed to a territorial exchange bringing the entire left bank of the Fly River into British New Guinea and moving the southern border east to the Torasi Estuary 97 The maritime boundary with Australia was confirmed by a treaty in 1978 98 In the Torres Strait it runs close to the mainland of New Guinea keeping the adjacent North Western Torres Strait Islands Dauan Boigu and Saibai under Australian sovereignty Maritime boundaries with the Solomon Islands were confirmed by a 1989 treaty Biodiversity edit See also Conservation in Papua New Guinea List of protected areas of Papua New Guinea and Fauna of New Guinea nbsp Mount Tavurvur nbsp Papua New Guinea s highlands Many species of birds and mammals found on New Guinea have close genetic links with corresponding species found in Australia One notable feature in common for the two landmasses is the existence of several species of marsupial mammals including some kangaroos and possums which are not found elsewhere Papua New Guinea is a megadiverse country Many of the other islands within PNG territory including New Britain New Ireland Bougainville the Admiralty Islands the Trobriand Islands and the Louisiade Archipelago were never linked to New Guinea by land bridges As a consequence they have their own flora and fauna in particular they lack many of the land mammals and flightless birds that are common to New Guinea and Australia nbsp A tree kangaroo in Papua New Guinea Australia and New Guinea are portions of the ancient supercontinent of Gondwana which started to break into smaller continents in the Cretaceous period 65 130 million years ago Australia finally broke free from Antarctica about 45 million years ago All the Australasian lands are home to the Antarctic flora descended from the flora of southern Gondwana including the coniferous podocarps and Araucaria pines and the broad leafed southern beech Nothofagus These plant families are still present in Papua New Guinea New Guinea is part of the humid tropics and many Indomalayan rainforest plants spread across the narrow straits from Asia mixing together with the old Australian and Antarctic floras New Guinea has been identified as the world s most floristically diverse island in the world with 13 634 known species of vascular plants 99 Papua New Guinea includes a number of terrestrial ecoregions Admiralty Islands lowland rain forests forested islands to the north of the mainland home to a distinct flora Central Range montane rain forests nbsp Green tropical rainforest of Papua New Guinea bears a sharp contrast to nearby arid Australia Huon Peninsula montane rain forests Louisiade Archipelago rain forests New Britain New Ireland lowland rain forests New Britain New Ireland montane rain forests New Guinea mangroves Northern New Guinea lowland rain and freshwater swamp forests Northern New Guinea montane rain forests Solomon Islands rain forests includes Bougainville Island and Buka Southeastern Papuan rain forests Southern New Guinea freshwater swamp forests Southern New Guinea lowland rain forests Trobriand Islands rain forests Trans Fly savanna and grasslands Central Range sub alpine grasslands Three new species of mammals were discovered in the forests of Papua New Guinea by an Australian led expedition in the early 2010s A small wallaby a large eared mouse and shrew like marsupial were discovered The expedition was also successful in capturing photographs and video footage of some other rare animals such as the Tenkile tree kangaroo and the Weimang tree kangaroo 100 Nearly one quarter of Papua New Guinea s rainforests were damaged or destroyed between 1972 and 2002 101 Papua New Guinea had a Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 8 84 10 ranking it 17th globally out of 172 countries 102 Mangrove swamps stretch along the coast and in the inland it is inhabited by nipa palm Nypa fruticans and deeper in the inland the sago palm tree inhabits areas in the valleys of larger rivers Trees such as oaks red cedars pines and beeches are becoming predominant in the uplands above 3 300 feet Papua New Guinea is rich in various species of reptiles indigenous freshwater fish and birds but it is almost devoid of large mammals 103 Climate edit The climate on the island is essentially tropical but it varies by region The maximum mean temperature in the lowlands is 30 to 32 C and the minimum 23 24 C In the highlands above 2100 metres colder conditions prevail and night frosts are common there while the daytime temperature exceeds 22 C regardless of the season 103 Economy editMain article Economy of Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea is richly endowed with natural resources including mineral and renewable resources such as forests marine resources including a large portion of the world s major tuna stocks and in some parts agriculture The rugged terrain including high mountain ranges and valleys swamps and islands and