Marape: No place for regionalism in military

 8th January 2022

By CLIFFORD FAIPARIK

THE PNG Defence Force belongs to the whole of Papua New Guinea and not to be dominated by an ethnic group or a region, Prime Minister James Marape says.

“It (PNGDF) is the chief corner stone of our sovereignty in a nation of thousand tribes. From the eastern most part of the country (Autonomous Region Of Bougainville and Milne Bay ) that divides Solomon Island and  PNG,  to the most northern part (Manus )of our Micronesian neighbors, to the western-most part (West Sepik )that divides PNG with West Papua in Indonesia and to the southern part (Western )that divides PNG, Australia and also Indonesia .The  entire of  the sovereignty of our nationhood is embodied in the personality of the  PNGDF as its role to maintain our sovereignty.”

Marape said that during the promotion of Colonel Mark Goina to Major General and the Announcement of his appointment as the new Chief of PNGDF at Murray Barracks in Port Moresby last week. “It is in our constitution that there must have a regional balance in our key constitutional office holders. In this context, in police, we have the Commissioner from New Guinea Island and chief of PNGDF from the Papuan region who earns his stripes on merit. And in the rank and file of the PNGDF, we have qualified military officers from all over the country. And many of our appointments in public office is regionally balanced. “We maintain a harmony to ensure that key constitutional offices holders are regionally balanced. And that is to ensure that the country is always protected as we progress forward.

”Marape said that “Appointments of public office holders is not based on the region you coming from.  But is based on the best man available for that job.  And having consider everything we got Goina as the new chief of PNGDF. Our challenges remain huge in security, tribalism, and now we face a challenge of a part of our country (Autonomous Region of Bougainville) trying to break away from us (PNG). Also election is coming up and you (PNGDF) will support the Police. 

Forgot politics and remain focused on your job.  Marape also acknowledge the outgoing Chief of PNGDF Major General Gilbert Toropo. “For eight years he has stepped up to hold the Force that was under resourced and underfunded. But he has to go and we have appointed him as the High Commissioner to New Zealand. 

Caption: Mark Goina’s wife Mirah pinning the ranks to her husband’s shoulders with the help of the Prime Minister James Marape and Deputy Chief Of Staff Colonel Tim Marsden at the Officers mess at Murray Barracks in Port Moresby last week.

PNGDF is heavily politicized

Papua New Guinea Defense Force Commander Major General Gilbert Toropo

Relieving the Papua New Guinea Defense Force Commander Major General Gilbert Toropo on the basis of age doesn’t sit well especially when considering set precedence and the manner in which the Marape administration is dispensing executive order. And this comes amidst the Marape led government’s sweeping changes across key state institutions in the twilight of its fading tenure.

People are asking since when did a PNG government considered going pass the age limit was a serious impediment to performance in the public service?

Particularly on the premise that not so long ago a retired Colonel by the name of Yaura Sasa was rushed into the citadel of the PNGDF command and control.

PNGDF Commander Toropo was well into the first part of his second term as the country’s top military advisor and commander of the army when some paper pushers in Waigani decided that the military must bend to political convenience.

Commander Toropo, is among the few, or if not the only special force soldier trained by the United States army and is acclaimed by many as a smart, measured and energetic military leader who dragged the aging army into modern discipline and command and control.

It is not about the question of who commands the army but concern on the detriment of the army’s honour and sanctity from the dirty hands of politics.

If PM James Marape has done nothing else in his troubled, turbulent tenure, he has sensitized us anew to concerns about the politicization of the military ­— along with the diplomatic corps. As much as the subject demands our attention, it has largely escaped the level of scrutiny and understanding it deserves.

Ours being a system of governance based on popular sovereignty — rule of, by, and for the people — the military, belongs to the people it is charged with representing.
Can the government do whatever it wants with the military? Our chosen form of government, representative democracy, is built of constitutionally empowered, co-equal institutions charged with checking and balancing one another.

Our army has been the most trusted institution for decades. It has managed to remain above the partisan political fray that has consumed many once-trusted cornerstones of constitutional offices.

Like all things crumbling from the tainted touch of this government the military is increasingly politicized in recent times, in ways that profoundly threaten its reputation for nonpartisanship. Left unchecked, this may gravely endanger the army to remain apolitical — which would have disastrous consequences for the nation’s security.

Using the army to score political points let alone to shop for votes will set a dangerous trend that will compromise its integrity and reputation as the cornerstone of our democracy.

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