They brought their laws - laws that took away our rights

05/05/2012 17:19

 

 

By Scott Waide @ Talking Edge PNG

Arua Arua Miria, a Motuan from Hanuabada  is an angry  man. Over the years, his people have seen their  traditional hunting and fishing grounds  taken from them through  “legal’ and illegal means. 
Like many other Papua New Guinean communities,  Motuan  land  was communally owned until the arrival of the British in 1884.  Commodore James  Erskine raised the Union Jack on Motuan land, declared it a protectorate of the British Empire and made laws that – over time –  took away the land rights of  the traditional landowners.
“The white man arrived just 200 years ago. We were here 2000 years before they arrived.
“They brought their laws – laws that took  away our rights.  Our ancestors placed their fingerprints on agreements, documents they didn’t understand,” Miria says. 
High rise buildings, nightclubs and offices stand on what used to be  traditional hunting grounds.  Beachfronts  were reclaimed by  a construction company  in the 1990s and is now the site of multimillion dollar developments.  On the opposite side of the Harbour,  the  Interoil refinery  stands in stark contrast to the savannah surroundings.  The  large processing tanks  shimmer in the afternoon sunlight.   This is on  the latest development that has imposed new restrictions on the Motuan way of life.  There is now an invisible buffer zone in front of the refinery  where  speedboats aren’t allowed.
Boga Daroa, another Motuan elder,  sits in his home  and faces towards the City  of  Port Moresby. His view of the refinery is  obstructed by  the corrugated  roofing  of his neighbors house.
“We’re seafaring people,  how can you stop us from using the sea?”
Today, the break down of their society is evident  as elders struggle to maintain order amongst  a large population of young people.  The Motuans of Hanuabada  have become a group of people on the verge of extinction.  With no more land to plant food and a polluted seafront, the elders are now beginning to hold discussions  about land rights.