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DEMOCRACY
Somare government sworn in amid standoff
by Staff Writers
Port Moresby (AFP) Dec 14, 2011


Resource-rich Papua New Guinea's governor general Wednesday swore in the government of Sir Michael Somare, but his rival refused to back down in a tense standoff as a huge earthquake rattled nerves.

"Despite the events of the last couple of days I am confident that common sense will prevail," Somare, who has led the sprawling and often violent country for almost half of its 36 years of independence, said in a statement.

Both Somare, 75, and younger challenger Peter O'Neill, 46, claim to be the legitimate leader of the Pacific island nation in a highly charged impasse that threatens to spill into chaos.

A violent 7.1-magnitude earthquake also shook buildings and swayed power lines in the capital Wednesday, although no significant damage was reported.

Impoverished PNG has been struggling to throw off its reputation as a politically dysfunctional and often lawless nation with a resources boom in the pipeline, but events of the past days have done little to alter the impression.

While there has not been major unrest, O'Neill and his ministers stormed a barricade manned by armed police at Government House Tuesday to force a meeting with Governor General Michael Ogio, but the talks failed to reach a resolution.

Somare was reinstated as leader on Monday when the Supreme Court ruled O'Neill's election to the post by fellow lawmakers in August was unconstitutional.

But parliamentary speaker Jeffery Nape said during an emergency sitting of the legislature Tuesday that he would only recognise O'Neill's government, which was installed when Somare was incapacitated by illness.

The O'Neill faction seems determined to stand its ground in what is the country's worst constitutional crisis since gaining independence in 1975.

As the governor general anointed the Somare government, MPs loyal to O'Neill passed a motion demanding Ogio come to parliament to swear him in again as leader.

Ogio is the representative in Papua New Guinea of Queen Elizabeth II, who is the Commonwealth country's head of state.

O'Neill's supporters also introduced a bill requiring police to "assist" the governor general in getting to parliament, Australian Associated Press reported.

But Ogio did not appear by late in the day, leaving the country in deadlock.

Somare said the decision of the governor general should be respected.

"It is important that we have another 36 years and more of stability by recognising and respecting the different arms of government, the judiciary, the legislature and the executive," he said.

The centrepiece of PNG's resources developments is a Aus$15 billion liquefied natural gas project led by US major ExxonMobil.

James Wilson, senior resource analyst at RBS Morgans in Perth, said mining firms doing business in the country would be wary, but not overly worried, by the crisis.

"The resources companies will be watching closely but the government, whoever is in power, wouldn't want to risk these big projects," he said.

"PNG needs the foreign investment and I generally don't see any major issues, although some fresh investments may stall."

Australian Defence Minister Stephen Smith said he expected the controversy to be resolved peacefully, and ruled out any possible intervention from Canberra.

"We want to see these matters resolved in accordance with PNG's constitution," he said.

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Major 7.1 quake strikes Papua New Guinea: USGS
Port Moresby (AFP) Dec 14, 2011 - A violent 7.1-magnitude earthquake struck Papua New Guinea Wednesday, shaking buildings and prompting residents to run into the streets and causing panic in the highlands.

The quake, initially rated at 7.3, hit at a depth of 115 kilometres (71 miles) southwest of the coastal city of Lae and 223 kilometres from the capital Port Moresby, the US Geological Survey said.

Macklyn Timbun, who works as a receptionist at the Lae International Hotel, said she was sitting on a bus when the quake hit and it was so large the driver ran away and the vehicle almost rolled in the upheaval.

"I was like 'Oh my god what's happening?' Everybody started running, people were trying to jump out of the windows, it was the biggest earthquake," she told AFP.

"Outside the hotel everyone was running out of the building because most of the time we never experience such earthquakes in Lae."

Geoscience Australia put the quake at a magnitude 7.2 at 0504 GMT, but said it was not expected to create a tsunami because it was not an undersea rupture.

"That's the assessment on the basis that it's about 20 kilometres inshore and also it's about 120 kilometres deep and that's too deep really to cause any tsunami problems," said seismologist Clive Collins.

Papua New Guinea's earthquake observatory said there were no reports yet of damage but Collins said the tremor could have caused problems for the nearest large town Wau, about 20 kilometres from the epicentre, as well as Lae.

"It's in a mountainous area so there may be issues of landslides and things like that, that's what's the main problem in that particular part of Papua New Guinea," Collins said.

In Wau, a gold mining centre located between Port Moresby and Lae, US missionary Jim Bloom described the quake as "quite a good one".

"The floor started sort of bouncing around a little bit like when a big truck passes nearby, and then the whole building really started shaking and rattling," he said, adding he was not aware of any damage in his area.

"Just a lot of shaking and a lot of noise from the buildings, but we very seldom have damage because most of our buildings are made from timber and steel and so they're very flexible. But the water tanks were sloshing around for about five minutes or six minutes or so afterwards."

Another Lae witness, reached by telephone, said there was no major destruction evident.

"I was standing outside and the buildings shook, the ground shook," he said, adding the quake likely lasted more than a minute.

"We have quakes here regularly but not like this."

Papua New Guinea is regularly rocked by quakes due to its proximity to the so-called "Pacific Ring of Fire", a hotspot for seismic activity due to friction between tectonic plates.

Collins said the impoverished but sparsely populated nation of 6.6 million would likely face aftershocks in the coming hours.

"I'm sure there will be aftershocks with something that big, whether they will be significant or not... it's unknown really," he said.



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