The Public Accounts Committee Inquiry into Department of Lands & Physical Planning
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
CONTENT PAGE
INTRODUCTION 6
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 6
CHRONOLOGY 9
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS 9
COMPOSITION OF THE COMMITTEE 10
JURISDICTION AND PURPOSE OF THE INQUIRY 12
JURISDICTION 14
The Constitution Of The Independent State Of Papua New Guinea 14
The Public Finance (Management) Act 15
Permanent Parliamentary Committees Act 16
PURPOSE OF THE INQUIRY 16
THE AUTHORITY TO REPORT 17
THE AUTHORITY TO REFER 17
METHOD OF INQUIRY 18
PART ONE OF THE INQUIRY – REPORTS OF THE AUDITOR
GENERAL 18PART TWO OF THE INQUIRY – BEFORE 2002 19
PART THREE OF THE INQUIRY: 2002 – 2005 20
PART FOUR OF THE INQUIRY – THE LAND BOARD 21
PROGRESS OF THE INQUIRY 22
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PRIVILEGES AND PROTECTION OF WITNESSES 24
RELEVANT STATUTES 24
Public Finances (Management) Act 1995 24
Financial Instructions 25
Land Act 1996 26
Land Registration Act 41
Organic Law on the Duties and Responsibilities
of Leadership 41Audit Act 41
Permanent Parliamentary Committees Act 1994 42
Parliamentary Powers and Privileges Act 1964 42
INDEFEASIBILITY 42
FISCAL RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE GOVERNMENT 45
RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE AUDITOR GENERAL 46
THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS AND PHYSICAL PLANNING 46
PART ONE – EXAMINATION OF THE REPORTS OF THE
AUDITOR GENERAL OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS &
PHYSICAL PLANNING FOR THE YEARS 2000 – 2004 48REVENUE AND DEBT COLLECTION BY THE DEPARTMENT OF
LANDS & PHYSICAL PLANNING 48LAND RENTALS 54
OBLIGATIONS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS & PHYSICAL
PLANNING TOWARD THE PUBLIC ACCOUNTS COMMITTEE 55PART TWO – PERFORMANCE OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS
AND PHYSICAL PLANNING 1999 -2002 59PORTION 1597 MILINCH GRANVILLE, FOURMIL MORESBY
AT PAGA HILL – GRANT TO PAGA HILL DEVELOPMENT COMPANY 59 -
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Background 59
The Land 61
The Urban Development Lease 62
The Business Lease 65
Financial Loss to the State 69
Failures by the Department 70
Failures by the Secretary for Lands 72
SECTION 122 HOHOLA 76
The Grant and Subdivision 77
Allotment 1 Section 122 Hohola 78
Allotment 2 Section 122 Hohola 79
Allotment 12 Section 122 Hohola 79
Allotment 13 Section 122 Hohola 80
Allotments 14, 15, 16 and 17 Section 122 Hohola 81
The Legality of Dealings in Allotments at Section
122 Hohola 82PORTIONS 109 AND 110 MADANG, MADANG PROVINCE,
VOLUME 12 FOLIO 113 (PREVIOUSLY VOLUME 65 FOLIO 26) 85ALLOTMENTS 2 AND 3 (CONSOLIDATED) SECTION 111
BOROKO STATE LEASE 27 FOLIO 202 87ALLOTMENT 69 SECTION 229 HOHOLA 88
PART 3 – PERFORMANCE OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
LANDS AND PHYSICAL PLANNING 2002 – MARCH 2006 91PORTION 1555 MILINCH GRANVILLE, FOURMIL MORESBY,
NATIONAL CAPITAL DISTRICT 91 -
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PORTION 2415 MILINCH GRANVILLE FOURMIL MORESBY, PORT
MORESBY, NCD 93PORTION 2399 MILINCH GRANVILLE FOURMIL MORESBY, PORT
MORESBY, NCD 93PORTION 2228 MILINCH GRANVILLE FOURMIL, PORT MORESBY 94
PART 4 – ANALYSIS OF LAND BOARDS 1999 – 2000 96
Papua New Guinea Land Board No. 2005 – (Items
130, 131, 132, 133 and 134) 97Papua New Guinea Land Board No. 2006
(Items 20, 101 and 102) 99Papua New Guinea Land Board 2014 102
Papua New Guinea Land Board 2017 103
Papua New Guinea Land Board 2026 104
Papua New Guinea Land Board no. 2033 105
SUMMARY 106
FAILURE BY THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS & PHYSICAL
PLANNING TO CO-OPERATE WITH THE PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
COMMITTEE – FINDINGS AND REFERRALS 109POTENTIAL LIABILITY OF THE STATE 111
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE BANKING AND FINANCE
INDUSTRY AND THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS & PHYSICAL
PLANNING 112THE PERFORMANCE OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS
& PHYSICAL PLANNING AND NATIONAL ECONOMIC AND
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT 112RESOLUTIONS OF THE COMMITTEE 114
FINDINGS 115
REFERRALS 120
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RECOMMENDATIONS 122
CONCLUSIONS 124
SCHEDULE ONE – LIST OF WITNESSES 125
SCHEDULE TWO – LIST OF EXHIBITS AND DOCUMENTS
BEFORE THE INQUIRY 126MISCELLANEOUS FILES 130
RESPONSE BY SECRETARY FOR LANDS TO
“SUMMONS TO A WITNESS 131INTERNAL AUDIT FILES 132
SCHEDULE THREE – COPIES OF DIRECTIVES AND
SUMMONSES ISSUED 133 -
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THE PUBLIC ACCOUNTS COMMITTEE
INQUIRY INTO DEPARTMENT OF LANDS & PHYSICAL PLANNING
REPORT TO THE NATIONAL PARLIAMENT
1. INTRODUCTION
1.1. On the 28th day of February 2006 the Permanent Parliamentary Public
Accounts Committee concluded a long running inquiry into the
Department of Lands & Physical Planning.1.2. As a result of evidence taken in the Inquiry, the Public Accounts
Committee made certain findings which were highly critical of
performance of the Department of Lands & Physical Planning and, in
particular, the performance and competence of the Head of Department
and Senior Officers.1.3. As a result of evidence and documents tendered to the Inquiry, the Public
Accounts Committee made certain referrals of the Secretary of the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning for inquiry and possible
prosecution for breaches of his statutory obligations.1.4. As a result of evidence and documents tendered to the inquiry, the Public
Accounts Committee unanimously resolved to make a full and complete
report of its Inquiry and findings to the National Parliament in accordance
with Section 86 (1) (c) of the Public Finances (Management) Act 1994.1.5. The Public Accounts Committee now tables the report with its strongest
recommendation that remedial action be immediately taken by the
National Parliament in accordance with findings and resolutions of the
Public Accounts Committee.2. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
2.1 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning is incompetent and
ineffective in carrying out its statutory obligations to manage land and
fails to protect and further the fiscal interests of the State.2.2 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning has failed to collect
revenue in a timely manner or at all. -
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2.3 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning has failed to implement
and maintain competent or adequate systems of accounting, control and
accountability.2.4 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning over many years has
conducted itself illegally in the allocation of and registering of State
Lease, granting of licenses, giving of Ministerial exemptions, dealing with
Customary land and in its fiscal obligations to the State.2.5 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning has, for many years,
given priority to the interests of private enterprise and private speculators
over the interests and lawful rights of the State.2.6 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning requires urgent
restructuring.2.7 The Committee recommends the immediate removal of the Secretary and
senior Management of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning
and the recruitment by international advertisement of competent senior
managers and executives to rebuild the Department.2.8 The system of Land Registration and performance of the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning is poorly regarded by the private sector.
