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Papua New Guinea says Australia to finance police reinforcements

An initial contingent of 20 police will be flown into the country during the first quarter of 2024, Police Commissioner David Manning told AFP.

AFP
Port Moresby
Tue, February 6, 2024

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Papua New Guinea says Australia to finance police reinforcements Papua New Guinea’s Prime Minister James Marape (right) shakes hands with Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Parliament House in Canberra on December 7, 2023. (AFP/Hilary Wardhaugh)

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ustralia will bolster Papua New Guinea's struggling police force by financing reinforcements from Commonwealth countries, the Pacific island nation's police chief said Tuesday.

An initial contingent of 20 police will be flown into the country during the first quarter of 2024, Police Commissioner David Manning told AFP.

Papua New Guinea will pay "absolutely nothing" under the Australian-funded initiative, Manning said, without providing financial details.

About 50 officers from the Commonwealth -- a club of more than 50 nations that are almost all former territories of the British Empire -- were expected to arrive this year, the police chief said. 

The scheme, which could encompass as many as 100 reinforcements, is set to run for two years, Manning said. 

An official announcement on deployments would be made after contracts had been completed, he said.

The country's police minister, Peter Tsiamalili, said this week that the reinforcements would wear Papua New Guinea police uniforms, operate under the country's laws, and report to Manning.

Australia's foreign ministry has been asked to comment.

News of the Australian scheme comes a week after it emerged that China had last year offered to train and equip Papua New Guinea's police.

Beijing's proposal raised the prospect of Chinese security personnel deploying to a country a short distance from Australia's northern coast.

Papua New Guinea's foreign minister said last week that "it would not be the end of the world" if the Chinese overture was rejected.

The South Pacific nation's police force numbers just a few thousand officers for a population of almost 10 million people. 

Security is precarious in much of the country.

A police strike over unexplained deductions from officers' pay was blamed for stoking riots last month in which at least 25 people were killed.

Papua New Guinea struck separate security agreements with the United States and Australia last year.

Concerned by China's growing influence in the South Pacific, Australia is seeking to strengthen ties with traditional allies including Papua New Guinea.

Australia has also agreed to spend about US$25 million renovating and expanding Papua New Guinea police barracks and housing, Manning said previously.

Papua New Guinea Prime Minister James Marape is due to visit Australia this week, with an address to parliament scheduled for Thursday.

While Australia is by far its largest donor, Chinese firms have made inroads into the impoverished but resource-rich island nation's markets.

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