high cost of developing infrastructure combined with other factors including law and order problems in some centres and the system of customary land title makes it difficult for outside developers Local developers are hindered by years of deficient investment in education health and access to finance Agriculture for subsistence and cash crops provides a livelihood for 85 of the population and continues to provide some 30 of GDP Mineral deposits including gold oil and copper account for 72 of export earnings Oil palm production has grown steadily over recent years largely from estates and with extensive outgrower output with palm oil now the main agricultural export Coffee remains the major export crop produced largely in the Highlands provinces followed by cocoa and coconut oil copra from the coastal areas each largely produced by smallholders tea produced on estates and rubber The Iagifu Hedinia Field was discovered in 1986 in the Papuan fold and thrust belt 104 471 Former Prime Minister Sir Mekere Morauta tried to restore integrity to state institutions stabilise the kina restore stability to the national budget privatise public enterprises where appropriate and ensure ongoing peace on Bougainville following the 1997 agreement which ended Bougainville s secessionist unrest The Morauta government had considerable success in attracting international support specifically gaining the backing of the International Monetary Fund IMF and the World Bank in securing development assistance loans As of 2019 PNG s real GDP growth rate was 3 8 with an inflation rate of 4 3 105 This economic growth has been primarily attributed to strong commodity prices particularly mineral but also agricultural with the high demand for mineral products largely sustained even during the crisis by the buoyant Asian markets a booming mining sector and by a buoyant outlook and the construction phase for natural gas exploration production and exportation in liquefied form liquefied natural gas or LNG by LNG tankers all of which will require multibillion dollar investments exploration production wells pipelines storage liquefaction plants port terminals LNG tanker ships The first major gas project was the PNG LNG joint venture ExxonMobil is operator of the joint venture also comprising PNG company Oil Search Santos Kumul Petroleum Holdings Papua New Guinea s national oil and gas company JX Nippon Oil and Gas Exploration the PNG government s Mineral Resources Development Company and Petromin PNG Holdings 106 The project is an integrated development that includes gas production and processing facilities in the Hela Southern Highlands and Western Provinces of Papua New Guinea including liquefaction and storage facilities located northwest of Port Moresby with capacity of 6 9 million tonnes per year There are over 700 kilometres 430 mi of pipelines connecting the facilities 106 It is the largest private sector investment in the history of PNG 107 A second major project is based on initial rights held by the French oil and gas major TotalEnergies and the U S company InterOil Corp IOC which have partly combined their assets after TotalEnergies agreed in December 2013 to purchase 61 3 of IOC s Antelope and Elk gas field rights with the plan to develop them starting in 2016 including the construction of a liquefaction plant to allow export of LNG TotalEnergies has separately another joint operating agreement with Oil Search Further gas and mineral projects are proposed including the large Wafi Golpu copper gold mine with extensive exploration ongoing across the country 108 The PNG government s long term Vision 2050 and shorter term policy documents including the 2013 Budget and the 2014 Responsible Sustainable Development Strategy emphasise the need for a more diverse economy based upon sustainable industries and avoiding the effects of Dutch disease from major resource extraction projects undermining other industries as has occurred in many countries experiencing oil or other mineral booms notably in Western Africa undermining much of their agriculture sector manufacturing and tourism and with them broad based employment prospects Measures have been taken to mitigate these effects including through the establishment of a sovereign wealth fund partly to stabilise revenue and expenditure flows but much will depend upon the readiness to make real reforms to effective use of revenue tackling rampant corruption and empowering households and businesses to access markets services and develop a more buoyant economy with lower costs especially for small to medium size enterprises One major project conducted through the PNG Department for Community Development suggested that other pathways to sustainable development should be considered 109 The Institute of National Affairs a PNG independent policy think tank provides a report on the business and investment environment of Papua New