There is a clear lack of confidence in the Department and its management.2.9 Illegalities and abuses by Management, Departmental Officers and certain
members of the Land Board continue with immunity and impunity.2.10 There is no will or ability in the current Management of the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning to effect any change.2.11 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning and, in particular, the
Secretary and Deputy Secretary of that Department obstructed the Inquiry
by the Public Accounts Committee by failing to produce documents when
ordered to do so.2.12 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning has failed in its duty to
protect and secure public documents and State records.2.13 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning has exposed the State to
significant liability by reason of illegal practices, unlawful decisions and
negligent actions of Departmental Officers. -
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2.14 The State has been deprived of very significant revenue by way of Land
Rental and tender or reserve price which has either not been levied at all
by the Department, or not collected.Levy2.15 The Department has, in the last decade, engaged in the planned and
deliberate granting of Reserved Land, National Park, or Open Space land
into private hands for little or no recompense to the State – and in many
cases, quite unlawfully.2.16 The current Management of the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning has taken no steps at all to rectify, or deal with abuses of past
administrations, despite having detailed knowledge of those illegalities.2.17 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning is a real impediment to
National development and economic growth. It is a Department which
needs to be brought immediately under control.2.18 The Government must review the entire system of land allocation in Papua
New Guinea. The current system requires a high degree of probity,
honesty and competence – attributes lacking for a decade in the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning and the Land Board.2.19 The Committee recommends that the Government immediately appoint a
Commission of Inquiry to review every Lease Grant made in the last
decade – with a view to establishing which State leases have been
illegally or unlawfully issued and to recover same to the benefit of the
State.2.20 That Commission of Inquiry should also be tasked with making
recommendations for the rebuilding of the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning and basic steps to be taken to restore confidence and
credibility to the Department and the system of land registration and land
security in Papua New Guinea.2.21 The Committee has referred the Secretary and Deputy Secretary of the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning for investigation and
prosecution.2.22 The Committee endorses and accepts the Reports of the Office of the
Auditor General on the Department of Lands and Physical Planning for
the years 2000 – 2004. -
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3. CHRONOLOGY
3.1. The Public Accounts Committee commenced its Inquiry into the
Department of Lands & Physical Planning in 2003 and continued on the
1st September 2005, the 24th November 2005, 25th November 2005, the
29th November 2005 and the 28th February 2006.3.2. The Inquiry was closed on the 28th February 2006.
3.3. Directives to produce evidence and documents were given to the Secretary
for the Department of Lands on the 5th September 2005, the 22nd
November 2005, the 29th November 2005 and the 26th day of February
2006.3.4. These Directives were complied with inadequately or not complied with at
all.3.5. Referrals of the Secretary for the Department of Lands & Physical
Planning for investigation and possible prosecution were made on the 24th
November 2005, the 25th November 2005, the 29th November 2005 and
the 28th day of February 2006.4. LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
4.1 UDL Urban Development Lease
4.2 TSL Town Sub-Division Lease
4.3 PF(M)A Public Finances Management Act
4.4 PAC Public Accounts Committee.
4.5 NCDC National Capital District Commission
4.6 The Constitution The Constitution of the Independent State of Papua
New Guinea4.7 The National Court The National Court of Justice of Papua New Guinea
4.8 The Committee The Permanent Parliamentary Public Accounts
Committee.4.9 The Secretary The Secretary of the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning -
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4.10 The Department The Department of Lands and Physical Planning.
5. COMPOSITION OF THE COMMITTEE
5.1 The Public Accounts Committee which made inquiry into the Department
of Lands & Physical Planning was constituted as follows:5.2 1st September 2005:
Hon. John Hickey MP (Chairman)
Hon. James Togel, MP (Member)
Hon. Michael Maskal, MP (Member)
Hon. David Anggo, MP (Member)
Hon. John Vulupindi, MP (Member)
Hon. Ekis Ropenu, MP (Member)
Hon. Bob Danaya, MP (Member)
5.3 24th November 2005:
Hon. John Hickey (Chairman)
Hon. Chris Haiveta, MP (Deputy Chairman)
Hon. Timothy Tala, MP (Member)
Hon. Sasa Zibe, MP (Member)
Hon. Ekis Ropenu, MP (Member)
Hon. Bob Danaya, MP (Member)
Hon. James Togel, MP (Member)
5.4 25th November 2005 .
Hon. John Hickey, MP (Chairman)
Hon. Bob Danaya, MP (Member)
Hon. Michael Maskal, MP (Member)
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Hon. Timothy Tala, MP (Member)
Hon. Sasa Zibe, MP (Member)
Hon. James Togel, MP (Member)
Hon. Ekis Ropenu, MP (Member)
5.5 29th November 2005:
Hon. John Hickey, MP (Chairman)
Hon. Bob Danaya, MP (Member)
Hon. Michael Maskal, MP (Member)
Hon. Timothy Tala, MP (Member)
Hon. Sasa Zibe, MP (Member)
Hon. James Togel, MP (Member)
Hon. Ekis Ropenu, MP (Member)
5.6 28th February 2006:
Hon. John Hickey, MP (Chairman)
Hon Sasa Zibe, MP (Member)
Hon. Bob Danaya, MP (Member)
Hon. Mal Smith-Kela, MP (Member)
Hon. John Vulupindi MP (Member)
Hon. Michael Maskal, MP (Member)
5.7 The Chairman, Deputy Chairman and Members of the Committee were
properly and lawfully appointed and empowered to sit as a Public
Accounts Committee. -
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6. JURISDICTION AND PURPOSE OF THE INQUIRY
INTRODUCTION
6.1 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning is a central and crucial
agency to the economic wellbeing and development of Papua New
Guinea. It manages all State land in Papua New Guinea and land is the
most important asset in the development of the society and the economy.6.2 The Department is responsible, inter alia, for the lawful and legitimate
issue of State Leases, the consideration by the Papua New Guinea Land
Board of tenders and applications for the grant of State Leases and, more
particularly, is responsible for the protection of State property, assets and
revenue.6.3 The Department of Lands and Physical Planning should be a major
revenue collector for the Government of Papua New Guinea and is subject
to the jurisdiction of the Office of the Auditor-General and the Public
Accounts Committee.6.4 The Public Accounts Committee has conducted ongoing Inquiries into the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning for at least a decade.6.5 Throughout this period the Committee has been concerned at the apparent
failures by the Department of Lands and Physical Planning to carry out its
functions with any degree of competence or success.6.6 The Committee has been concerned at the apparent inability of the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning to protect and manage State
land, State Leases and State revenue.6.7 The Committee became increasingly concerned at the clearly apparent
difference between assurances given by Departmental Officers that the
Departmental performance was improving every year while the Reports of
the Auditor General and other indicators suggested that these assurances
were not correct.6.8 During its Inquiries, the Public Accounts Committee has sought to effect
change within the Department of Lands and Physical Planning by a
process of Inquiry, directive, suggestion, encouragement and
recommendation. -
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6.9 Throughout that period, the Committee has seen no improvement in the
performance of the Department and its Officers. That performance can, in
almost all respects, be described as extremely poor and, in many cases,
totally non-existent.6.10 The Committee has entertained serious concerns as to the competence and
honesty of Management of the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning for some years.6.11 Continuous evidence of illegal dealings in land, failures to forfeit and
reallocate land for breaches of Lease covenants, failure to collect huge
arrears of Land Rental owed to the State, the alienation of Reserved or
Open Space land to private hands, the failure of the Department to deal
with these abuses and an increasingly obvious attitudinal problem within
the Department and an increasing Departmental reputation for corruption
and failure, has persuaded the Public Accounts Committee that a
Parliamentary Report recommending urgent intervention is warranted, if
any remedial steps are to occur.6.12 The Committee has concluded that corrupt practices and inept
management of the National Estate continues with impunity and
immunity. This is not acceptable.6.13 This conclusion was confirmed by the almost complete failure and / or
refusal of the Departmental Officers to assist the Public Accounts
Committee by complying with Directives and producing documents,
records and files requested by the Committee.6.14 It was clearly apparent that the Department deliberately refused to
produce any records at all in respect of patently illegal land dealings.6.15 This blatant failure was blithely explained away by the Secretary and
Head of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning in the following
sworn testimony to the Committee:Mr. Pepi Kimas
“Let me inform the Committee that once the client receives their titles
they get officers to remove and destroy the files and everything else”and further
“What they do is that as soon as they get the title they pay off
somebody who will destroy the file and remove it and that makes the
task very difficult” -
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Evidence to the Committee 29th November 2005.
