Provinces of Papua New Guinea explained

Provincial-level divisions of Papua New Guinea
Territory:Independent State of Papua New Guinea
Current Number:22 provincial-level divisions:
20 Provinces
1 Autonomous Region
1 National Capital District
Population Range:Provinces only:
Smallest: 50,231 (Manus)
Largest: 674,810 (Morobe)
Area Range:Provinces only:
Smallest: 800order=flipNaNorder=flip (Manus)
Largest: 37911order=flipNaNorder=flip (Fly River)
Subdivision:Districts
Local-level government areas (LLG)
Wards
Census units (or villages)

For administrative purposes, Papua New Guinea is divided into administrative divisions called provinces. There are 22 provincial-level divisions, which include 20 provinces, the Autonomous Region of Bougainville, and the National Capital District of Port Moresby.

In 2009, the National Parliament of Papua New Guinea created two additional provinces, that officially came into being on 17 May 2012.[1] They were Hela Province, which was split from Southern Highlands Province, and Jiwaka Province, which was split from Western Highlands Province.[2]

Each province forms a provincial electorate, called a constituency, for the PNG national parliament. The 22 provincial members are chosen from single-member electorates. Each provincial member becomes governor of their province unless they take a ministerial position, in which case the governorship passes to an open member of the province.[3]

History

Immediately before independence on 16 September 1975, Papua New Guinea was divided into nineteen provinces and the National Capital District. These provinces corresponded to the "Districts" of the pre-Independence administration of the Territory of Papua and New Guinea.

The Bougainville issue

See also: Autonomous Region of Bougainville. It had been considered that an independent state with limited resources could ill afford the infrastructure of a two-level quasi-federal governmental structure. However, a secessionist movement in Bougainville, whose copper mine provided the largest single source of foreign exchange and whose contribution to the general revenue was crucial to the independent state's economic viability, forced the issue. The Bougainville secession movement declared the Republic of the North Solomons on 1 September 1975 and the central government very quickly responded by offering provincial status to Bougainville. For the sake of consistency, as there were or had been regional separatist movements in Papua and East New Britain, provincial status was offered to the other 18 Districts as well.

Bougainville continues to be a special case. A renewed secession movement emerged in 1988 and resulted in a violent military campaign on the island, the closing of the Bougainville Copper Mine with serious financial consequences for the central government, the destruction or running-down of most infrastructure on the island and, ultimately, the total quarantining of the province for a decade. The Sandline affair of 1997 was a political scandal that became one of the defining moments in Papua New Guinea's history, particularly that of the conflict in Bougainville.

The Bougainville secessionists came to terms with the central government in 1997. A constitution was drafted for a more autonomous regional polity within Papua New Guinea with its own president and provisions for a referendum on total autonomy in due course.

Government

Until 1995, the provinces had elected provincial assemblies and cabinets led by premiers; however, the country remained unitary, not federal. Unlike Canada, Australia, and the United States, whose federal governments are creatures of the provinces or states, but as with the provinces and states of Pakistan and India, the provinces are creatures of the central government and can be suspended by it or have their boundaries changed. Indeed, there have been suspensions of several provincial governments to address corruption or incompetence by elected provincial governments. Changes in the boundaries of those provinces which are adjacent to the former boundary between the Territories of Papua and New Guinea can cause special complications in the administration of statutes that apply in Papua or New Guinea but not both.

Ultimately in June 1995, in an effort to re-assert a measure of control by the central government over the often wayward provinces in an environment of limited numbers of personnel qualified for public office in many of the provinces, the office of the provincial premier was abolished and the regional (at-large) members of Parliament became provincial governors, while also retaining their seats in Parliament.

Naming of provinces

Several provincial governments have adopted a local name for their province. For example, Bougainville became North Solomons, Western became Fly River, Chimbu became Simbu, Northern became Oro, and West Sepik became Sandaun.

Though these names are accorded popular acceptance, they remain unofficial, as formal changes in province names require amendments to the Constitution, using the prescribed amending formula.

New provinces

In May 2012, two new provinces were established: Hela Province was split from Southern Highlands Province and Jiwaka Province from Western Highlands Province.[4]

List of provinces

For administrative purposes, Papua New Guinea is divided into four regions and also into 22 provinces, as follows (they are numbered according to the map on the top right):


  1. (map)
RegionProvinceCapitalGovernor
(as of 2022)
Area
(km2)
Population
(2011 census)
Density
(pop/km2)
1SouthernPort MoresbyRufina Peter29,998269,7566.21
2HighlandsKundiawaNoah Kool6,112376,47342.42
3Highlands Eastern HighlandsGorokaSimon Sia11,157 579,82538.35
4IslandsKokopoMichael Marum15,274328,36914.20
5MomaseWewakAllan Bird43,426450,5307.98
6Highlands EngaWabagPeter Ipatas11,704 432,04522.60
7Southern GulfKeremaChris Haiveta34,472 158,1943.04
8Momase MadangMadangRamsey Pariwa28,886493,90612.49
9IslandsLorengauCharlie Benjamin2,000 50,23120.76
10Southern Milne BayAlotauGordon Wesley14,345 276,51214.93
11Momase MorobeLaeLuther Wenge33,705674,81015.56
12Islands New IrelandKaviengJulius Chan9,557 194,06712.31
13Southern Oro (Northern)PopondettaGary Juffa22,735186,3095.82
14Islands BougainvilleBukaIshmael Toroama (President 2020)
Joe Lera
9,384 249,35815.18
15HighlandsMendiWilliam Powi15,089510,24523.86
16SouthernDaruTaboi Awe Yoto98,189 201,3511.53
17HighlandsMount HagenWai Rapa4,299362,85059.12
18IslandsKimbeSasindran Muthuvel20,387 264,2648.80
19Momase Sandaun (West Sepik)VanimoTony Wouwou35,820 248,4115.12
20Southern National Capital DistrictPort MoresbyPowes Parkop240364,1251051.95
21HighlandsTariPhilip Undialu10,498249,44917.71
22HighlandsKurumulSimon Kaiwi4,798343,98738.68

Regions

See main article: List of regions of Papua New Guinea. On a broader scale, PNG is divided into four regions. The regions are significant in daily life and are often the basis for the organisation of government services, corporate operations, sporting competitions, and even the machinations of politics. For instance, there has been much discussion over the years of how many Prime Ministers have come from each region, and whether a particular region is due to provide the next one. Ministers and departmental heads are often appointed to maintain an overall balance between the regions.

People generally identify quite strongly with their region, and inter-region rivalries can be intense. The four regions are:

Simbu, Eastern Highlands, Enga, Hela, Jiwaka, Southern Highlands, and Western Highlands.

East New Britain, Manus, New Ireland, Bougainville (North Solomons), and West New Britain.

East Sepik, Madang, Morobe, and West Sepik (Sandaun). (Momase is a recently devised word which combines the first two letters of Morobe, Madang, and Sepik.)

Central, Gulf, Milne Bay, Northern Province (Oro), Western (Fly), and the National Capital District.

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. http://www.islandsbusiness.com/news/index_dynamic/containerNameToReplace=MiddleMiddle/focusModuleID=130/focusContentID=28517/tableName=mediaRelease/overideSkinName=newsArticle-full.tpl "PNG’S new province Hela, Jiwaka declared"
  2. http://www.postcourier.com.pg/20090715/news05.htm Post-Courier, "Jiwaka, Hela set to go!" 15 July 2009
  3. Web site: About Our Parliament . National Parliament of Papua New Guinea.
  4. News: PNG creates two new provinces in the Highlands . 15 July 2009 . . 4 November 2011.