Plea for UN intervention over illegal PNG logging
Logging ship, Turubu Bay, East Sepik (taken from cover image of 'The FCA Logging Scandal' report).
Photo:
Oakland Institute
A United Nations Committee is being urged to act on human rights violations committed by illegal loggers in Papua New Guinea.
Watchdog groups ACT NOW and Jubilee Australia have filed a formal request to the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination to consider action at its next meeting in August.
"We have stressed with the UN that there is pervasive, ongoing and irreparable harm to customary resource owners whose forests are being stolen by logging companies," ACT NOW campaign manager Eddie Tanago said
He said these abuses are systematic, institutionalised, and sanctioned by the PNG government through two specific tools: Special Agriculture and Business Leases (SABLs) and Forest Clearing Authorities (FCAs) - a type of logging licence."
"For over a decade since the Commission of Inquiry into SABLs, successive PNG governments have rubber stamped the large-scale theft of customary resource owners' forests by upholding the morally bankrupt SABL scheme and expanding the use of FCAs," Tanago said.
He said the government had failed to revoke SABLs that were acquired fraudulently, with disregard to the law or without landowner consent.
"Meanwhile, logging companies have made hundreds of millions, if not billions, in ill-gotten gains by effectively stealing forests from customary resource owners using FCAs."
The complaint also highlights that the abuses are hard to challenge because PNG lacks even a basic registry of SABLs or FCAs, and customary resource owners are denied access to information to the information they need, such as:
"The only reason why foreign companies engage in illegal logging in PNG is to make money," he said, adding that "it's profitable because importing companies and countries are willing to accept illegally logged timber into their markets and supply chains."
ACT NOW campaigner Eddie Tanago
Photo:
Facebook / ACT NOW!
"If they refused to take any more timber from SABL and FCA areas and demanded a public audit of the logging permits - the money would dry up."
ACT NOW and Jubilee Australia are hoping that this UN attention will urge the international community to see this is not an issue of "less-than-perfect forest law enforcement".
"This is a system, honed over decades, that is perpetrating irreparable harm on indigenous peoples across PNG through the wholesale violation of their rights and destroying their forests."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
3 hours ago
- RNZ News
Burnham Camp - the spiritual home of Bougainville peace process
ABG President Ishamel Toroama, sitting front (2nd left), with Sir Jerry Mateparae and PNG Prime Minister James Marape at the Joint Consultation Moderator Meeting. 17 March 2025 Photo: Autonomous Bougainville Government The Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea, James Marape, says next week's meeting involving the governments of PNG and Bougainville is a milestone in the ongoing post referendum consultations. In 2019 an overwhelming percentage of Bougainvilleans, 97.7 percent, voted for independence from PNG. The referendum, though mandated by the 2001 Peace Agreement, was not binding. The week of meetings is being held at New Zealand's Burnham army camp, near Christchurch. In a statement Marape said Burnham is widely regarded as the spiritual home of the Bougainville peace process, after the role it played in hosting talks in 1997 that led to a cease fire in the civil war and the eventual Peace Agreement. PNG Bougainville Premier Gerard Sinato signs the "Burnham Declaration" in 1997, which set in motion an end to the civil war. Photo: AFP He said the Burnham talks will focus on finalising the process to bring the referendum results before the National Parliament. Marape said the Era Kone Convenant committed both governments to present the referendum before parliament in 2025. He said these steps will determine how that happens and what constitutional steps must be followed and that this will be grounded in mutual respect, dialogue and the spirit of reconciliation. Teams of officials from both the PNG and Bougainville Governments were expected to arrive in Christchurch today.

