Date: Fri, 21 Mar 1997 09:19:30 +1000 Subject: News from Papua New Guinea Sorry about the weird layout . . . _______________ The Age (Melbourne) Friday 21 March 1997 Chan bows to pressure By LINDSAY MURDOCH, Port Moresby, Thursday Papua New Guinea's Prime Minister, Sir Julius Chan, tonight suspended plans to use mercenaries in the fight against Bougainville rebels after another day of looting, rioting and shooting in Port Moresby. In a bold attempt to restore order and hold on to power, Sir Julius ordered an inquiry into the $A48million mercenaries contract with British-based Sandline International. Sir Julius said the contract would be suspended until the inquiry was completed in two weeks. He said the inquiry, to be headed by a National Court judge, indicated that the Government had ``listened to the wishes of the people''. The concession came after another day of violence in Port Moresby, during which at least four people were shot, three reportedly wounded by rubber bullets fired by police during outbreaks of looting and rioting. A soldier was among those injured. Earlier, an Australian delegation sent to PNG by the Prime Minister, Mr John Howard, met Sir Julius for more than four hours in an attempt to end the crisis. Meanwhile, the sacked military chief Brigadier-General Jerry Singirok tonight intensified his attacks on Sir Julius, accusing him of approving a plan for mercenaries to inflict mass destruction on Bougainville with weapons including missiles fired from gunships. Revealing for the first time details of the mercenary plan, General Singirok said he could not live with the death and destruction that was aimed at a population that included women and children. He said the plan was for bombing runs across Bougainville. The revelations came amid a stepped-up political campaign against Sir Julius being led by opposition politicians, community groups and students. Three of Sir Julius' senior ministers were meeting with military chiefs late tonight in an attempt to reach a deal that would end the military revolt. Sources said one of the main points for negotiation would be the possibility of dissolving the Government ahead of mid-year elections. Police fired tear-gas and bullets into crowds of protesters taking refuge in the grounds of the military headquarters in Port Moresby today, sparking an angry confrontation that came close to a shoot-out between police and soldiers. As several people were injured by rubber bullets, one man lost one of his hands when it was chopped off by a supermarket security guard armed with a machete. The man reached into a store to steal something. Authorities said tonight they were unable to control the street violence, which for the second successive day forced police to use tear-gas and fire shots at trouble-makers. The Australian Government was today presented with a petition from several non-government organisations in PNG asking it to assist with Sir Julius' resignation and to offer him political asylum. PNG's military sent a second petition to Sir Julius demanding the immediate reinstatement of General Singirok and a royal commission of inquiry into the mercenary affair. In Johannesburg, Executive Outcomes, the South African company involved in the Bougainville operation, said all its men were out of PNG. THE_NEWS | COMPUTERS | CLASSIFIEDS | FAIRFAX_RESEARCH | ABOUT_THE_AGE | FRONT PAGE =A91997 David Syme & Co Ltd --- from list aut-op-sy-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu ---
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