6.16 In light of the attitude displayed in this evidence, and considering all the
evidence in the Inquiry, the Committee concluded that the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning had some very serious, deep and fundamental
problems that will not be solved without Governmental coercion to do so.6.17 The Committee also resolved that the Report to the Parliament from the
Committee, contain recommendations for reform of the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning.6.18 At all times, the Committee has taken great care to enable witnesses to make
full and complete representations and answers to any matter before the
Committee – in particular those matters about which the Committee may
make adverse findings against individuals or companies.6.19 The Public Accounts Committee has taken care to give careful consideration
to all responses and evidence given before the Committee.6.20 All evidence was taken on oath and full and due inquiry was made of all
relevant State Agencies where the Committee considered those inquiries to
be necessary.7. JURISDICTION
THE CONSTITUTION OF THE INDEPENDENT STATE OF PAPUA
NEW GUINEA.7.1 The Committee finds its jurisdiction firstly, pursuant to Section 216 of the
Constitution of the Independent State of Papua New Guinea. That
Section reads:“216. Functions of the Committee
(1) The primary function of the Public Accounts Committee is, in
accordance with an Act of the Parliament, to examine and report
to the Parliament on the public accounts of Papua New Guinea
and on the control of and on transaction with or concerning, the
public monies and property of Papua New Guinea”.(2) Sub-section (1) extends to any accounts, finances and property that
are subject to inspection and audit by the Auditor General under
Section 214 (2) … and to reports by the Auditor General under that
Sub-section or Section 214 (3)…”. -
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7.2 The Committee has taken care to restrict its Inquiry to an examination of the
control of and on transactions with or concerning the public monies and
property of Papua New Guinea by the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning and its officers.7.3 Land itself is a significant State asset and the Committee has jurisdiction to
consider the standard of management and control exercised over that asset
by the Department of Lands and Physical Planning, on behalf of the State.7.4 Whilst considering the relevant provisions of the Constitution, the
Committee has had regard to the Final Report of the Constitutional
Planning Committee 1974 and been guided by or applied the stated
intentions of that Committee wherever necessary.7.5 The Public Accounts Committee has had due regard to reports by the
Auditor General made pursuant to audit inspections of the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning for the years 2000 – 2004, but has conducted
an Inquiry into matters deemed by the Committee to be of National
Importance or which arise naturally from primary lines of Inquiry and which
are within the jurisdiction and function of the Committee as set forth in the
Constitution.7.6 Whilst engaged in the Inquiry the Committee was guided by two definitions
contained in the Constitution, which are directly relevant to Section 216 of
the Constitution. They are:“Public Accounts of Papua New Guinea” includes all accounts, books
and records of, or in the custody, possession or control of, the National
Executive or of a public officer relating to public property or public
moneys of Papua New Guinea;”and
“Public moneys of Papua New Guinea” includes moneys held in trust by
the National Executive or a public officer in his capacity as such,
whether or not they are so held for particular persons;”Schedule 1.2 of the Constitution.
8. THE PUBLIC FINANCES (MANAGEMENT) ACT.
8.1. The Public Accounts Committee also finds its jurisdiction to Inquire into
the Department of Lands and Physical Planning in Section 86 of the
Public Finance (Management) Act. That Section empowers the
Committee to examine accounts and receipts of collection and expenditure -
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of the Public Account and each statement in any Report of the Auditor
General presented to the Parliament.8.2. The Committee has considered both accounts and receipts and as they
have been made available by the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning and such statements and reports of the Auditor General as may
have been presented to Parliament.8.3. The Committee has further considered reports of the Auditor General
which have not yet been presented to the Parliament, on the basis that that
evidence was tendered by the Auditor General for the consideration of the
Committee and on the basis that such material is within the purview of the
Committee as a matter of national importance. (See Para. 9 infra).8.4. Power to refer matters for investigation and possible prosecution is
granted to the Committee by Section 86A of the Public Finances
(Management) Act.9. PERMANENT PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEES ACT:
9.1. The Committee received very serious allegations of misconduct,
maladministration and corrupt dealing within and by Officers of the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning.9.2. The Committee resolved that a full Inquiry into the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning was a matter of National importance and found
further jurisdiction for the inquiry in Section 17 of the Permanent
Parliamentary Committees Act.9.3. That Section provides that the Public Accounts Committee can consider any
matter to be of national importance. The Committee, as we have stated,
considers the Department of Lands and Physical Planning to be such a
matter.10. PURPOSE OF THE INQUIRY
10.1. The purpose of the Inquiry conducted by the Public Accounts Committee
was to make full and complete examination of the manner in which the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning in all its aspects, and officers
of that Department, controlled transactions with or concerning public
monies and property, accounted for those monies and property, protected
the position of the Independent State of Papua New Guinea, collected
revenue, controlled and monitored expenditure and protected the position
of the State and the security and integrity of property, assets and money of
the State. -
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10.2. The purpose of the Inquiry was not to improperly pursue or criticize any
person or company, but to make a constructive and informed Report to the
Parliament on any changes which the Committee perceives to be necessary
to any item or matter in the accounts, statements or reports or any
circumstances connected with them, of the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning and any matter considered by the Committee to be of
national importance.10.3. Further, the intention of the Inquiry was to enable the Committee to report
to the Parliament in a meaningful way on alterations that the Committee
thinks desirable in the form of the public accounts as manifested in the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning, in the method of keeping
them, in the method of collection, receipt, expenditure or issue of public
monies and/or for the receipt, custody, disposal, issue or use of stores and
other property of the State by the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning.11. THE AUTHORITY TO REPORT
11.1. The Public Accounts Committee finds authority to make this Report in
Section 17 of the Permanent Parliamentary Committees Act and Section
86(1) (c) and (d) (i), (ii), (iii) and (iv) and (f) of the Public Finances
(Management) Act 1995.12. THE AUTHORITY TO REFER
12.1. Where satisfied that there is a prima facie case that a person may not have
complied with the provisions of the Constitution of the Independent State
of Papua New Guinea and / or the Public Finances (Management) Act in
connection with the control and transaction with and concerning the
accounts of a public body or the public moneys and the property of Papua
New Guinea, it may make referrals of that person to the Office of the
Public Prosecutor in accordance with Section 86A of the Public Finances
(Management) Act.12.2. The Public Accounts Committee is not a true investigatory body capable
of investigating and/or prosecuting persons for breaches of the law. The
Committee is required to refer such matters to the appropriate authorities
and may make such recommendations as it thinks fit in relation to any
referral made pursuant to Section 86A.12.3. The Committee is also empowered to refer for prosecution, any witness
who fails to comply with a Notice to Produce any document, paper or
book and / or any person who fails to comply with a Summons issued and
served by the Committee. See Section 23 Permanent Parliamentary
Committees Act 1994. -
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12.4. Further, Section 20 of the Parliamentary Powers and Privileges Act
permits the Committee to refer for prosecution any person who, inter alia,
fails to comply with a Summons to produce books, papers or documents
specified in the Summons.12.5. The Public Accounts Committee twice made referrals of the Secretary for
Lands and Physical Planning, Mr. Pepi Kimas, during the course of this
Inquiry, for investigation and prosecution for failure to comply with a
Notice and a Summons to Produce Documents.12.6. Those referrals were made after anxious consideration of the evidence and
explanations given by the Secretary. The Secretary was invited to make
any response or show any reason why he should not be referred, but made
no or no adequate response to the Committee in this regard.12.7. The Committee is cognisant that to make referrals, particularly of a senior
public servant is a very serious matter which will adversely reflect on the
individual concerned. These referrals are not made lightly but only after
careful consideration of all the evidence and unanimous resolution by the
Committee.13. METHOD OF INQUIRY
13.1. The Inquiry by the Public Accounts Committee into the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning was a public hearing at which sworn
evidence was taken from a small number of witnesses.13.2. Assistance was obtained from representatives of the Salaries &
Remuneration Commission, the Office of the Auditor General and from
the Public Service Commission.13.3. The Committee made its Inquiry in four parts, each addressing a different
area of Departmental operations. Those Parts are summarized in Paras. 14
– 17 inclusive.14. PART ONE OF THE INQUIRY – REPORTS OF THE AUDITOR
GENERAL.14.1. The Committee initially considered reports of the Auditor General and
questioned officers of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning on
the findings of the Auditor General. Certain findings and
recommendations were made arising from the Reports of the Auditor
General for the years 2000 – 2004. -
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14.2. The Committee identified a clear failure by the Department to collect
Land Rental in a timely fashion and, as the Inquiry progressed, became
concerned at the quality of the evidence given by Departmental Officers –
particularly the Secretary of the Department, Mr. Pepi Kimas concerning
those failures.14.3. Continuing failures in accounting and management systems were
identified in every Audit – many were continually identified and not
remedied.15. PART TWO OF THE INQUIRY – BEFORE 2002.
