Government and society

Constitutional framework

Papua New Guinea’s constitution was adopted in 1975 and has been amended frequently since then. The country is a constitutional monarchy and a member of the Commonwealth. The British monarch, represented by a governor-general, is head of state, and the prime minister is head of government. The unicameral National Parliament has 111 members who are elected to serve five-year terms. Of those, 89 represent single-member “open” electorates (districts); each of the other 22 represents one of the provincial electorates. Parliament nominates the governor-general, who is then appointed by the British monarch. Parliament also elects the prime minister, who in turn appoints the ministers of the National Executive Council (cabinet).

Local government

Provincial-level government formerly consisted of 19 elected provincial assemblies and their executives. In 1995 the National Parliament instituted reforms that replaced this system with one in which the members of Parliament (MPs) who were elected to represent the provinces usually became the provincial governors while retaining their seats in the National Parliament. MPs from the “open” districts constitute the membership of the provincial assemblies along with presidents of local-level councils. This has meant that national legislators effectively control executive government at local levels. Although the parliamentarians gained control over considerable funds for their electorates, few provinces have seen appreciable benefits, and in most districts the coverage and quality of government services declined markedly after 1995.

Justice

Papua New Guinea’s judicial system has at its base a network of district courts presided over by magistrates. The higher-level National Court has the power of judicial review over the lower courts and handles serious civil and criminal matters. The Supreme Court is the final court of appeal, and it also reviews the decisions of the National Court and issues rulings on the constitutionality of laws. The Ombudsman Commission is a significant constitutional body with a major role in monitoring the ethical behaviour of national leaders under the Leadership Code—a set of ethical guidelines and responsibilities for state officers that is established in the constitution—as well as monitoring public administration.

The courts have dealt increasingly with political disputes over elections, constitutional and parliamentary matters, and Leadership Code cases. Below the formal court system but not integrated into it is a network of more than 1,000 village courts run by part-time local community appointees; these use customary law, mostly in dispute resolution aimed at preventing the escalation of local conflicts. Village court magistrates, almost all male, are assisted by local peace officers. Each province has a system of correctional institutions.

Political process

National elections are held every five years, and many hundreds of candidates run for seats in the National Parliament. Commonly, a high proportion—as many as three-fourths—of sitting MPs may lose their seats in a given election cycle, indicating popular discontent with the performance of legislators and reflecting the intensity of competition and fragmented nature of their electorates. Some regions have seen electoral violence and fraud. International and domestic observers, including civil-society watchdog groups, citizen election monitors, and local churches, have for decades alleged problems of corruption in government.

There are dozens of political parties in Papua New Guinea, although they generally lack clear policy differences or bases in ideology or class. Many of them succeed in gaining parliamentary representation, which prevents the dominance of the legislature by one or two major parties. Parties tend to be, essentially, parliamentary factions based around prominent leaders. Most MPs owe their election to local connections rather than to any political party that may have supported them. That has tended to create among elected officials a lack of loyalty toward parties, resulting in a fluid party system and party-hopping by MPs seeking personal advancement—often called “yo-yo politics.” A 2001 law, the Organic Law on the Integrity of Political Parties and Candidates (OLIPPAC), created a degree of relative stability by forbidding individual MPs from leaving or changing parties, although some of its provisions were later successfully challenged in court. Most parties have negligible local organization, although, after the institution of the OLIPPAC, incumbency helped the National Alliance Party to develop a branch structure in the provinces, gain more parliamentary seats, and lead the government for a number of years.