I’m not envious – Wagambie Jnr

Anthony Wagambie Jnr, well respected and high performing policeman has been demoted and sent out of the capital of PNG, Port Moresby following the 10 January 2024 riots. He one of many senior policemen across the country being demoted and re-stationed across the country. Following many outpouring support from the rank and file across the country, Wagambie had this to say:

By Anthony WAGAMBIE Jr

“I AM NOT ENVIOUS ABOUT THE TOP JOB, EVERYTHING COMES IN GOD’S TIMING

To my family, friends and supporters. I humbly acknowledge and appreciate all the support given. I have not been personally lobbying to take the top Police job. I am happy where I am and doing what I set out to do. I love my job and I love serving to make our community safe.

I will tell you why I became a Police man.

I grew up as a son of a Police Officer. I am the first born son of Anthony Wagambie Snr. He was then an Inspector of Police based in Lae and my mum, Mrs Elizabeth Wagambie nee Saun was a Pediatric Nurse at Angau Hospital.

Our first home was at Salamanda flats Lae, where we shared with former Commissioner of Police and my uncle Mr Peter Aigilo. Uncle Peter was a young Sub Inspector of Police at that time.

Anyway, when I was born , my dad named me after him, so that’s why I am Anthony Wagambie Jnr. My dad always said I would be a Policeman just like him.

When I was a baby, he always put his officer’s peak cap on my head and brainwashed me by saying ” He will be a Policeman just like me and his bubuman”( both my grandfathers were retired Policemen. My dad’s father was a First Constable and my mum’s father was a Senior Sergeant, both War veterans).

So I grew up always thinking and knowing that I would be a cop one day.

My parent’s albums are full of childhood photographs of me dressing up as a Policeman, especially a Riot Squad ( today Mobile Sqaud) officer. With my dad’s peak cap on my head, track suit tucked into my gum boots and carrying a water gun.

That was my dream to be in the riot squad.

I grew up always wanting to get on a Police or just being around Police. Those days the Police were well disciplined by way of attitude,dressing and attitude. They were respected by the Community. I always envied them and wanted to be just like those cops.

There was turning point in my life, which cemented everything. I was in Grade 11 at Divine Word Institute, which is now Divine Word University . I was returning to school after holidays in Lae. There was a bridge that had collapsed due to heavy rain so my parents decided to fly me back to school on Air Niugini. This was in 1993, and ANG had a route which came from POM to Nadzab and on to Madang.

I got on that flight and we were off to Madang. There were other schoolmates on the flight who were mostly girls. We arrived late in the afternoon. In those days there were no Mobile phones, we depended on Public pay phones.

To make matters worse, the school truck had not arrived to pick us up. I also realized that among the girls , there were only two males. Another boy and myself.

Remember, there were no Mobile phones then so we never told that the previous weekend , there had been a fight between our DIWAI Soccer team and a team from the surrounding Airport Community .

We had just landed in hot water. The kids from the soccer team somehow learnt that DIWAI students had arrived and were stranded at the terminal. They had planned to attack students coming back from holidays.

This was the last flight and the aircraft had already departed.

All of a sudden we realized that the young men from the community had started to block off the gate to to the terminal.

At that point of time, the first time in my life I felt the fear of being attacked.

I felt hopeless and helpless, thinking of how I would defend the girls( their panicking didn’t help at all 😂😂). To be frank, for the first time in my life I was scared of losing my life.

I was brought up in a home of feeling protected because my dad was a senior Police Officer. This was the first time I felt real fear. All I wanted was for my dad to come rescue us.

The place had started to get dark and the feeling of danger was greater.

Then we we saw it, amidst the darkness a Police 15 seater bus came speeding up the road with it’s blue lights on. When the thugs saw this they ran in all directions.

The mere sight of Police brought instant relief. Thank God we were safe. The Blue Angel had arrived.

When the bus pulled up, it was only one very old Policeman , with no gun, and Mrs Kalasim, the wife of then PPC Madang papa Robert Kalasim (now retired)

They had come to the Airport to check on a relative. They had sensed something was wrong when they saw the gate crowded. The old copper put on the blue lights which chased them away . That blue light made me feel safe.

The girls shed tears of joy.

I was so taken aback by what the presence of a Police vehicle could do. A Police vehicle with one old Policeman with no gun. He became my instant hero, my lifesaver.

At that point in time, I made up my mind. I said to myself ” That’s it, I want to be like that, I want to make people feel safe, I want to make a difference!”.

So Family, I want to make a point.

I am not envious of the top job, I am happy , doing what I set out to do, that is,trying my best to make my Community safe. As long as everyone feels safe, then I am satisfied.

People who know me well, know that I do not rest until a problem is solved, until strategies to ensure a safer Community is in place. It gives me that satisfaction to see men, women and children move about freely and feeling safe. For them to know that Police is close by to help when they need it and for everyone to feel secured. When this happens, I know that my boys and girls in blue have done their job. Money cannot buy that happiness and sense of achievement.

