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New Guinea 1932, when Australia needed New Guinea like a city needs water and the fuzzy wuzzy angels could be relied upon

Colonial fever was still hot at the turn of the twentieth century. Sometimes it takes a deadly military campaign to realize some places are better left alone. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

Todays stamp features a bird of paradise that is native to the tropical island. Still a common vision on todays successor Papua stamps. The bloody price paid by outsiders for the presence on New Guinea means that the draw is no longer as great.

Todays stamp is issue A32, a 3 Penny stamp issued by the territory of New Guinea in 1932 while the area was under a League of Nations mandate to Australia. It was part of a 15 stamp issue in various denominations issued over many years. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth $1.25 used.

The northeastern part of the island of New Guinea was first colonized by the Germans. This caused some consternation in the then still British colonies on Australia. They were concerned about the sea trade lanes and just the presence of a potentially hostile  power. In fact the colony of Queensland tried to formally annex German New Guinea. This was quickly resinded by the British foreign office who had no interest in the expense of starting a colony and no wish to comfront Germany. Germany formed a private company to exploit  the territory and tried to set up rubber plantations. This did not go well as without slavery it was nearly impossible to get Guineans to work. The Germans tried to demand labor in order to pay taxes that required cash to pay but results were poor and rebellions frequent. Chinese or Indians were not brought in as would have happened in a British colony. At the beginning of World War I, Australian troops landed and got rid of the Germans with hardly a fight.

Post war, the Australians strongly argued for continued presence in New Guinea as an outside Australia line of defense. Australian Prime Minister Billy Hughes said that strategically the northern island encompass Australia like fortresses and are as necessary to Australia as is water to a city. The League of Nations awarded the mandate to Australia in 1921. At this point it was administered separately from Papua to the south.

The fortress aspect came true during World War II.  The Japanese landed and were able to establish a foot hold at Rabaul the capital but the Australians were able to hold on to Port Moresby to the south. From Rabaul, Japan was able to bomb Darwin and if they possessed larger bombers more of Australia would have been subject to bombing. What followed was a bloody three year campaign to dislodge the Japanese and caused the death of 7000 Australian soldiers, 7000 Americans and 30,000 Japanese. The Guineans/Papuans themselves played no part in the fighting although Australians made propaganda of Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels that assisted Australians and allowed them to imply they had native support. No doubt Imperial Japan would never imply they require the services of Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels or Devils for that matter.

A wounded Australian soldier being assisted a New Guinean native, a Fuzzy Wuzzy Angel in 1942

After the war came a new UN mandate and new joint administration with Papua. The expense of fortresses on New Guinea was deemed too expensive and Australias forward defense post war would be handled by long range bombers, aircraft carriers and the ANZUS alliance. Papua New Guinea was set on course to independence which was achieved in the 1970s. The Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels are no longer considered so angelic as they have soaked up much Australian foreign aid that was mostly squandered.

Well my drink is empty and I may have a few more while I consider the plight of New Guinea. Another place where the colonizers should have left well enough alone. Come again for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2019.

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Papua New Guinea 1973, Australia spends up to at least have something they can take a picture of

Australia did their best with PNG. After independence over half the national budget was provided by Australia. Yet the country failed to achieve. Most of the money was wasted or stolen. Hence the attraction of tangible projects that pictures can be taken of. Life expectancy was under 50, illiteracy was rampant, but check out our satellite dishes. Crazy. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

This was a big aid project, bringing modern telecommunications to PNG. It took over four years. So the stamps showing it off went all out. This stamp was one corner of a four stamp bloc. The stamps show satellite dishes, relay stations and helicopters slinging heavy loads up Mt. Tomavatur. If natives ever sent a letter, they must have thought the colonials nuts. They surely were allowed nowhere near it.

Todays stamp is issue A81, a seven cent stamp issued by Papua New Guinea on January 21st, 1973 ahen it was still a colony of Australia. It was  a six stamp issue, four in the block and two others. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used. Keeping the block of four stamps together would have increased the value 40% all the way up to $1.40.

Australia at it’s closest point is only 4km from the island of New Guinea. So during World War I, they cleared the area of the former German colony. In World War II, the Japanese landed and it was a much harder slog to clear the Japanese from the island. The campaign cost over 8000 Australian deaths. Natives were uninvolved in either war. Post war Australia rethought it’s defense strategy abandoning fortifications on islands like New Guinea and acquiring aircraft carriers and long range bombers for forward defense.