Guinea every five years based upon a survey of large and small local and overseas companies highlighting law and order problems and corruption as the worst impediments followed by the poor state of transport power and communications infrastructure 110 111 Land tenure edit nbsp The Ok Tedi Mine in southwestern Papua New Guinea The PNG legislature has enacted laws in which a type of tenure called customary land title is recognised meaning that the traditional lands of the indigenous peoples have some legal basis to inalienable tenure This customary land notionally covers most of the usable land in the country some 97 of total land area 112 alienated land is either held privately under state lease or is government land Freehold title also known as fee simple can only be held by Papua New Guinean citizens 113 Only some 3 of the land of Papua New Guinea is in private hands this is privately held under 99 year state lease or it is held by the State There is virtually no freehold title the few existing freeholds are automatically converted to state lease when they are transferred between vendor and purchaser Unalienated land is owned under customary title by traditional landowners The precise nature of the seisin varies from one culture to another Many writers portray land as in the communal ownership of traditional clans however closer studies usually show that the smallest portions of land whose ownership cannot be further divided are held by the individual heads of extended families and their descendants or their descendants alone if they have recently died citation needed This is a matter of vital importance because a problem of economic development is identifying the membership of customary landowning groups and the owners Disputes between mining and forestry companies and landowner groups often devolve on the issue of whether the companies entered into contractual relations for the use of land with the true owners Customary property usually land cannot be devised by will It can only be inherited according to the custom of the deceased s people citation needed The Lands Act was amended in 2010 along with the Land Group Incorporation Act intended to improve the management of state land mechanisms for dispute resolution over land and to enable customary landowners to be better able to access finance and possible partnerships over portions of their land if they seek to develop it for urban or rural economic activities The Land Group Incorporation Act requires more specific identification of the customary landowners than hitherto and their more specific authorisation before any land arrangements are determined a major issue in recent years has been a land grab using or rather misusing the Lease Leaseback provision under the Land Act notably using Special Agricultural and Business Leases SABLs to acquire vast tracts of customary land purportedly for agricultural projects but in an almost all cases as a back door mechanism for securing tropical forest resources for logging circumventing the more exacting requirements of the Forest Act for securing Timber Permits which must comply with sustainability requirements and be competitively secured and with the customary landowners approval Following a national outcry these SABLs have been subject to a Commission of Inquiry established in mid 2011 for which the report is still awaited for initial presentation to the Prime Minister and Parliament as of citation needed Gold discovery edit Traces of gold were first found in 1852 in pottery from Redscar Bay on the Papuan Peninsula 114 Demographics editMain article Demographics of Papua New Guinea Population 115 116 Year Million 1950 1 7 2000 5 6 2021 9 9 Papua New Guinea is one of the most heterogeneous nations in the world 117 with an estimated 8 95 million inhabitants as of 2020 118 There are hundreds of ethnic groups indigenous to Papua New Guinea the majority being from the group known as Papuans whose ancestors arrived in the New Guinea region tens of thousands of years ago The other indigenous peoples are Austronesians their ancestors having arrived in the region less than four thousand years ago There are also numerous people from other parts of the world now resident including Chinese 119 Europeans Australians Indonesians Filipinos Polynesians and Micronesians the last four belonging to the Austronesian family Around 50 000 expatriates mostly from Australia and China were living in Papua New Guinea in 1975 but most of these had moved by the 21st century 120 Data from the World Bank indicates that about 0 3 of the Papua New Guinean population is made up of international migrants as of 2015 121 With the National Census deferred during 2020 2021 ostensibly on the grounds of the COVID 19 pandemic an interim assessment was conducted using satellite imagery In December 2022 a report by the UN based upon this survey was conducted with the University of