I don’t have the latest headlines loaded right now. If you’d like, I can fetch current news on Papua New Guinea chiefs and summarize the most recent developments. Do you want me to search now?
In the meantime, here’s how I can structure the update once I pull sources:
- Who are the chiefs or leaders being discussed (names and roles)
- The latest developments or events involving them
- Any notable political, social, or environmental context connected to these chiefs
- A quick timeline of recent key moments
- Short list of reliable sources for further reading
If you’d prefer, I can proceed to pull the latest news and return a concise briefing with citations.
Sources
17 June 2020 Chiefs from 28 *haus tambarans* – "spirit houses" – representing 78,000 people along Papua New Guinea's remote Sepik river have formally declared they want a proposal for the country's largest ever mine halted. … [...] Mine campaigner Emmanuel Peni told the Guardian PanAust had not been "honest or transparent" in its consultations with those who live in the Sepik river valley. [...] Peni, from Korogu village on the Sepik River, said the villages felt the need to make the...
www.business-humanrights.orgBritain’s Prince Charles delighted locals in Papua New Guinea with a brief address in pidgin after inspecting a military parade on Sunday, as he and wife Camilla conduct a jubilee tour of the Pacific.
www.scmp.comU.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has congratulated Papua New Guinea on its climate leadership and praised the South Pacific nation for its role in initiating the International Court of…
www.the-independent.comChief Ombudsman speaks to UPNG students, Gives update on Tkatchenko Issue and Defence Agreement Chief Ombudsman Richard Pagen and a team of senior officials met with the Students of the University of Papua New Guinea on 5 July 2023 at…
www.ombudsman.gov.pgPapua New Guinea, the resource-rich, volatile Pacific nation to Australia's north, is entering a fourth day of political chaos today, with two men vying to run the police force, two men – each with his own cabinet – claiming to be the prime minister, and a governor-general dumped for taking sides. Armed police patrolled the capital, Port Moresby, yesterday amid fears of civil unrest in a city notorious for its "raskol" gangs. One of the police commissioners, Tom Kulunga, called for calm as a...
www.independent.co.uk