The broader context of the murder of DWU student Nigel Laki
15 March 2014
FR GIORGIO LICINI | Catholic Reporter PNG
THE brutal murder of Divine Word University student Nigel Laki on Friday afternoon in the streets of Madang will shock the community and shake the nation.
Early rumours blame settlement youth but police are still investigating and some say the outcome could be different. University President Fr Jan Czuba SVD stated today that alcohol was not a stranger.
The shock comes as another young promising life is lost to the family and to the community for no understandable and acceptable reason.
Schoolmates and friends grieve a loss that is forever. Leaders and authorities scramble in trying to contain immediate anger and emotions to avoid eye for eye, tooth for tooth retribution.
PNG is a Christian Country and Divine Word a Christian University. We cannot go down that path!
The nation, however, needs to feel shaken. Settlements exist in all developing countries and at times even in first world countries. They are not places full of rascals. Teachers, bank employees, policemen and other people in the so-called working class live in settlements.
They simply cannot afford to purchase, build or rent a house. Any current tertiary student is a potential settlement dweller.
The problem is wider. It relates to urbanisation because of lack of development, facilities and amenities in rural areas. It is aggravated by tribal fights and sorcery persecution that force people out of their remote but agriculturally prosperous villages in the Highlands.
It becomes hell when a city does not find its own Powes Parkop providing scholarships to school drop outs and casual job opportunities to those who can just room the streets.
Settlements in a city full of students like Madang are a hazard. Rausim ol! (evict them!) becomes the mantra of the victims’ friends exasperated by too many incidents and injuries.
But where are you going to put people? The alternatives can only be realistic, viable, and acceptable. When people cannot go back to their village or are second generation in the city, they can only put up a new settlement somewhere a couple of miles away.
Consider instead the total closing down and SP Brewery and sale of beer in the country. There will still be alcoholism, but not at this intolerable level. Think of a serious housing program for PNG urban areas.
Churches, NGOs and Universities, reserve a yearly budget for assistance to nearby settler dwellers, especially school fees, medical assistance, a Christmas gift! Invite those jobless and unskilled boys outside your gate to help in maintenance works when needed in your compound.
Since many of us have lived or live in settlement areas, we know that their disadvantaged boys can either be our worst enemies or our best friends… We know that it all depends on the way we shake hands with them and extend a bit of understanding and help.
Not necessarily SP homebrew (yawa) brewing and consumption is at its peak.
Posted by: Lynnette Amepou | 15 March 2014 at 05:06 PM
Indeed, Unitech is also surrounded by settlements, where regrettably many of our permanent staff live, the working poor. In Lae, we saw the non-temporary prohibition increases the investments in illegal distilleries, that make a potentially lethal brew.
"Closing down" SP, will just swell the ranks of the unemployed. India has successful experiences converting informal owners of urban land, into formal owners of houses or apartments. Why not take a page from that book?
Posted by: Albert Schram | 15 March 2014 at 04:38 PM