Southampton using satellite imagery and ground truthing suggested a new population estimate of 17 million nearly double the country s official estimate 17 Urbanisation edit According to the CIA World Factbook 2018 122 Papua New Guinea has the second lowest urban population percentage in the world with 13 2 only behind Burundi The geography and economy of Papua New Guinea are the main factors behind the low percentage Papua New Guinea has an urbanisation rate of 2 51 measured as the projected change in urban population from 2015 to 2020 Largest cities and towns in Papua New Guinea www wbr geonames wbr org wbr PG wbr largest cities in papua new guinea wbr html Rank Name Province Pop nbsp Port Moresby nbsp Lae 1 Port Moresby National capital district 513 918 2 Lae Morobe 110 911 3 Mount Hagen Western Highlands 47 064 4 Kokopo East New Britain 40 231 5 Popondetta Northern Province 28 198 6 Madang Madang 27 419 7 Arawa Bougainville 33 623 8 Mendi Southern Highlands 26 252 9 Kimbe West New Britain 18 847 10 Goroka Eastern Highlands 18 503 Languages edit Main article Languages of Papua New Guinea nbsp The language families of Papua New Guinea according to Timothy Usher nbsp The language families in Ross s conception of the Trans New Guinea language family The affiliation of some Eastern branches is not universally accepted nbsp Huli wigman from the Southern Highlands Papua New Guinea has more languages than any other country 123 with over 820 indigenous languages representing 12 of the world s total but most have fewer than 1 000 speakers With an average of only 7 000 speakers per language Papua New Guinea has a greater density of languages than any other nation on earth except Vanuatu 124 125 The most widely spoken indigenous language is Enga with about 200 000 speakers followed by Melpa and Huli 126 Indigenous languages are classified into two large groups Austronesian languages and non Austronesian or Papuan languages There are four languages in Papua New Guinea with some statutory recognition English Tok Pisin Hiri Motu 127 and since 2015 sign language which in practice means Papua New Guinean Sign Language English is the language of government and the education system but it is not spoken widely The primary lingua franca of the country is Tok Pisin commonly known in English as New Guinean Pidgin or Melanesian Pidgin in which much of the debate in Parliament is conducted many information campaigns and advertisements are presented and a national weekly newspaper Wantok is published The only area where Tok Pisin is not prevalent is the southern region of Papua where people often use the third official language Hiri Motu Although it lies in the Papua region Port Moresby has a highly diverse population which primarily uses Tok Pisin and to a lesser extent English with Motu spoken as the indigenous language in outlying villages Health edit Main article Health in Papua New Guinea As of 2019 life expectancy in Papua New Guinea at birth was 63 years for men and 67 for women 128 Government expenditure health in 2014 accounted for 9 5 of total government spending with total health expenditure equating to 4 3 of GDP 128 There were five physicians per 100 000 people in the early 2000s 129 The 2010 maternal mortality rate per 100 000 births for Papua New Guinea was 250 This is compared with 311 9 in 2008 and 476 3 in 1990 The under 5 mortality rate per 1 000 births is 69 and the neonatal mortality as a percentage of under 5s mortality is 37 In Papua New Guinea the number of midwives per 1 000 live births is 1 and the lifetime risk of death for pregnant women is 1 in 94 130 The Human Rights Measurement Initiative finds that Papua New Guinea is achieving 71 9 of what should be possible for the right to health based on their level of income 131 Religion edit Main article Religion in Papua New Guinea Citizen population in Papua New Guinea by religion based on the 2011 census 6 Catholicism 26 Evangelical Lutheran Church of Papua New Guinea 18 4 Seventh day Adventist 12 9 Pentecostal 10 4 United Church in Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands 10 3 Evangelical Alliance Papua New Guinea 5 9 Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea 3 2 Baptist 2 8 Salvation Army 0 4 Kwato Church 0 2 Other Christian 5 1 Non Christian 1 4 Not stated 3 1 The government and judiciary uphold the constitutional right to freedom of speech thought and belief and no legislation to curb those rights has been adopted The 2011 census found that 95 6 of citizens identified themselves as Christian 1 4 were not Christian and 3 1 gave no answer Virtually no respondent identified as being nonreligious Religious syncretism is high with many citizens combining their Christian faith with some traditional indigenous religious practices 132 Most Christians in Papua New Guinea are Protestants constituting roughly 70 of the total population They are mostly represented