PNG could choose next PM by this week

PNG is expected to elect its next prime minister by the end of the week, according to analysts.

The parliament of Papua New Guinea (PNG) will elect a prime minister at the end of the week, in an election marred by poor organisation and opposition accusations of electoral roll irregularities.

With no political party able to clinch enough seats to form a government, analysts said the outcome remained too close to call, stirring voter frustration that could trigger more unrest in the resource-rich South Pacific nation.

On Saturday, incumbent Prime Minister Peter O'Neill was invited to try to form a coalition government, with his party on track to win the largest number of seats, although fewer than half the 56 needed, forcing him to woo coalition partners.

"The ruling People's National Congress and the main opposition, the National Alliance party, each believe they have the numbers, it is very close," said Jonathan Pryke, a research fellow at Australian think-tank the Lowy Institute.

Wednesday's vote to determine PNG's next parliamentary speaker will offer a clue to which party has the necessary support to win the prime ministerial vote, analysts say.

However, both decisions are unlikely to be made by a full complement of MPs, as vote counting continues after polls had to be extended when a large number of voters were unable to cast ballots.

PNG voters went to the polls to elect a new 111-member parliament in late June, but use of an electoral roll dating from 2012 meant many voters could not vote, forcing an extension of a two-week window.

Most of PNG's nearly eight million people live at subsistence level on islands, atolls and in remote mountain villages, despite the country's mineral wealth, evidenced by energy giant Exxon Mobil's $A25 billion LNG plant.

"It is most unlikely that all seats will have been declared by Friday," said a source close to the main opposition National Alliance Party, who declined to be named as he was not authorised to talk to the media.

"The numbers won't matter, the prime minister will be determined by the majority present on the day."

Voter dissatisfaction with the election triggered sporadic violence nationwide, but O'Neill's re-election could stoke more tension, as many are disenchanted by corruption allegations against him that he denies.

The winner faces a tough economic task, with the 2016 budget deficit of 34 per cent of GDP having doubled from 2012, worsened by a slump in energy prices.

PNG must also grapple with fallout from plans to close an Australian-run detention centre home to just over 800 refugees.


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Source: AAP



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