15.1. The Committee was constantly assured by officers of the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning that “new systems” were in place. The
systems would, apparently, ensure that abuses which had occurred in the
past within the Department of Lands and Physical Planning would no
longer occur.15.2. The Secretary of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning assured
the Committee that he had taken significant steps towards eradicating
corrupt dealings and improving revenue collection and financial and
accounting performance of the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning.15.3. The relevant portions of his evidence were:
HON. CHRIS HAIVETA MP (DEPUTY CHAIRMAN):
“So what you are saying in the last three years, you have not attempted
to make any change to the existing policy, rules and existing laws so
that land that is taken illegally from the State can be given back to the
State. You have not done anything up to now. You are still surrounded
by the current inefficient policies. Is that correct?”MR. PEPI KIMAS :
“That is not quite correct. From the 4th April 2002 and to date, the
Lands Department has improved. Lands Department is different from
what it used to be. We have tightened things through in-house
procedures to ensure that none of the past experiences are repeated”.Evidence given to the Committee on the 29th November 2005.
15.4. This evidence was not borne out by the Reports of the Auditor General.
The Committee decided to test the assertion of improvement by Mr.
Kimas. -
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15.5. The Committee chose at random, a number of grants of State Leases prior
to 2002 and examined those grants to ascertain whether the Department
was protecting the position of the State in these dealings and whether the
Department was lawfully and fully collecting revenue on behalf of the
State.15.6. The object of this phase of this Inquiry was to establish whether certain
allegations received by the Committee of malpractice, corruption and
consequent loss to and liability of the State in the period prior to 2002,
were true.15.7. The second part of the Inquiry was directed to examining these randomly
chosen dealings in the period before the appointment of Mr. Pepi Kimas as
Secretary of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning, with a view
to establishing if and how the current Secretary and his management team
had dealt with and remedied past abuses.15.8. The Committee also considered the liability of the State for these past
abuses and the quality of protection given by the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning to public land, reserved Open Space Land and National
Parks. In other words, if and how the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning was protecting the national asset and land reserved for the use of
citizens, in the period from 2002 until 2005.15.9. To the very great concern of the Committee, it became quickly apparent
that the Department had failed to carry out its basic statutory obligations
adequately or at all, had failed to protect State assets, had failed to protect
the legal liability of the State, had opened the State to considerable
liability by Departmental failures, had connived with and assisted illegal
dealings and exhibited serious management failures and incompetence.15.10. Of equal concern was the apparent failure of the Department to take any
steps to remedy or reverse the abuses of the past after 2002, despite
making those abuses public and being well aware of those failures.15.11. Findings and resolutions were made by the Committee in respect of these
matters.16. PART THREE OF THE INQUIRY – 2002 – 2006.
16.1. The Public Accounts Committee made a further random choice of certain
land transactions since 2002 to examine and assess the performance of the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning and the management of that
Department during the period 2002-2006 – with particular emphasis on the
Departmental protection of State revenue and property. -
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16.2. In doing so, the Committee tested the assertion of the Secretary of the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning that, under his stewardship,
the Department had eradicated corruption and had dealt with instances of
corrupt dealings known to the Department.16.3. Further, the Committee intended to test the assertion that the management,
accounting for and transactions by the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning with State property assets and money had improved under the
control of the current Secretary and whether the position of the State was
now fully protected.16.4. The Public Accounts Committee considered a number of land transactions
and decisions made by the Department and the Papua New Guinea Land
Board during the period 2002-2006. It quickly became apparent to the
Committee that corrupt, incompetent and unlawful dealings persist and
that the Management of the Department has not improved at all – at least
in this regard.16.5. Also apparent was the fact that Departmental officers seem to have no idea
of their roles, no appreciation of the vital importance of the Department
and no interest in carrying out their tasks in a lawful and professional
manner.16.6. What also became apparent was the contempt and suspicion in which the
Department is held by members of the public and persons legitimately
involved in land dealings and investment.16.7. It also became rapidly apparent that no attempt whatsoever had been made
by the current Management to deal with known instances of corrupt,
fraudulent and criminal dealing with land prior to 2002.16.8. In one instance, the Secretary had actually issued Press Releases declaring
certain dealings to be corrupt, but had taken absolutely no steps to fulfill
his statutory obligations to rectify those problems.17. PART FOUR OF THE INQUIRY – THE LAND BOARD.
17.1. The Committee had received a number of serious allegations concerning
the corrupt and incompetent conduct of the Papua New Guinea Land
Board over many years.17.2. The Committee considered the performance of the Land Board during the
period 1993 – 2005 and concluded that the performance has declined and
remains poor and that illegal decisions and conduct still pervade the Land
Board. -
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17.3. The Committee made certain findings and recommendations in this regard.
These matters are addressed later in this Report.18. PROGRESS OF THE INQUIRY:
18.1. The Committee met on the 1st day of September 2005 and questioned the
Secretary of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning, Mr. Pepi
Kimas as to his understanding of his duties and obligations as Secretary
and Head of a Government Department.18.2. The Committee heard sworn evidence from Mr. Kimas. He assured the
Committee that he was aware of and implemented all the requirements of
the Public Finances (Management) Act (particularly Section 5), the
Financial Instructions and all Statutes which it was the duty of his
Department to administer.18.3. The Committee then adjourned the Inquiry.
18.4. On the 5th day of September 2005 a Notice for the Production of
Documents and other evidence was given to the Secretary for the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning.18.5. The Secretary had nearly three months to comply with this Notice. The
Notice was initially given pursuant to Section 23 (1) (b) of the Permanent
Parliamentary Committees Act 1994.18.6. The Secretary of the Department failed to comply adequately with many
of the Directives, and failed to comply at all with a large number of them.18.7. Accordingly, on the 24th day of November 2005 the Secretary of the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning was referred to the Office of
the Public Prosecutor and to the Police for prosecution arising from his
failure to provide documents to the Public Accounts Committee in
accordance with the Notice to Produce.18.8. On that day, the Public Accounts Committee issued a Summons to the
Secretary for the Department of Lands and Physical Planning pursuant to
Section 89 of the Public Finances (Management) Act requiring the
production of those documents not yet produced by the Secretary.18.9. The Secretary for Lands and Physical Planning managed to produce a few
more documents, but failed to comply with large portions of the
Summons. -
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18.10. Accordingly, on the 25th day of November 2005, the Public Accounts
Committee again referred the Secretary for Lands and Physical Planning
to the Public Prosecutor and the Police for further investigation and
prosecution, on this occasion for failure to comply with a Summons to
Produce documents.18.11. These referrals are more fully addressed in this Report (infra).