by the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Papua New Guinea the Seventh day Adventist Church diverse Pentecostal denominations the United Church in Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands the Evangelical Alliance Papua New Guinea and the Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea Apart from Protestants there is a notable Roman Catholic minority with approximately 25 of the population There are approximately 5 000 Muslims in the country The majority belong to the Sunni group while a small number are Ahmadi Non traditional Christian churches and non Christian religious groups are active throughout the country The Papua New Guinea Council of Churches has stated that both Muslim and Confucian missionaries are highly active 133 134 Traditional religions are often animist Some also tend to have elements of veneration of the dead though generalisation is suspect given the extreme heterogeneity of Melanesian societies Prevalent among traditional tribes is the belief in masalai or evil spirits which are blamed for poisoning people causing calamity and death and the practice of puripuri sorcery 135 136 The first Baha i in PNG was Violete Hoenke who arrived at Admiralty Island from Australia in 1954 The PNG Baha i community grew so quickly that in 1969 a National Spiritual Assembly administrative council was elected As of 2020 there are over 30 000 members of the Baha i Faith in PNG In 2012 the decision was made to erect the first Baha i House of Worship in PNG Its design is that of a woven basket a common feature of all groups and cultures in PNG It is therefore hoped to be a symbol for the entire country Its nine entrances are inspired by the design of Haus Tambaran Spirit House Construction began in Port Moresby in 2018 Culture editMain articles Culture of Papua New Guinea Music of Papua New Guinea and Papua New Guinean cuisine nbsp Bilum bag from Goroka Eastern Highlands Province nbsp A resident of Boga Boga a village on the southeast coast of mainland Papua New Guinea nbsp Asaro Mudmen nbsp A 20th century wooden Abelam ancestor figure nggwalndu It is estimated that more than one thousand cultural groups exist in Papua New Guinea Because of this diversity many styles of cultural expression have emerged Each group has created its own expressive forms in art dance weaponry costumes singing music architecture and much more Most of these cultural groups have their own language People typically live in villages that rely on subsistence farming In some areas people hunt and collect wild plants such as yam roots and karuka to supplement their diets Those who become skilled at hunting farming and fishing earn a great deal of respect Seashells are no longer the currency of Papua New Guinea as they were in some regions sea shells were abolished as currency in 1933 This tradition is still present in local customs In some cultures to get a bride a groom must bring a certain number of golden edged clam shells 137 as a bride price In other regions the bride price is paid in lengths of shell money pigs cassowaries or cash Elsewhere it is brides who traditionally pay a dowry People of the highlands engage in colourful local rituals that are called sing sings They paint themselves and dress up with feathers pearls and animal skins to represent birds trees or mountain spirits Sometimes an important event such as a legendary battle is enacted at such a musical festival The country possesses one UNESCO World Heritage Site the Kuk Early Agricultural Site which was inscribed in 2008 The country however has no elements inscribed yet in the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists despite having one of the widest array of intangible cultural heritage elements in the world 138 139 Media edit Main articles National Broadcasting Corporation of Papua New Guinea and List of newspapers in Papua New Guinea Sport edit Main article Sport in Papua New Guinea Sport is an important part of Papua New Guinean culture and rugby league is by far the most popular sport 140 In a nation where communities are far apart and many people live at a minimal subsistence level rugby league has been described as a replacement for tribal warfare as a way of explaining the local enthusiasm for the game Many Papua New Guineans have become celebrities by representing their country or playing in an overseas professional league Even Australian rugby league players who have played in the annual State of Origin series which is celebrated every year in PNG are among the most well known people throughout the nation State of Origin is a highlight of the year for most Papua New Guineans although the support is so passionate that many people have died over the years in violent clashes supporting their team 141 The Papua New Guinea national rugby league team usually plays against the Australian Prime Minister s XIII a selection of NRL players