THE STRIKE by police in Papua New Guinea resulted in rioting that left more than 15 people dead on Thursday.
Papua New Guinea, Prime Minister James Marape appealed for calm as protests descended into rioting and looting in the absence of police. Eight people died in the capital Port Moresby while seven more were killed in Lae in the country’s north, according to an update from police.
Television footage showed thousands in the streets of Port Moresby on Wednesday with many carrying what appeared to be looted goods. Black smoke billowed over the city, and a crowd torched a police car outside the prime minister’s office. The Chinese embassy said Chinese-owned businesses had been targeted and an unspecified number of its citizens had been hurt. Marape told a news conference on Thursday that police reinforcements had been flown into Port Moresby, and the situation in the capital had calmed.
The Post Courier newspaper said soldiers had been deployed to help restore law and order and that military vehicles were on the streets in a “show of strength”. “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. Police went on strike on Wednesday morning after discovering a reduction in their pay packets.
An official told local radio FM100 on Wednesday that without police, the city had “lost control”.
Beijing said it had lodged “solemn representations” with Papua New Guinea as a result of the unrest.
By Desmond Nleya, Daily Times