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Article

29 Jan 2020

Author:
Kate Lyons, The Guardian

Papua New Guinea: President of the Autonomous Bougainville Government clears RTG claims

"Bougainville president accuses mining company of lying to Australian stock exchange", 24 January 2020

The president of the autonomous Bougainville government has accused an Australian-linked mining company of lying to the Australian Securities Exchange over its plans to reopen one of the world's largest copper mines.

...John Momis...said his government "will not rest until all RTG and their executives are banned for life from Bougainville and Papua New Guinea".

[...]

However, RTG clarified in its statement to the ASX that its executives were "not banned from travel to Papua New Guinea" and emphasised that "the national government currently [have] constitutional authority over border control for the country".

[...]

There are disputes over land rights at the Panguna mine site, but RTG is the joint venture partner of the Special Mining Lease Osikaiyang Landowners Association (SMLOLA). RTG wrote in their statement to the ASX that the members of the SMLOLA "are the customary landowners who own the minerals at the Panguna Mine under the Bougainville Mining Act".

However, Momis said the SMLOLA was established under an old system and that the autonomous Bougainville government considered its claims over the mine "illegal, null and void".

There are concerns that disputes over land rights at the mine site might reignite tensions in the region. The Bougainville government enacted an indefinite moratorium on renewing the licence of BCL, a controversial mining company, in January 2018 over fears it could reignite violent civil conflict. However, since then, the government has shown signs that it was in favour of restarting mining in the region.

[...]