each year normally in Port Moresby Although not as popular Australian rules football is significant in another way as the national team is ranked second only after Australia Other major sports which have a part in the Papua New Guinea sporting landscape are netball association football rugby union basketball and in eastern Papua cricket Education editMain article Education in Papua New Guinea A large proportion of the population is illiterate 142 with women predominating in this area 142 Much of the education in PNG is provided by church institutions 143 This includes 500 schools of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Papua New Guinea 144 Papua New Guinea has six universities as well as other tertiary institutions The two founding universities are the University of Papua New Guinea based in the National Capital District 145 and the Papua New Guinea University of Technology based outside of Lae in Morobe Province The four other universities were once colleges but have since been recognised by the government These are the University of Goroka in the Eastern Highlands province Divine Word University run by the Catholic Church s Divine Word Missionaries in Madang Province Vudal University in East New Britain Province and Pacific Adventist University run by the Seventh day Adventist Church in the National Capital District The Human Rights Measurement Initiative reports that Papua New Guinea is achieving 68 5 of what should be possible for the right to education based on their level of income 146 Science and technology editPapua New Guinea s National Vision 2050 was adopted in 2009 This has led to the establishment of the Research Science and Technology Council At its gathering in November 2014 the Council re emphasised the need to focus on sustainable development through science and technology 147 Vision 2050 s medium term priorities are 147 emerging industrial technology for downstream processing infrastructure technology for the economic corridors knowledge based technology science and engineering education and to reach the target of investing 5 of GDP in research and development by 2050 Papua New Guinea invested 0 03 of GDP in research and development in 2016 148 In 2016 women accounted for 33 2 of researchers in Papua New Guinea 148 According to Thomson Reuters Web of Science Papua New Guinea had the largest number of publications 110 among Pacific Island states in 2014 followed by Fiji 106 Nine out of ten scientific publications from Papua New Guinea focused on immunology genetics biotechnology and microbiology Nine out of ten were also co authored by scientists from other countries mainly Australia the United States of America United Kingdom Spain and Switzerland 147 In 2019 Papua New Guinea took second place among Pacific Island states with 253 publications behind Fiji with 303 publications in the Scopus Elsevier database of scientific publications 148 Health sciences accounted for 49 of these publications 148 Papua New Guinea s top scientific collaborators over 2017 to 2019 were Australia the United States of America United Kingdom France and India 148 Forestry is an important economic resource for Papua New Guinea but the industry uses low and semi intensive technological inputs As a result product ranges are limited to sawed timber veneer plywood block board moulding poles and posts and wood chips Only a few limited finished products are exported Lack of automated machinery coupled with inadequately trained local technical personnel are some of the obstacles to introducing automated machinery and design 147 Renewable energy sources represent two thirds of the total electricity supply 147 In 2015 the Secretariat of the Pacific Community observed that while Fiji Papua New Guinea and Samoa are leading the way with large scale hydropower projects there is enormous potential to expand the deployment of other renewable energy options such as solar wind geothermal and ocean based energy sources 149 The European Union funded the Renewable Energy in Pacific Island Countries Developing Skills and Capacity programme EPIC over 2013 to 2017 The programme developed a master s programme in renewable energy management accredited in 2016 at the University of Papua New Guinea and helped to establish a Centre of Renewable Energy at the same university 148 Papua New Guinea is one of the 15 beneficiaries of a programme on Adapting to Climate Change and Sustainable Energy worth 37 26 million The programme resulted from the signing of an agreement in February 2014 between the European Union and the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat The other beneficiaries are the Cook Islands Fiji Kiribati Marshall Islands Federated States of Micronesia Nauru Niue Palau Samoa Solomon Islands Timor Leste Tonga Tuvalu and Vanuatu 147 Transport editMain article Transport in Papua New Guinea The country s mountainous terrain impedes