Everything comes in God’s timing. He will determine everything. God uses humans as an instrument to do as His Will on Earth. He will determine how and when.

I devote my life to serving and leading men and women under my charge, so that they too can become “Blue Angels”.

God Bless you all, thank you for reading.”

Allan Bird Targeted

East Sepik Governor and alternate prime minister as nominee for the vote of no confidence against incumbent prime minister James Marape says his life is threatened. Read full post by Allan Bird on his Facebook account below:

By Allan Bird

“Am I desperate to be PM of PNG? Short answer is NO. But someone needs to step up and seriously address the issues which are destroying our country. Those problems will not fix themselves.

Since my nomination, I have been advised by a Deputy Police Commissioner that my life is under threat and they are monitoring the situation.

I am informed by senior Government Ministers that my phones have been illegally taped.

I am told by reliable sources that various State Institutions have been instructed to try find anything illegal on me and charge me and arrest me.

All the apparatus of State have been put on full alert to hunt down the most dangerous criminal in PNG: his name is Allan Bird.

This is not the country I was born into, this is not the country the founding fathers envisioned. I have the best job in the world as Governor of East Sepik. I have many good people working in my province at all levels. I just support them and they do a great job, its not perfect, but they are trying and improving.

Unfortunately my high performing PPC just got demoted and transferred to Hela and my province no longer has a PPC. Political punishment is already on foot.

So if my colleague leaders feel that I am incomeptent and unfit for the job, I will happily go back to building my people of greater Sepik. At least try to insulate my province from the nation’s greater problems.

We still have to fix our power problems and find enough money to fix all our roads, schools and health services. PNG has very serious challenges. Anyone who fixes these problems will be hated just like Sir Mekere did 25 years ago.

Doing what needs to be done is not pretty, but it has to be done. Someone has to be willing to do the hard things. Many countries have problems, but not many countries have all those challenges all at the same time. PNG does so right now.

The things Government is doing today does not give me any confidence that things are going to get better because there are no strategic interventions. We are just managing crisis every day and even then, we are not managing crisis well. PNG, by all indicators is a failing State.

What are the key indicators of a failing State?

Indicator No 1: Security Gap – A state that is unable to guarantee the safety and security of its citizens

Indicator No 2: Capacity Gap – A state that is struggling to provide services to its people.

Indicator No 3: Legitimacy Gap – A state where the election of its leaders is called into question.

Indicator No 4: Poor Governance, Corruption and Nepotism

Indicator No 5: Prolonged Economic Crisis

Indicator No 6: Extreme Inequality

Whoever becomes PM of our beautiful country, MUST FIX all of the above challenges and do so quickly.

To all Marape and PANGU supporters, I am not the enemy: PNG has at least 6 enemies and I have listed some of them for you. I hope you find the wisdom, the courage and the will to meet our 6 main enemies head on. Because this is what our country needs.”

Parliament adjournment benefits the PNG opposition

Why adjourning parliament works in the opposition’s favour

Let’s be honest: if there was a vote of no confidence in February 2024 Marape would have defeated it.

Governments in PNG are usually destabilised from within – not without.

Leading up to the vote of no confidence, Pangu Pati numbers actually grew. So did coalition numbers.

Marape and the government made a mistake when they adjourned parliament. He should have accepted the challenge, and defeated it. That way, if the opposition tried VONC again, the populace would have condemned the opposition as the government already defeated it. More VONCs would have been seen as causing unnecessary instability.

How does the adjournment benefit the opposition?

Now they have time to recruit more MPs – which they failed to do leading up to the VONC in February 2024.

This is why I believe the opposition has not taken the matter to Supreme Court to have the parliament recalled. In 2016, the parliament was recalled by the Supreme Court when it was adjourned to avoid a VONC (read Polye vs Zurenoc 2016). There is precedence and the court could have easily ruled in favour of the opposition had they taken the matter to court.

Way forward for the opposition:

Take the Speaker to court and have the National Court charge him under section 23 of the Constitution. Which among other things states that where the Supreme Court imposes a duty and that duty is breached, and there is no specific penalty, the charge would be 10 years imprisonment maximum.

In Supreme Court ruling in 2016 (Polye vs Zurenouc), the Supreme Court warned they can charge the Speaker under section 23 of the Constitution. The Speaker was not charged because the opposition at the time only asked the Supreme Court’s interpretation of section 145 of the Constitution on VONC, and to direct parliament to reconvene if the adjournment was unconstitutional. Had the opposition asked for penalty, the Supreme Court would have rendered one.

So in for the recent adjournment of parliament by the Speaker to avoid a VONC, the opposition can only seek possible penalty against the Speaker and send him to jail. They shouldn’t seek recalling the parliament as they don’t have the numbers. They should then start recruiting with Pangu and the coalition.

And go for the VONC in May 2024 when parliament reconvenes.

Way forward for the government side:

Replace Marape from within. John Rosso can replace him and there’d be not need for a complete overhaul.

Notice for no confidence vote against PNG prime minister submitted: what’s next?

