PNG pledges to pay police APEC allowances after parliament rampage

Authorities in Papua New Guinea's capital have called for calm after security forces stormed the country's parliament, spurring unrest and looting across the city.

PNG police officers and soldiers stormed parliament over unpaid wages.

PNG police officers and soldiers stormed parliament over unpaid wages. Source: Twitter / Mark Davis @PoroMark

Papua New Guinea have pledged to pay police and soldiers their allowances for the recently concluded APEC summit after they stormed parliament to demand the unpaid bonuses.

Up to 300 security personnel smashed windows and trashed furniture in parliament on Tuesday in protest over the special allowance for helping to protect the gathering of Asia-Pacific leaders, which ended Sunday.

The outburst prompted looting around the capital, one of the world's most crime-ridden cities.
PNG police officers and soldiers stormed parliament over unpaid wages.
PNG police officers and soldiers stormed parliament over unpaid wages. Source: Twitter / Mark Davis @PoroMark
Calm was restored after government ministers met with the protesters late Tuesday and agreed to pay the APEC allowance plus an additional bonus to all local personnel, police spokesman Dominic Kakas told AFP Wednesday.

"Everything is back to normal," Kakas said.
The lavish welcome for the international dignitaries had stirred resentment in Papua New Guinea, the poorest of APEC's 21 member nations.
The police officers and troops are protesting lost wagesThe government says it will now pay the lost APEC allowances, police and troops are demanding.
The government says it will now pay the lost APEC allowances, police and troops are demanding. Source: PNG TV
Preparations for the summit included the construction of purpose-built roads and conference centres, and the purchase of 40 luxury Maseratis to ferry visiting leaders around.
Security officers were further frustrated when they learned their special duty allowance for the summit was far less than the amount paid to foreign reinforcements brought in for the event, the Post Courier newspaper reported.


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Source: AFP, SBS


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