PNG leader pledges to make most of resources

FILE - In this Sept. 24, 2011 file photo, Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea Peter O'Neill addresses the 66th session of the United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters in New York. Rebel soldiers seized the military's headquarters Thursday, Jan. 26, 2012 and replaced Papua New Guinea's top defense official with their own leader, who gave O'Neill a week to step aside for his ousted predecessor. The self-proclaimed new leader of the country's defense forces, retired Col. Yaura Sasa, insisted he was not mounting a coup. But he warned that the military will take unspecified action unless O'Neill stands down and former prime minister Sir Michael Somare, is reinstated, as the national Supreme Court ordered last month. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)

Education, health and resources on the agenda … Papua New Guinean Prime Minister Peter O’Neill. Photo: AP

THE Papua New Guinean Prime Minister, Peter O’Neill, launched his election campaign last night, promising to use the country’s multiplying natural resource wealth to improve education and health services, roads and provide greater protection against crime.

At a gathering of supporters in Port Moresby, Mr O’Neill pledged to extend free education up to year 12 by 2014, when a $15 billion liquefied natural gas project comes on stream, massively boosting government revenues.

In his short nine months in power since ousting former prime minister Sir Michael Somare in tense parliamentary manoeuvres, Mr O’Neill has already removed school fees up to year 10 and now seeks to emphasise his government’s commitment to improving the lives of ordinary citizens.

He also promised to rebuild the country’s near derelict system of public hospitals to provide free basic health service, and to rejuvenate the ageing and under-resourced police and defence services to ensure better public safety in PNG’s crime-ridden towns.

Australia’s assistant foreign affairs minister for the South Pacific, Richard Marles, said last week this was a particularly important election, since it would mark the change from Somare’s 1975 generation of independence leaders at the same time as the biggest resources boom ever, setting Papua New Guinea’s course for decades.

”There is a lot of excitement about changing the direction in which we are managing the affairs of our country,” Mr O’Neill said. ”We understand that we have mismanaged our past opportunities. We are committed to making sure we don’t make the same mistakes in the future.”

The election has now been set for June 23, after a move to delay it by six months was set aside.

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