18.12. The Committee reconvened on the 29th day of November 2005 and heard
sworn evidence from the Secretary for Lands and Physical Planning.18.13. It became quickly apparent to the Public Accounts Committee that prior to
2002 every randomly chosen land transaction was either unlawful, corrupt
or incompetently or corruptly handled by the Department and had exposed
the State to both considerable revenue loss and loss of assets.18.14. More concerning was the fact that the evidence clearly revealed that
Public Land and National Parks had unlawfully been alienated by the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning with complete disregard of
the relevant law and statutory duty imposed on the Department and its
officers.18.15. The Committee adjourned the Inquiry and reconvened on the 28th day of
February 2006.18.16. On the 22nd February 2006, a further Notice to Produce Documents and
information was served on the Secretary.18.17. On the 28th February 2006, further evidence was taken and the Inquiry
closed after the Committee delivered its findings and recommendations.18.18. The Committee first considered the issue of Land Rental collection and
further comments are made on this issue later in this Report.18.19. The Committee considered certain randomly chosen land transactions
during the period 2002 – 2005.18.20. It quickly became apparent to the Public Accounts Committee that after
2002, every one of those randomly chosen transactions was either
unlawful, corrupt or incompetently or corruptly handled by the
Department and had exposed the State to considerable loss of revenue and
assets.18.21. The Department of Lands and Physical Planning has failed in its role as
the administering arm of the State over Land matters and, it seems to this
Committee, has become an arm of private enterprise responsible for -
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allocating Leases regardless of the Law and to the very considerable cost
of the State and the citizens of Papua New Guinea.18.22. In short, the Committee concluded the Inquiry with profound and deep
concerns that the Independent State of Papua New Guinea had suffered
significant financial losses, lost considerable amounts of very valuable
property and has been open to very significant liability as a result of the
incompetence, deceit and mismanagement by Departmental Officers at all
levels (but particularly Senior Management) of the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning.18.23. For these reasons the Committee resolved to make this Report as soon as
possible.19. PRIVILEGES AND PROTECTION OF WITNESSES
19.1. The Public Accounts Committee has taken care to recognise and extend to
all witnesses the statutory privileges and protection extended by the Public
Finances (Management) Act 1995 and the Permanent Parliamentary
Committees Act 1994 and the Parliamentary Powers and Privileges Act
1964.20. RELEVANT STATUTES
20.1. The Committee was required to consider the following Statutes during the
course of the Inquiry:21. PUBLIC FINANCES (MANAGEMENT) ACT 1995.
21.1. The Public Finances (Management) Act prescribes the method and
standard of the Administration of and accounting for public monies, public
properties and assets by State entities in Papua New Guinea.21.2. Further, the Act imposes certain obligations on Public Servants for
collection of State revenue and controls the expenditure of State or public
monies.21.3. Relevant sections of the Act which were considered by the Public
Accounts Committee during the course of the Inquiry into the Department
of Lands & Physical Planning are:(i) Section 5 – Responsibilities of Heads of Department
This Section prescribes the duties, powers and obligations of Head of
Department. -
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(ii) Section 3 – Responsibilities of the Minister
This Section prescribes the obligations and duties of relevant
Ministers of State.(iii) Part X – The Public Accounts Committee
This Part empowers and imposes functions and obligations on the
Public Accounts Committee. In particular, the Committee was
required to consider Section 86 (A) – power to refer officers of the
Department to the Office of the Public Prosecutor for investigation
and possible prosecution relating to breaches of the Public Finances
(Management) Act 1995 and/or the Constitution.(iv) Part XI – Surcharge
This Section prescribes personal liability for certain public servants
who fail in their obligations to collect and protect certain public
monies.(v) Section 112 – Offences
This Section prescribes disciplinary action which may be taken
against certain public servants or accountable officers who fail to
comply with the terms of the Public Finances (Management) Act
1995.22. FINANCIAL INSTRUCTIONS
22.1. Section 117 of the Public Finances (Management) Act enables the
promulgation of certain Financial Instructions which establish detailed
procedures for the handling, collection, expenditure, disposal and
accounting for public monies, property and stores.22.2. The Public Accounts Committee had regard to these Financial Instructions
or Directives when considering the performance of the Department of
Lands & Physical Planning and its relevant responsible Officers.22.3. In particular, the Committee had regard to Part 6 Division 1 Para. 2.1–
Accountable Officers. That paragraph reads, in part:“…..the Departmental Head is liable under the doctrine of personal
accountability to make good any sum which the Public Accounts
Committee recommends should be “disallowed”. -
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23. LAND ACT 1996
23.1. The Land Act 1996 is an Act of Parliament which vests all alienated land
in the State, controls all dealings with and management of the National
Estate and prescribes the procedures for and the manner in which land
may be granted by State Lease.23.2. In particular, the Land Act prescribes the powers of the Minister for
Lands and the powers, duties and obligations of the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning in respect of the management of State land and
imposes strict obligations on the Department in the allocation of State
Leases, collection of revenue and protection of the public moneys of
Papua New Guinea by enforcing the terms of the Land Act against
defaulting Lessees.23.3. Further, the Land Act creates the Land Board which is vested with power
to, inter alia, consider tenders for and grants of State Leases. The Land
Act prescribes strict procedural steps attending sittings of the Land Board.23.4. The Committee had cause to examine several parts of the Land Act in the
course of the Inquiry.23.5. In order to understand the findings and recommendations of the
Committee, it is necessary to appreciate the relevant terms of the Land
Act and the obligations imposed on the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning thereby.23.6. The relevant Sections of the Land Act are:
SECTION 4. NATIONAL TITLE TO LAND
(1) All land in the country other than customary land is the property of
the State, subject to any estates, rights, titles or interests in force
under any law.(2) All estate, right, title and interest other than customary rights in
land at any time held by a person are held under the State.23.7. The appropriate entity which administers the law relating to those estates,
rights, titles and interests is the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning.23.8. The crucial nature of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning in
protecting and developing the National Estate, is clear from this Section. -
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23.9. The Committee have concluded that, as a result of this Section, the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning performs an important role in
the development of the Nation and the National economy, by reason of its
role as the custodian of State land.23.10. The Committee considers that a high standard of probity and competence
is required of Officers and Management of the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning if the National Estate and the economic welfare of the
State and its citizens are to be protected.23.11. The Committee also concluded that land is the single most significant
issue in the social welfare and economic development of Papua New
Guinea. Judicious and proper management of land matters will mean a
healthy economy and a developing nation with improved living standards
for its citizens.PART D II. THE LAND BOARD
SECTION 55 ESTABLISHMENT OF THE LAND BOARD
(1) A Land Board is hereby established;
(2) ………………..
and
SECTION 57 FUNCTIONS OF THE LAND BOARD
(1) In addition to such other functions as are conferred on it by this
Act, the Land Board shall consider and make a recommendation
on any matter referred to it by the Minister or by the Department.(2) Except where the Minister is empowered by this or any other Act to
make a direct grant of a State Lease, the Land Board shall
consider all applications for grant of lease which have been
investigated and referred to it by the Department and all other
matters are remitted to it by the Minister for its consideration.and
SECTION 58 MEETINGS OF THE LAND BOARD, REPORTS, ETC
(1) At least seven days before a meeting of Land Board, the
Chairman shall publish in the National Gazette a list of:(a) The applications and other matters to be considered; and
-
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(b) Lands to be dealt with
by the Board at the meeting.
(2) ………………..
(3) The meeting of the Land Board shall be held not less than 7 days
and no more than 42 days after the publication of the List
referred to in Subsection (1), and the Board shall deal with the
applications and matters, hear any objections and report on the
applications or matters within 14 days to the Minister.(4) The Chairman shall cause meetings of the Land Board to be held
as he thinks necessary.(5) ……………………….
(6) ……………………….
(7) Where the Land Board –
(a) takes evidence at a meeting from which members of the
public have been excluded;(b) …………………….
(c) …………………….
it shall report on it within 14 days to the Minister.
(8) In respect of each application the Land Board shall recommend
(a) the applicant to whom, in the opinion of the Land Board,
the State Lease should be granted; and(b) …………………………
(c) …………………………
(9) The Chairman shall forward notice of the Land Boards
recommendations, other than a recommendation to which
subsection (8) applies, to every person who, in his opinion, is
interested in an application or matter dealt with by the Board.(10) ……………………..
-
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23.12. The Committee considers that an assessment of the functioning and
efficiency of the Land Board would provide a good indication as to the
corporate health of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning.23.13. The Committee considered the state of compliance by the Land Board
with the procedural requirements of the Land Act. In many areas the
Board had failed to comply at all – thus rendering its decisions unlawful.23.14. Further, the revenue of the State and the protection and allocation of State
Land is largely decided by the Land Board. The Committee considers that
a high degree of competence and honesty is necessary if the Land Board is
to work efficiently and properly.PART VIII – APPEALS AND REPORTS
SECTION 62 APPEALS
(1) A person aggrieved by a decision of the Land Board may, not
later than 28 days after notices are forwarded under Section
58(10) forward a Notice of Appeal to the Minister.(2) ……………………..
