Papua New Guinea PM resigns ending political crisis

World Wednesday 29/May/2019 14:05 PM
By: Times News Service
Papua New Guinea PM resigns ending political crisis

Port Moresby: Papua New Guinea’s (PNG) prime minister announced his resignation on the floor of parliament Wednesday, bringing a long-running political crisis to a close.

Peter O'Neill, who ruled the South Pacific nation for eight years, was set to face a vote of no confidence he would have likely lost. O’Neill told parliament that he had tendered his letter of resignation to the country’s governor general.

The fall of O'neill raises doubts over a $13 billion deal signed with Total and ExxonMobil to extract, pipe and ship liquefied natural gas (LNG) overseas. The deal caused a major political scandal, with ministers baulking at the deal.

Finance minister James Marape was the first senior cabinet official to resign in protest, saying the money would not go to ordinary Papua New Guineans, local firms or the regions.

A similar deal in the last decade has failed to bring wealth to a country where around 70 percent of people do not have access to reliable electricity.

O’Neill had earlier promised to resign, but failed to do so and took court action in a bid to cling to power.

That prompted angry scenes in parliament Tuesday, including physical confrontations between O’Niell’s supporters and opponents trying to oust him and the speaker of parliament.

But on Wednesday O’Neill jumped: “I want to inform this honourable house that at 9:45 am this morning I delivered to... the governor-general of Papua New Guinea my letter of resignation so that we can deal with this matter once and for all.”

In a valedictory speech, O’Neill touted his achievements in office, including hosting the 2018 APEC summit, a vast undertaking for a developing country with limited central government capacity.

“We have always been known for the wrong reasons,” O’Neill said.

A parliamentary vote on a new prime minister is expected to take place in the coming days.

Experts said that his departure could see an end to big-ticket infrastructure projects that many believe have benefited only Port Moresby and the country’s connected elite.

“O’Neill’s departure has the potential for a wholesale shift in the policy direction taken by PNG’s government,” said Jonathan Ritchie of Melbourne’s Deakin University.

“But the suspicion of at least some informed Papua New Guinean observers is that it will result only in the rearranging of the deck chairs,” he wrote ahead of O’Neill’s departure.

“A reshuffling of the cards that will lead to another privileged insider, another member of PNG’s political class, taking over the PM’s role from the mostly unlamented O’Neill.”