transport Aeroplanes opened up the country during its colonial period and continue to be used for most travel and for most high density value freight The capital Port Moresby has no road links to any of PNG s other major towns Similarly many remote villages are reachable only by light aircraft or on foot Jacksons International Airport is the major international airport in Papua New Guinea located 8 kilometres 5 mi from Port Moresby In addition to two international airfields Papua New Guinea has 578 airstrips most of which are unpaved 3 The national airline is Air Niugini operating out Jacksons International 150 See also edit nbsp New Guinea portal nbsp Countries portal Economy of Papua New Guinea Outline of Papua New Guinea Western New GuineaNotes edit abbreviated PNG ˈ p ae p j u e ˈ ɡ ɪ n i ˈ p ɑː also US ˈ p ɑː p w e ˈ p ɑː p j e 12 References edit Somare Michael 6 December 2004 Stable Government Investment Initiatives and Economic Growth Keynote address 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and Social Affairs Archived from the original on 4 June 2020 Chinese targeted in PNG riots report Archived 7 September 2012 at archive today News com au 15 May 2009 Papua New Guinea Culture History amp People Britannica www britannica com 24 March 2024 Retrieved 30 March 2024 International migrant stock of population Papua New Guinea worldbank org Archived from the original on 10 February 2023 Retrieved 14 February 2023 The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Archived from the original on 22 January 2019 Retrieved 31 May 2019 Seetharaman G 13 August 2017 Seven decades after Independence many small languages in India face extinction threat The Economic Times Archived from the original on 28 March 2020 Retrieved 6 December 2019 Translations Pangeanic The country with the highest level of language diversity Papua New Guinea Pangeanic Translations Pangeanic com Archived from the original on 8 November 2020 Retrieved 15 March 2018 Felix Marti Paul Ortega Itziar Idiazabal Andoni Barrenha Patxi Juaristi Carme Junyent Belen Uranga Estibaliz Amorrortu 2005 Words and worlds world languages review Multilingual Matters p 76 ISBN 1853598275 Retrieved 18 March 2020 permanent dead link Languages on Papua vanish without a whisper 21 July 2011 Archived from the original on 11 January 2012 Retrieved 22 July 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link AFP via dawn com 21 July 2011 There is no specific legislation proclaiming official languages in Papua New Guinea In the constitution of Papua New Guinea section 2 11 literacy of its preamble mentions all persons and governmental bodies to endeavour to achieve universal literacy in Pisin Hiri Motu or English as well as tok ples and ita eda tano gado In addition section 67 2 c mentions speak and understand Pisin or Hiri Motu or a vernacular of the country sufficiently for normal conversational purposes as a requirement for citizenship by nationalisation this is again mentioned in section 68 2 h a b Papua New Guinea WHO Archived from the original on 18 October 2018 Retrieved 23 November 2018 Human Development Report 2009 Archived from the original on 29 April 2009 Retrieved 19 February 2010 The State of the World s Midwifery Papua New Guinea PDF United Nations Population Fund Archived from the original PDF on 5 October 2012 Retrieved 2 August 2011 Papua New Guinea HRMI Rights Tracker rightstracker org Retrieved 1 May 2023 Papua New Guinea International Religious Freedom Report 2003 US Department of State Archived from the original on 1 September 2019 Retrieved 22 May 2019 Papua New Guinea U S Department of State Archived from the original on 11 September 2017 Retrieved 24 January 2018 Islam in Papua New Guinea PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 December 2014 Retrieved 31 January 2015 Salak Kira 2004 Four Corners A Journey into the Heart of Papua New Guinea National Geographic Society ISBN 978 0 7922 7417 9 puripuri Archived 1 May 2005 at the Wayback Machine coombs anu edu au 26 January 2005 Papua New Guinea culture Datec Pty Ltd Archived from the original on 10 February 1999 Retrieved 16 December 2005 Centre UNESCO World Heritage Kuk Early Agricultural Site whc unesco org Archived from the original on 24 May 2018 Retrieved 23 May 2018 Papua New Guinea intangible heritage Culture Sector UNESCO ich unesco org Archived from the original on 3 July 2018 Retrieved 23 May 2018 Hadfield Dave 8 October 1995 Island gods high in a dream world The Independent Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 6 October 2009 Three dead in PNG after State of Origin violence BrisbaneTimes com au 26 June 2009 Archived from the original on 13 May 2011 Retrieved 27 June 2010 a b Papua New Guinea HDI Rank 145 2007 2008 Human Development Report Hdrstats undp org Archived from the original on 29 April 2009 Retrieved 27 June 2010 Kichte in not de Kirche in not de 6 March 