Today marks the initiation of a significant political process as a vote of no confidence notice has been served to the Deputy Speaker of Parliament. Here’s an expanded breakdown of the ensuing proceedings:

  1. The notice identifies the alternative prime minister, disqualifying rumours that someone from Pangu Pati may be nominated.
  2. More than of 12 MPs have endorsed the notice, which which means all technical requirements are pretty much satisfied.
  3. Tomorrow, the Speaker (or deputy speaker) will present the notice to the Parliamentary Business Committee for review, potentially concluding by tomorrow’s lunchtime if expedited.
  4. By Thursday or Friday, assuming procedural requirements are met, the Speaker (or deputy speaker) will notify the parliament of the notice for a vote of no confidence.
  5. Parliament will adjourn for one week.
  6. Elections will be conducted in the third week following the notification of the no-confidence motion.
  7. Delays by the Speaker and Parliamentary Business Committee can further postpone the adjournment and subsequent PM election.
  8. While there’s no specific timeframe in the Constitution for the Speaker and PBC meetings, unreasonable delays, exceeding a month may result in opposition seeking Supreme Court intervention to expedite the process.
  9. Whilst MPs are usually locked up in hotels and islands and cannot move to other camps, they can switch on the floor of parliament. No camp therefore can claim certainty at this stage.

Clarifications on PM Candidature:

  1. Contrary to post-general election protocols, where the party with the most MPs assumes power, any individual, including an independent MP, can be a PM nominee if backed by 10% of MPs.
  2. Governors are eligible as PM candidates and ministers, but they must surrender their gubernatorial roles during their ministerial or PM tenure, dispelling circulating misconceptions.
  3. A successful VONC doesn’t grant the PM an additional 18-month grace period; subsequent attempts can be initiated in subsequent parliament sittings until the term limit is reached.
  4. A PM can resign, get re-elected, and enjoy another grace period, as exemplified by Pias Wingti in 1993. However, proper parliamentary procedures must be followed to avoid invalidation, as per a Supreme Court ruling.
  5. By July 2026, despite no restrictions on VONCs against the PM, MPs may refrain from such actions, as successful motions lead to parliamentary dissolution and fresh elections, emphasizing removal over replacement.

Alan Bird’s resigns from Pangu-led government

The resignation of East Sepik Governor Alan Bird and Bulolo MP Junior Sam Basil brings the total to 12 MPs resigning from the Pangu-led government since the chaos and looting on 10 January 2024.

Below is Alan Bird’s post on his Facebook page explaining why he resigned from James Marape’s Pangu led government.

By Governor Allan Bird
Thursday 8th February 2024

I will not be the lookout, standing guard while the riches of this country are plundered. My conscience will not allow it.

I remained in government hoping that this government would solve our cost of living crisis, our power crisis, our fx crisis, our law and order crisis and our employment crisis.

As a strong advocate of good governance, the recent revelations regarding PM Marape’s involvement in the Paraka and Connect PNG payments are too compelling for me to remain in government.

While I have nothing personal against PMJM, if I remain it will mean that I condone high level corruption and that I approve of powerful people selectively engaging contracters with family links.

While a man is presumed innocent until proven guilty, leaders are not ordinary citizens and therefore we must be held accountable to much higher standards.

Our people expect higher standards of responsibility from leaders in the stewardship of public funds. Especially from MPs and more so from the PM. And the people are right to expect higher standards on matters such as this because we are custodians of the public interest.

I have been uncompromising on transparency and governance at the provincial level and my people of East Sepik expect me to maintain the same standard at national level.

Holding public office is a sacred trust and our ability and attitude to be prudent and honest in the use or public funds is critical. We are not just project managers.

I had no prior knowledge of the Paraka payments or the Connect PNG payments until the details were made public. If I remain in government it will mean that I support these types of behavior. This would go against everything I stand for.

I remained in government because I was committed to the work on Elections, GEWE and Provincial government.

I also felt Sepik people owed a debt to PMJM for standing with GC Somare in 2011. After supporting PMJM 3 times to be PM, that debt has been repaid in full.

I have had many disagreements with the Government on issues of ethics, philosophy and management but this latest revelation is difficult to reconcile.

The prosperity of the country cannot be measured by the success in one or two districts while entire provinces are going backwards. Provinces are collections of districts that must complement each other.

Public funds are being weaponised to favor certain districts to the detriment of our country. PNG needs a new formula for growth and equitable sharing of the nations wealth.

I hope PM Marape can see the importance of protecting the sanctity of the chair he holds and step aside and clear his name in a court of law.

If he can stand down Hon Tkatchenko for using words unbecoming, if he can ask Hon Tambua to step down pending serious allegations from his wife and daughters, then our PM ought to be consistent and step aside in light of the serious and compelling court documents that reveal his purported role in the Paraka payments.

I have personally advised our PM on what I think he should do and I hope he finds it in himself to do the honorable thing.

I take responsibility for being one of 100 plus MPs who voted for this government and I share the blame for the lack of movement on the key issues I mentioned before.

By leaving government, I hope to preserve whatever dignity I have left and serve our people from the opposition benches.

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