Still a grave mistake was made on New Guinea. Instead of leaving, Australia turned the place into a colony. Post war this was a new style colony that sought to bring the people up. The World Bank was brought in to design the program. It all this sounds expensive it was and unsuccessful. Hence the lure of silliness like satellite dishes that at least give you something to show for the money spent.

Papua New Guinea became independent in 1975, but Australian aid was still the bulk of the economy. They lucked out in acquiring the services of Prime Minister Sonome. He designed PNG’s development plan because after all driving a car gets you no where if you do not know the destination. Economic activity did not actually get going so in 2011 PNG developed a new growth roadmap. It quoted liberally the failed 1975 plan and still had Prime Minister Sonome to implement it. You can read it here, http://www.treasury.gov.pg/html/publications/files/pub_files/2011/2011.png.vision.2050.pdf   . PNG had acquired a leader for life, Africa Style. Australia has finally started scaling back the aid, now “only” 500 million a year. PNG noticed that Australian government spending on Australians have gone up recently and they are annoyed. They recently asked for 600 million in emergency aid from Australia, the new Prime Minister is apparently having trouble fulfilling his campaign promise of making PNG the richest black nation on Earth. When will leaders learn to under promise? He thinks the aid would work better if it was redirected straight to the government. Ha.

Telephones in PNG are not originally a Australian idea. The first phone lines were laid by the Germans in 1905. They connected the 18 phones in the colony. Mount Tornavatur is still home to the satellite dishes and now also hosts cell phone towers. Life expentancy now has made it to 57 and literacy to 70%.

Well my drink is empty and I may have a few more while I contemplate the Australian failure on PNG. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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Australia attempts nation building in Papua New Guinea but only enriches a corrupt elite

In studying colonial issue stamps, we wrestle with how a colonial power leaves. Some times the best laid plans go wrong. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

There is a period in a march toward independence that this stamp represents well. The colonials are still in power, but there is an effort to make a place in the institutions for the locals. This is well intended. However some of the institutions will have no relevance to locals. Thus the craft worker on the stamp from 1969, nor the Papuan craft worker of today will not have any awareness of the International Labour Association, which this stamp celebrates.

The stamp today is issue A62, a 5 cent stamp issued by the Territory of Papua and New Guinea on September 24th, 1969. It was a single stamp issue celebrating the 50th anniversary of the International Labour Organization. According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents whether it is mint or used.

Papua New Guinea is a very diverse place where English is the language of government and Christianity widely practiced. The vast majority of the people  are indigenous Papuans with many different tribal languages and religious practices. Perhaps not the ideal place to launch a political system based on Australia but that is what was intended. Australia became the colonial power after World War II. A several year campaign had been fought during that war by the Australians to remove the Japanese. More than 7000 Australians died in that ultimately successful effort.

An Australian Brigadier General Donald Cleland was appointed administrator. He set out making places for locals in the institutions and set up a local assembly. His wife Rachel worked with local chapters of the YWCA and the Girl Guides. Donald Cleland ended the ban on natives drinking alcohol. The World Bank was invited in to devise a development plan that was funded mostly by Australia. As independence neared, Cleland stayed on in retirement and served as chancellor of the University of Papua New Guinea and of the local archdiocese of the Anglican Church.

Independence was achieved in 1975 with Michael Somare being the first prime minister. He was educated first by the occupying Japanese and then later by the Australians and became a teacher. He became an advocate for independence and pointed to the problem of local artifacts not being preserved. The colonial authority named him to the board chair of the national Museum.

As Prime Minister, things did not go so well. There was never stability with constantly shifting alliances and no confidence votes between the same few people including Somare. The artifacts proved not really to be important to him as the national Museum became derelict post independence. There have been constant corruption charges that the powerful refuse to respond to. Mr. Somare sneered at the house that was given to the country by Australia for the prime minister as not grand enough. He has since bought a series of homes that he refuses to say how he paid for. Australia attempted to send police and administrators to see that their aid was not squandered but they were refused entry into the country.

The way I have written this might make Cleland look good and Somare look bad. This could be thought of as being an apologist of colonialism. While I feel it is not debatable that Cleland occupies a higher moral ground the problem really is how the same they are. Somare may be ethnically local and sometimes adorns himself in the trappings of a local tribesman, he is no closer to the average Papuan than Cleland. He is a product of the colonial system that Australia imposed. That he resents it and games it for more aid is not surprising. That the locals tolerate his ilk is the real surprise.

Well my drink is empty so I will open the discussion in the below comment section. Come again for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.