The Papua New Guinean government worked to restore order yesterday after at least 15 people were reportedly killed during rioting and looting that left the country’s two biggest cities in flames.
The unrest began in the capital, Port Moresby, on Wednesday after hundreds of police officers, soldiers, prison staff and public servants walked off their jobs in protest over a pay dispute.
The Papua New Guinean government attributed the pay cut to an administrative glitch.
Photo: AFP
Similar riots also caused damage in Lae, the second-biggest city in the southwestern Pacific country. Australian Broadcasting Corp reported that at least 15 people died in Port Moresby and Lae.
An additional 180 defense personnel flew into Port Moresby yesterday.
Tensions in the country have risen amid high unemployment and increased living costs.
Papua New Guinean Prime Minister James Marape said Port Moresby was “under stress and duress,” but that violence had eased.
“Police were not at work yesterday in the city and people resorted to lawlessness — not all people, but in certain segments of our city,” Marape said at a news conference yesterday. “[The] situation report as of this morning shows tension in the city has subsided.”
Many shops and banking services were closed yesterday as business owners repaired damage.
Papua New Guinea is a diverse, developing nation of mostly subsistence farmers where about 800 languages are spoken. It is in a strategically important part of the South Pacific. With 10 million people, it the most populous South Pacific nation after Australia, which is home to 26 million.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese appealed for calm.
He said his government had not received any requests for help from its closest neighbor.
Papua New Guinea and Australia last month signed a bilateral security pact.
Papua New Guinea struggles to contain escalating tribal violence and civil unrest in remote regions and has a long-term aim to increase its police force from 6,000 officers to 26,000.
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