23.15. The Committee proceeded upon the basis that no recommendation of the
Land Board could be actioned until the expiry of the 28 days after the
forwarding of a Notice to all interested persons, if there was no Appeal.23.16. The Committee proceeded on the basis that strict compliance with the
procedural matters attending meetings of the Land Board was necessary in
the interests of the public and of the State.23.17. It is these procedures which ensure transparency and a fair open
competitive tender process for the allocation of State Lands and thereby
maximizes the return to the StateSECTION 64 ALIENATION OF GOVERNMENT LAND
(1) Government land shall not be alienated otherwise than under this
Act or another law.(2) Land which is the property of the State solely by virtue of the
operation of Section 4(1) shall not be alienated or otherwise dealt
with by the State under this Act unless the provisions of Section 5
have been complied with in respect of that land. -
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23.18. The Committee finds that the Land Act is the sole authority for the
alienation of State Land and the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning is, thereby, the entity which is responsible for this vital function.23.19. Moreover, the Department maintains the responsibility for ongoing
management of development, revenue collection, Lease issue and all other
aspects of land management for and on behalf of the Independent State of
Papua New Guinea.23.20. The Committee again proceeded upon the basis that a high standard of
strict probity and competence was required of the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning and its Officers – not least in the areas of protection
of State Land, security and protection of documents and records and
accountability for effecting revenue collection in a timely manner.PART X – STATE LEASES
DIVISION 1 – STATE LEASES GENERALLY
SECTION 65 GRANT OF STATE LEASES
The Minister may grant State Leases of Government Land as
provided by this Act.SECTION 66 ……………………..
SECTION 67 STATE LEASES NOT TO BE INCONSISTENT WITH
ZONING, PHYSICAL PLANNING ETCA State Lease shall not be granted for a purpose that would be in
contravention of zoning requirements under the Physical
Planning Act 1989, and any other law relating to Physical
Planning, or any law relating to the use, construction or
occupation of buildings or land.23.21. The Committee proceeded upon the basis that the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning in the course of administering the National Estate
should maintain a comprehensive and complete knowledge of the Physical
Planning Act 1989 and zoning and planning decisions affecting any piece
of land, the subject of a lease or application for lease.23.22. The Committee considers that the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning could not alienate any State Land in any way inconsistent with
zoning or planning laws, which themselves are the responsibility of the
Department Lands and Physical Planning. -
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23.23. Further, the Committee proceeded upon the basis that the Papua New
Guinea Land Board must retain a working knowledge of all relevant
zoning and planning decisions or restrictions applying to any particular
parcel of land the subject of a State Lease or application for State Lease.SECTION 68 ADVERTISEMENTS OF LANDS AVAILABLE FOR
LEASING(1) Except where land has been exempted from advertisement under
Section 69, the Departmental Head shall give notice by
advertisement in the National Gazette, of all lands available for
leasing under this Act.(2() An advertisement under Sub-section 1 shall contain the following
information:(a) the type of lease available to be granted;
(b) the purpose of the lease;
(c) the length of the lease
(d) a description of the land to be leased;
(e) the amount of rent (if any) payable for the first period of
the lease;(f) in the case of a special purpose lease – any royalties that
are payable;(g) the terms and conditions of the lease;
(h) the reserve price;
(i) such other information as the Departmental Head thinks
fit or the Minister directsSECTION 69 DUTY TO ADVERTISE STATE LEASES
(1) A State Lease shall not be granted without first being advertised
in accordance with Section 68 unless the land has been exempted
from advertisement under Sub-section (2).(2) The Minister may exempt land from advertisement for application
or tender – -
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(a) Where the lease is granted to a Governmental body for a
public purpose or;(b) Where it is necessary to relocate persons displaced as a
result of a disaster as defined in the Disaster Management
Act (Chapter 403); or(c) Where a lessee applies for a further lease; or
(d) Where the State has agreed to provide land for the
establishment or expansion of a business, project, or
other undertakings; or(e) Where the land applied for adjoins land owned by the
applicant and is required to bring the holding up to a
more workable unit …(f) ………………….
(g) ………………….
(h) Where the applicant has funded the acquisition of
land from customary landowners in order to acquire a
State Lease over it; or(i) Where a lease is to be granted under Section 99 or
102; or(j) Where a new lease is granted under Section 110, 130
or Section 131.23.24. The Committee finds that these two Sections of the Land Act impose a
duty on the Department of Lands and Physical Planning and the Papua
New Guinea Land Board, when considering applications or tenders for the
grant of State Leases over any land the subject of the Sections, to ensure
strict compliance with the terms of the Sections.23.25. The Committee finds that these Section import transparency, confidence
and commercial competitiveness into the process of allocating State
Leases. Any deviation from the terms of these Sections will inevitably
result in a less than competitive tender to the cost of the State and a
consequent reduction in revenue flow to the State from the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning. -
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23.26. The Committee was concerned to establish the precise number of
Ministerial exemptions given in respect of land which otherwise would
have been the subject of an open competitive tender before the Papua New
Guinea Land Board.23.27. The power to grant Ministerial exemption is bound with strict conditions.
The Committee noted at the outset of the Inquiry, that the power to exempt
had been delegated to certain Departmental officers and the Committee
determined to investigate the use of that delegated power and its effect (if
any) on the protection of the National Estate and the consequent flow of
revenue to the State from land dealings.SECTION 70 HOW APPLICATIONS FOR STATE LEASES ARE TO
BE MADEAn application for a State Lease shall –
(a) be made in the approved form; and
(b) be accompanied by the prescribed fee for the registration of the
applicationSECTION 73 DEALING WITH TENDERS
(1) Where the land is required to be offered for lease by tender, a
Tender Notice shalla. contain the particulars specified in Section 68; and
b. specify the reserve price for the land
(2) A tender for an amount less than the reserved price specified under
Sub-section (1) (b) is invalid and shall not be considered.(3) ……………………..
(4) The successful tenderer shall pay to the State the amount of his
tender;(5) The successful tenderer is entitled to a State Lease of the land the
subject of the tender in accordance with the tender notice. -
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SECTION 74 PUBLICATIONS OF NAMES OF SUCCESSFUL
APPLICANTS, ETC, IN THE NATIONAL GAZETTEThe Departmental Head shall publish in the National Gazette-
(a) the name of the successful applicant for each State Lease, together
with particulars of the land to be leased to him; and(b) in respect of that State Lease and those lands –
i. the name of applicant considered the second choice successful
applicant; andii. the name of the applicant considered the third choice successful
applicant, to whom a Letter of Grant may be forwarded in
accordance with Section 75 and 79.23.28. The Land Act exclusively prescribes the method by which the Papua New
Guinea Land Board and thereby the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning must deal with the advertisement of lands available for leasing
and applications and tenders made for those lands.23.29. The Committee accepted that in all but the most unusual cases, open
commercially competitive tenders are prescribed for the grant of all State
Land by the Land Act. That open, competitive transparent process
ensures that the State will maximize the financial return from any
particular land grant and that the tenderer most capable of developing the
land will be chosen.23.30. The statutory duties of the Papua New Guinea Land Board and the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning are clear. The process is not
complex or difficult for either the Department or prospective applicants or
tenderers, to comply with.23.31. In respect of all the statutory requirements thus far outlined in this Report,
the Committee has repeatedly found a failure to comply with even the
most basic statutory requirements – most notably in the alienation of
Reserved Land, Public Space land and National Parks, into private hands.23.32. The Committee will report a Finding of incompetence, mismanagement,
fraud, dereliction of duty and blatant misrepresentation by both the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning and the Land Board during
the period 1999 – 2006. -
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SECTION 81 COMMENCEMENT OF STATE LEASES
The term of a State Lease and the time within which improvement
conditions are to be fulfilled and rent and fees paid shall be calculated
from(a) the date of publication of the relevant Notice under Section 74;
or(b) Such later date as the Minister, after considering a Report of the
Land Board, determines.23.33. This is an important Section. The calculation and collection of revenue
and the supervision of compliance with Improvement Covenants can be
calculated exactly – to the benefit of the State.23.34. The Committee examined several transactions and found that the actual
issued State Lease document exhibited an incorrect commencement date
and other and further incorrect information.SECTION 83 RENT
The rent on a State Lease is as is prescribed.