RNZ News
14 hours ago
- RNZ News
Australian and NZ anti-corruption bosses embroiled in 'chaos' at ICAC PNG
By Papua New Guinea correspondent Marian Faa , ABC The feud between (from left) Graham Gill, Andrew Forbes and Daniel Baulch has left the anti-corruption organisation "dysfunctional". Photo: Supplied / Independent Commission Against Corruption PNG Papua New Guinea's peak anti-corruption body is on the brink of implosion , senior staff say, as its three commissioners, who hail from Australia and New Zealand, level criminal allegations at each other. The country's Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) began operating in 2023 but has been hamstrung by feverish leadership tensions. Deputy commissioners Graham Gill and Daniel Baulch have accused commissioner Andrew Forbes of suspected corruption and abuse of power, alleging in a letter that he secretly manipulated ICAC legislation to give himself exclusive power over key agency functions. Meanwhile, Forbes has referred his deputies to police for alleged misconduct involving the authorisation of travel and accommodation costs. Several sources have told the ABC almost all the agency's expatriate staff, including multiple Australians, are likely to resign, stripping the organisation of expertise needed to fight corruption. They have described an environment of "chaos". One staff member, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the situation was "disgraceful" and the organisation had become "completely dysfunctional". It comes at a crucial time, as Papua New Guinea fights desperately to avoid being grey-listed by an international anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing watchdog. Kerenga Kua, an opposition MP and former head of the PNG law society, told the ABC the paralysis of ICAC was disappointing for PNG, which may lose more than a billion dollars to corruption each year. "After many, many years of decay and decadence at the hands of white-collar crime … we were looking forward to a bigger, better and brighter future," Kua said. "The whole thing, the way it's been handled at the ICAC level and at the Appointments Committee level is truly regrettable." When the ICAC was set up two years ago, there were high hopes it would mark a turning point for PNG in combating corruption. The commissioners were selected by a group - chaired by PNG Prime Minister James Marape with representatives from the opposition, the judiciary, the Public Services Commission and churches - known as the Appointments Committee. But things at PNG ICAC turned south when the agency began to investigate its own commissioner, Andrew Forbes, early last year. "We reasonably suspect that the commissioner has engaged in a course of corrupt conduct," Gill and Baulch wrote in a letter to the Appointments Committee last July. The next month, ICAC PNG commenced a formal investigation into Forbes, codenamed "Operation North". The investigation culminated in an arrest warrant being authorised last November, accusing Forbes of abusing "the authority of his office". Operation North alleged Forbes misused his position to secretly change laws, effectively giving himself exclusive power to probe politicians and public officials, according to a copy of the warrant seen by the ABC. The warrant said Forbes allegedly changed the wording of key ICAC regulations so that only qualified lawyers could conduct hearings and make orders, directions and summons. Forbes was the only commission member who fit that description, the warrant said, which meant those changes effectively gave him singular powers and stripped the ability of the deputy commissioners to carry out core responsibilities. It further alleged that Forbes deliberately concealed the changes to the regulations from the deputy commissioners and other ICAC staff. The letter to the Appointments Committee also accused Forbes of using his personal email address to message a senior public servant who was being investigated by the commission. The commissioner did not respond to the ABC's request for comment. Forbes is a lawyer from Brisbane who was previously a partner at the commercial law firm Turks Legal and has no apparent prior experience in anti-corruption work. His LinkedIn page states that his areas of expertise include commercial litigation, administrative and regulatory law. After the arrest warrant was authorised, Forbes obtained a court injunction stopping ICAC and the police from arresting him and conducting investigations into the matter while it was before the Appointments Committee. The commissioners at their swearing-in ceremony. Photo: Supplied / Independent Commission Against Corruption PNG Over the weekend, Forbes reported deputy commissioners Graham Gill and Dan Baulch to police for alleged financial misconduct. The ABC understands Gill and Baulch have since left PNG. Baulch is a former detective with Victoria police in Australia and Gill was a senior executive in charge of evaluation, intelligence and corporate affairs at the Serious Fraud Office in New Zealand. The fraud and anti-corruption squad confirmed it was investigating "serious allegations" related to fraudulent approval of travel and accommodation expenses. In a written response to the ABC, the deputy