Autonomy For Bougainville – A Parallel For Tamils
Bougainville (B) Region comprises two large Islands of B and Buka, in the Papua New Guinea (PNG) Archipelago. B is rich in copper and a mine was opened in 1969 in Panguna located in the central area. In 1972 a measure of autonomy was given to B. However in 1975 when a Constitution Planning Committee toured the country seeking views, B conveyed its demand for secession.
Copper promised wealth to a resource poor B, but when mining commenced PNG’s relationship was exploitative. On profit sharing, there was violent disagreement between PNG government and B. PNG appropriated virtually all at 20% giving B, 0.5-2.0%. Unfair distribution incensed feelings which were further exacerbated by ethnic and linguistic differences between B and PNG. It sparked a 10 year civil war 1989 – 1998, which claimed 20,000 lives and displaced 70,000. At present the population is 220,000 and it is fairly evenly spread geographically across B.
Consequent to a ceasefire in 1998, the Bougainville Peace Agreement was signed in August 2001 between PNG and Bougainville Revolutionary Army. What followed was a constitution for an Autonomous Bougainville Government (ABG). It was approved by the PNG Parliament in December 2004. It specified 3 branches.
- Legislative – Bougainville House of Representatives of 39 elected members and 2 ex officio.
- Executive – Bougainville Executive Council
- Judicial – Bougainville courts including a Supreme Court and 7 High Courts
In principle, the respective powers and functions shall be kept separate. The first election was held in 2005. The President was elected and the Vice-President was selected by the House of Representatives. The second election was in 2010. A referendum regarding Bougainville independence is set to happen in the period 2015 – 2020.
Papua New Guinea (PNG) Read More














The Special Task Force (STF) has set up snap road blocks in the Northern Province.




I 