23.35. Land Rental is a fundamental revenue flow to the State for the grant of
land by way of State Lease.23.36. Every Lessee must pay rental to the State on an annual basis. The method
of calculation is simple.23.37. It is the duty of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning to
correctly calculate and collect this Land Rent.23.38. The Committee resolved to examine several State Leases and grants of
land to private hands with a view to establishing whether rental was
properly fixed by the Department of Lands and Physical Planning and
whether the rent has actually been collected.SECTION 104 THE URBAN DEVELOPMENT LEASES TO BE
GRANTED OVER LAND IN PHYSICAL PLANNING AREAS
SUITABLE FOR SUB-DIVISION.(1) Subject to Section 69, where there is Government land within a
Physical Planning area that is suitable for sub-division in
accordance with this Division, the land shall, in the first instance,
be offered for lease by tender. -
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(2) A tender document shall contain the following:-
(a) the particulars specified in Section 68;
(b) …………………..
(c) ………………….
(d) the reserve price for the land.
SECTION 105 – CONDITIONS PRECEDENT TO LAND BEING
ADVERTISED FOR SUB-DIVISIONBefore land is offered for lease under this division, the Chief Physical
Planner or his delegate shall-(a) certify –
(i) that the land is –
(A) within a Physical Planning area; and
(B) properly zoned; and
(C) suitable for subdivision; and
(D) suitable for release; and
(ii) after consultation with the relevant authorities, that the State
will not incur undue expense in the provision of electricity,
water and other services to the proposed subdivision; and(b) provide –
(i) a plan showing the location of the land;
(ii) an assessment of the subdivision potential of the land; and
(c) specify –
(i) the development conditions that will apply to the lease; and
(ii) the conditions that will apply in respect of the infrastructure and
zoning when part or the whole of the land subject to the lease is
subsequently surrounded/ -
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SECTION 108 TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF URBAN
DEVELOPMENT LEASESAn Urban Development Lease –
(a) shall –
(i) be for a term not exceeding five years; and
(ii) contain –
(A) A covenant that within one year … the lessee will submit for
the approval of the Physical Planning Board an application
for full planning permission for subdivision and zoning, and
a final proposal for subdivision, together with survey plans;
and(B) A covenant that a lessee will conform with a determination of
the Physical Planning Board under Section 108(3);(C) A covenant that after the Physical Planning Board has given
its approval under Clause (a) (ii )(A), the lessee will submit a
cadastral survey plan on the subdivision to the Surveyor
General …; and(D) Such other covenants and conditions including restrictions
on disposal prescribed by Section70, as the Land Board
thinks proper or as are prescribed; and(b) may contain a requirement for the surrender … of areas of land the
subject of the lease that are not and will not, under the final proposal
for subdivision, be required for business or residence purposes; and(c) may contain covenants that are to be inserted in the new leases
granted on the surrender of developed parts of the subdivision.23.39. These Sections have been quoted at length because they are mandatory
requirements for the issue of an Urban Development Lease. These
Sections were examined by the Committee when considering at least one
grant of a National Park to private hands by way of an Urban
Development Lease.23.40. An Urban Development Lease is a pre-cursor to an application for a 99
year State Lease, to enable development to occur. No Urban Development -
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Lease can be issued which conflicts with any Physical Plan or Zoning of
that land.23.41. An Urban Development Lease contains onerous covenants and is
generally only given for large scale developments to investors with very
significant capacity to carry out their obligations.23.42. The Committee accepts that in administering the Grants of Urban
Development Leases, a high degree of probity, competence and measured
judgment as to the future needs of the citizens of Papua New Guinea and
planned economic development, is required from both the Department and
the Grantee23.43. During its inquiry, the Committee considered a National Park which had
been granted to private hands by way of Urban Development Lease. The
Committee has concluded that every aspect of the process was
incompetent and/or unlawful.23.44. The State and the public of Papua New Guinea have lost an immensely
valuable tract of land to a Lessee which cannot afford to pay the Land
Rent – much less invest K 300 million to develop the land as required.23.45. The necessary good faith and honest and transparent dealing required in
such transactions is lacking in this and other similar dealings considered
by the Committee.23.46. More importantly, the Department of Lands and Physical Planning has
done nothing to rectify the situation – although it has known of that
situation for many years – nor does it intend to do so.PART XV FORFEITURE OF STATE LEASE AND FINES
DIVISION 1 – FORFEITURE OF STATE LEASE
SECTION 122 FORFEITURE OF STATE LEASE
(1) The Minister may, by Notice in the National Gazette, forfeit a State
Lease –(a) if rent on the lease remains due and unpaid for a period of six
months; or(b) if fees are not paid in accordance with this Act; or
(c) if the amount payable in respect of improvement is not paid in
accordance with this Act; or -
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(d) if –
(i) a covenant or condition of the lease; or
(ii) a provision of this Act relating to the lease; or
(iii) …………………………
is not complied with; or
(e) if the granting of the Lease has been obtained, in the opinion
of the Minister, wholly or partly as a result of Statements that
were, to the knowledge of the lessee, false or misleading.
(Committees’ emphasis)(2) Before forfeiting a State Lease under Sub-section (1), the Minister
(a) shall serve Notice on lessee calling on him to show cause, within
a period specified in the Notice why the lease should not be
forfeited on the ground or grounds specified in the Notice; and(b) may, whether or not cause has been shown in accordance with a
Notice under Paragraph (a), serve on the lessee a Notice
requiring him within a period specified in the Notice, to comply
with the covenants or conditions on the lease or the provisions of
this Act.(3) …………………
(4) …………………
(5) No acceptance of rent by the State waives a right to forfeit a lease
under this Act.(6) For the purposes of this Section the grant of an application for a
State Lease shall be deemed to be the grant of the lease.23.47. The Committee resolved to examine the enforcement of the forfeiture
provisions for want of both payment of Land Rent to the State and failure
to comply with Covenants within a lease – notably land Rental and
Improvement Covenants.23.48. The Committee considers that the Statutory Scheme for forfeiture of leases
is designed to protect the State from loss of revenue and to encourage -
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development and thereby economic advancement for Papua New Guinea
and its people.23.49. The Committee considered that these forfeiture provisions would provide
a ready measure of the competence and effectiveness of the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning in fulfilling its statutory obligations.23.50. The Committee examined several land parcels known to be significantly in
rental arrears to the State and on which no development has occurred in
accordance with an Improvement Covenant in the Lease – often for years.
In other words, State Leases which should be forfeited by and to the State.23.51. Consistently, the Committee found that the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning had failed to effect or even commence forfeiture (or
cancellation where appropriate) proceedings. Huge arrears of Land Rental
have accrued over the last five years with no apparent attempt to reclaim
land to the State or to collect that Rent.PART XVI – LICENSES
DIVISION 1 – LICENSES GENERALLY
SECTION 125 GRANT OF LICENSE
(1) Subject to Subsection (2) the Minister or his delegate may grant a
licence in the approved form to a person to enter on Government
land for one or more of the following purposes:-(a) to graze stock or a specified kind of stock; or
(b) to strip, dig and take away any valuable material or
substance; or(c) for fisherman’s residences and drying ground; or
(d) for any other temporary purpose approved by the Minister.
(2) A licence shall not be granted for a purpose that would be in
contravention of zoning requirements under the Physical Planning
Act 1989, any other law relating to Physical Planning or any law
relating to use, construction, or occupation of buildings or land.(3) ……………………….
(4) A licence under this Section continues in force for a period, not
exceeding one year, specified in the licence; -
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(5) …………………………
(6) …………………………
23.52. The Committee proceeded upon the basis that no Licence can be granted
over land which is Customarily owned.23.53. The Committee was in receipt of information concerning the issue of
licences over Customary land.23.54. The Committee resolved to inquire into two of these transactions with a
view to establishing whether the land was, truly, Customarily owned or, if
it was a Government land, whether the Licences had been issued as a
result of a competitive and openly transparent procedure, to the benefit of
the State.23.55. Further, in the course of the Inquiry the Committee considered whether
the Department of Lands and Physical Planning had given adequate and
proper protection to Customary land – which the Committee considers to
be part of the assets of the weal.LAND REGISTRATION ACT – PART III DIVISION 5 AND PART IV
23.56. Those portions of the Act deal with the effect of registration. The Law of
Indefeasibility of Title was considered by the Committee in the course of
the Inquiry and this topic is more fully developed – See Para 18.ORGANIC LAW ON THE DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF
LEADERSHIP23.57. The Public Accounts Committee has had regard to this Organic Law in the
course of the inquiry into the Department of Lands & Physical Planning.