commissioners said they believed they had been "subjected to retaliatory behaviour" and that they would strongly defend the allegations". In a media release, Forbes said he "did not tolerate misconduct at any level" but did not provide further details about the deputies' alleged misconduct. It is not the first accusation levelled against a deputy commissioner. In August last year, two weeks after the complaint against him was lodged, Forbes referred Baulch to the Appointments Committee. He claimed Baulch failed to disclose a prior criminal charge in his application for a PNG visa and other immigration documents. He also accused Baulch of bullying and harassing Forbes's assistant when she was interviewed by Baulch as part of the Operation North investigation. The commissioner further claimed Baulch falsely made out he was authorised to approve ICAC requisitions and expenses. Almost a year since the matters against Forbes and Baulch were referred to the Appointments Committee, no decision has been reached. PNG Prime Minister James Marape during a visit to New Zealand in March. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone Several ICAC insiders have told the ABC they believe the Appointments Committee failed disastrously in its handling of the allegations against the deputy commissioners. "It's been terribly handled," one source said, speaking anonymously. "I think if they'd done their job properly then it wouldn't have got to the extent is has." Peter Aitsi, who chairs anti-corruption organisation Transparency International PNG, said when serious allegations of misconduct were made, the "right thing for individuals to do is step aside". Aitsi said an oversight committee should be appointed to resolve the issues as quickly as possible and restore ICAC's functions. Prime Minister James Marape did not respond directly to the ABC's questions. In a public media statement, he said the Appointments Committee had asked for a detailed report and legal review to be submitted to PNG's cabinet for consideration. "Once recommendations are endorsed, cabinet will take swift and responsible action to restore stability within ICAC," he said. "This institution must not fall. It was created to be a cornerstone in the fight against corruption - not a battleground of personalities and power struggles." ICAC staff were among those marching during the Walk Against Corruption in Port Moresby in June 2024. Photo: Supplied / Independent Commission Against Corruption PNG Many are concerned the recent issues within ICAC could worsen PNG's already-bleak chances of being grey-listed by the international anti-money laundering watchdog, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF). FATF "grey lists" countries it believes have weaknesses in its regimes for combating money laundering and terrorist financing. The country has already been put on notice by FATF and faces a review in October this year. Stephen Howes, an economist at the Lowy Institute in Australia, said PNG was grey-listed in 2014 - but removed quickly because it passed legislation the following year to strengthen the anti-corruption framework in the financial sector. "But now the view is that not enough has been done to implement that legislation," he said. "The recent ICAC implosion will do nothing to dispel that impression." Professor Howes said being grey-listed would make it harder for PNG's new banks to operate internationally. Grey-listing would also be a reputational blow for PNG, which marks its 50th anniversary of Independence in September this year. Despite the concerns, Transparency International's Peter Aitsi said the PNG public still had a strong belief in the value of ICAC. "We need to work quickly to reset and restore that trust again," he said. -ABC

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
PNG, Bougainville to talk independence in military camp near Christchurch, NZ
The launch of the Bougainville Digital Democracy Project is about empowering our citizens, said Bougainville President Ishamel Toroama. 25 March 2025 Photo: Autonomous Bougainville Government Talks between Papua New Guinea and Bougainville to decide on issues surrounding an independence referendum are to be held at Burnham military camp near Christchurch, New Zealand, this weekend. The moderator in the talks is former New Zealand governor-general Sir Jerry Mateparae, who sought to have the discussion at Burnham where critical talks in 1997 helped end the Bougainville civil war. The Burnham consultations will be conducted by Sir Jerry with the support of United Nations officials. The New Zealand Minister of Foreign Affairs, Winston Peters, said his government's involvement is to provide the venue and environment necessary for substantive discussions on Bougainville's political future. It is the third round of talks to try and resolve how the 2019 referendum results are tabled in the PNG parliament. The Bougainville government is strongly in support of independence from PNG and expects to achieve that status by 2027. Peters said reaching a mutually agreed outcome is important for Papua New Guinea, Bougainville, and the wider region, "s is upholding the integrity of the Bougainville Peace Agreement, to which New Zealand is a witnessing signatory".