2009 Archived from the original on 20 November 2010 Retrieved 27 June 2010 Evangelisch Lutherische Kirche in Papua Neuguinea NMZ mission de Archived from the original on 31 December 2010 Retrieved 27 June 2010 Vahau Alfred 5 January 2007 University of Papua New Guinea Upng ac pg Archived from the original on 5 January 2009 Retrieved 27 June 2010 Papua New Guinea HRMI Rights Tracker Retrieved 1 May 2023 a b c d e f UNESCO Science Report towards 2030 PDF Paris UNESCO 2015 pp 693 731 ISBN 978 92 3 100129 1 Archived PDF from the original on 30 June 2017 Retrieved 17 March 2017 a b c d e f Scott Kemmis Intarakumnerd Rasiah Amaradasa 11 June 2021 Schneegans S Straza T Lewis J eds Southeast Asia and Oceania In UNESCO Science Report the Race Against Time for Smarter Development Paris UNESCO pp 674 715 ISBN 978 92 3 100450 6 Archived from the original on 16 September 2021 Retrieved 8 September 2021 Pacific first centre of excellence for renewable energy and energy efficiency takes shape Secretariat of Pacific Community press release 18 June 2015 Archived from the original on 18 March 2017 Retrieved 17 March 2017 Our History airniugini com pg 24 April 2015 Archived from the original on 5 April 2023 Retrieved 15 February 2023 Sources edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a free content work Licensed under CC BY SA IGO 3 0 Text taken from UNESCO Science Report towards 2030 535 555 UNESCO UNESCO Publishing Further reading editBiskup Peter B Jinks and H Nelson A Short History of New Guinea 1970 Connell John Papua New Guinea The Struggle for Development 1997 online Archived 8 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine Dorney Sean Papua New Guinea People Politics and History since 1975 1990 Dorney Sean The Sandline Affair Politics and Mercenaries and the Bougainville Crisis 1998 Dorney Sean The Embarrassed Colonialist 2016 Gash Noel A Pictorial History of New Guinea 1975 Golson Jack 50 000 years of New Guinea history 1966 Griffin James Papua New Guinea A political history 1979 James Paul Nadarajah Yaso Haive Karen Stead Victoria 2012 Sustainable Communities Sustainable Development Other Paths for Papua New Guinea Honolulu University of Hawaii Press Archived from the original on 9 August 2021 Retrieved 15 December 2017 Institute of National Affairs PNG at 40 Symposium Learning from the Past and Engaging with the Future 2015 Knauft Bruce M South Coast New Guinea Cultures History Comparison Dialectic 1993 excerpt and text search Archived 30 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine McCosker Anne Masked Eden A History of the Australians in New Guinea 1998 Mckinnon Rowan et al Papua New Guinea amp Solomon Islands Country Travel Guide 2008 excerpt and text search Archived 26 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine Rynkiewich Michael and Roland Seib eds Politics in Papua New Guinea Continuities Changes and Challenges 2000 Swadling Pamela 1996 Plumes from Paradise Papua New Guinea National Museum ISBN 978 9980 85 103 1 Waiko John Short History of Papua New Guinea 1993 Waiko John Dademo Papua New Guinea A History of Our Times 2003 Zimmer Tamakoshi Laura Modern Papua New Guinea 1998 online Archived 8 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine Primary sources edit Jinks Brian ed Readings in New Guinea history 1973 Tim Flannery Throwim Way Leg Tree Kangaroos Possums and Penis Gourds 2000 memoir excerpt and text search Archived 13 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Malinowski Bronislaw Argonauts of the Western Pacific An Account of Native Enterprise and Adventure in the Archipelagoes of Melanesian New Guinea 2002 famous anthropological account of the Trobriand Islanders based on field work in 1910s online Archived 8 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine Visser Leontine ed Governing New Guinea An Oral History of Papuan Administrators 1950 1990 2012 Whitaker J L et al eds Documents and readings in New Guinea history Pre history to 1889 1975 External links editPapua New Guinea at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage nbsp Data from Wikidata Government edit Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea Archived 11 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine National Parliament of Papua New Guinea National Economic amp Fiscal Commission Archived 25 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine General information edit Papua New Guinea The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Papua New Guinea at UCB Libraries GovPubs archived 7 April 2008 Papua New Guinea at Curlie nbsp Wikimedia Atlas of Papua New Guinea nbsp Geographic data related to Papua New Guinea at OpenStreetMap 6 S 147 E 6 S 147 E 6 147 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Papua New Guinea amp oldid 1221356760, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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