Certain Referrals and resolutions were considered within the terms of this
Organic law and are more fully developed (infra).AUDIT ACT
23.58. The Audit Act establishes and empowers the office of the Auditor General
to carry out its work of overseeing and supervising the handling of public
monies, stores and property by all arms of the National Government. The
Public Accounts Committee had regard to the terms of this Act during the
course of the Inquiry into the Department of Lands & Physical Planning23.59. The Committee received considerable assistance from the Office of the
Auditor General in the course of this Inquiry. -
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PERMANENT PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEES ACT 1994.
23.60. The Committee has had regard to Sections 17, 22, 23, 25, 27, and 33 of the
Permanent Parliamentary Committees Act during the course of the
Inquiry into the Department of Lands & Physical Planning.
.
PARLIAMENTARY POWERS AND PRIVILEGES ACT 196423.61. The Parliamentary Powers and Privileges Act 1964 sets forth those
privileges and powers extending to Members of Parliament, Committees
of Parliament and Officers or Parliamentary Staff.23.62. In the course of this Inquiry, the Committee had cause to examine and
apply Sections 19 and 20 (1) (d) of that Act.23.63. The Secretary of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning failed
to comply with a Summons requiring the production of documents and
certain resolutions and referrals were made in this respect. This matter is
developed more fully in this Report (infra).24. INDEFEASIBILITY
24.1. As a result of sworn evidence received from the Secretary for the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning, the Committee was required
to consider the law of Indefeasibility as it applies to land in Papua New
Guinea which has been granted by way of State Lease either unlawfully,
fraudulently or by reason of misrepresentation or malpractice within the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning – or elsewhere.24.2. The Secretary of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning, by his
own sworn admission, failed to take any action at all to reclaim to the
State land which had been freely given to private hands in a manner which
was unlawful. This failure has extended for three years.24.3. The Secretary justified this inaction on the basis that the issued title was
indefeasible as soon as the State Lease was registered. The Secretary also
proffered other excuses which will be dealt with in this Report (infra), but
he was clearly of the view that once registration of a State Lease occurred,
the State lost all power over both the land and the Lessee by reason of the
Law of Indefeasibility.24.4. The relevant evidence was:
Mr Pepi Kimas:
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“The process of rectification is not as easy as it may sound”
and;
“What I have maintained is that as and when a title is registered by hook
or by crook that title remains indefeasible until and unless it is
challenged”and
“I can cancel the title upon issuance……….but as and when the title is
given it is indefeasible……and that is the power that neither I nor the
Minister has to cancel those titles”.Evidence to the Committee on the 29th November 2005.
24.5. This assertion was also partly relied on by the Secretary for his failure to
forfeit land for non-payment of Land Rental and / or breach of covenants
in a State Lease.24.6. The Secretary has, in fact, relied on this conclusion to excuse his inaction
to protect the position of the State for the last three years and in respect of
transactions which occurred before his appointment as Secretary, but
which were his responsibility to rectify.24.7. The following is a succinct statement of the law of Indefeasibility of Title
in such circumstances. The Committee proceeded upon the basis that this
summation is an accurate statement of the current law – albeit that the area
is a developing one.24.8. The Committee had regard to the way in which the question of
Indefeasibility of fraudulently or unlawfully issued State Leases has been
dealt with by the National Court and the Supreme Court in the last ten
years.24.9. This matter has come before the Courts with increasing frequency and
almost always involving allegations of incompetent or illegal actions by
officers of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning.24.10. It is clear that the English or Australian cases on the topic, dealt almost
exclusively with malpractice by a party to a transaction, rather than by
State public servants. The need for the Courts to consider Indefeasibility
of Title as a result of Departmental or State misconduct seems to be a
matter peculiar to Papua New Guinea – and says a great deal about the
management of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning over the
last decade. -
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24.11. The Committee concludes that, in the last ten years, both the National and
Supreme Courts have been increasingly required to consider instances
where Departmental Officers have fraudulently or unlawfully issued State
Leases over State Land – and in particular, over Reserved or Open Space
land.24.12. Clearly, the earlier cases such as Mudge v Secretary for Lands (1985)
PNGLR 387, applied the full rigor of the Torrens system principle of
Indefeasibility.24.13. However, over the succeeding 20 years, the Courts were increasingly
asked to deal with instances where fraud, constructive or actual, or illegal
practices by the Department of Lands and Physical Planning and its
officers, resulted in the issue of State Leases.24.14. One principal difference between jurisdictions is the fact that the
Australian cases deal with freehold title – where the opportunities for
malpractice by state officers is small. The malpractice alleged is almost
exclusively that of one party to a transaction rather than the State or its
employees or agents.24.15. In Papua New Guinea, the central administration of State Leases over
State land offers greater opportunity for abuse by the Department, acting
as it does on behalf of the State, with complete power to either issue or
forfeit the Lease.24.16. The National and Supreme Courts have struck down fraudulently or
unlawfully issued State Leases where such conduct has occurred. In other
words, a registered Lease obtained or issued in breach of the Statutory
requirements, does not confer indefeasible title.24.17. In this sense, the Courts have increasingly become the guardians of last
resort of the National Estate against the incompetent and/or unlawful
conduct of its own Department.24.18. The Committee considers that this was precisely what the former Chief
Justice Sir Arnold Amet meant when he said:“I do not believe that the ….(Torrens)…..system is necessarily
appropriate in circumstances such as this, where an individual land
holder is deprived of his title to land by irregular procedures by officials
and a department of State, to the advantage of a private individual.I do not accept that quite clear irregularities and breaches of the….
(Land Act)…. provisions should remain indefeasible. -
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I believe that, although those irregularities and illegalities might not
amount strictly to fraud, they should, nevertheless, still be good grounds
for invalidating subsequent registration, which should not be allowed to
stand.I have concluded that the doctrine of indefeasibility under the Torrens
system of land registration is one that does not necessarily apply, nor is
it necessarily appropriate in circumstances such as this that will
continue to be experienced by ordinary Papua New Guineans against
the might of the State and private corporations.Emas Estate Development Pty. Ltd. v. John Mea (1993) PNGLR 215
24.19. The effect of this and other Judgements is to deprive the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning of the ability to hide or excuse its conduct
and failures to act, behind the cloak of indefeasibility.24.20. Accordingly, the Committee does not accept the excuses for inaction
given by Mr. Pepi Kimas – in particular the ludicrous assertion that any
attempt by him to cancel or forfeit unlawful or corruptly issued State
Leases would undermine confidence in the integrity of the Land
Registration in Papua New Guinea.24.21. The Committee made findings and recommendations in this regard in this
Report (infra).25. FISCAL RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE GOVERNMENT
25.1. The Government of Papua New Guinea is obliged to adequately fund and
resource the Department of Lands and Physical Planning. The Public
Accounts Committee made no inquiry into the adequacy of that funding,
but notes sworn testimony of the Secretary for the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning to the effect that staffing, and in particular,
competent staffing was a continuing problem in his efforts to collect
unpaid Land Rental and effect cancellation or forfeiture of fraudulently
issued Titles.25.2. The Committee does not wholly accept these excuses for Departmental
failures, but will make certain recommendations in respect of an
assessment of the adequacy of funding and resourcing of the Department
of Lands and Physical Planning.26. RESPONSIBILITES OF THE AUDITOR GENERAL
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26.1. The Auditor General is a Constitutional Office Holder and the duties and
responsibilities of that Office are contained in the Audit Act 1989.26.2. The standard of the Reports of the Auditor General into the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning were, on the whole, competent and adequate.26.3. However, the Committee finds that the Reports of the Auditor General
into the Department of Lands and Physical Planning were not up to date
and have not been tabled or presented to the Parliament, for many years.26.4. The Committee fully understands the severe staffing constraints attending
the Office of the Auditor General but will make recommendations in
respect of the funding and resourcing of that Office by the Government of
Papua New Guinea, to enable it to carry out its statutory duty in a
competent and timely manner.27. THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS AND PHYSICAL PLANNING
27.1. The Department of Lands and Physical Planning has the following
responsibilities:1. Promote the best use of all land in Papua New Guinea in the interests
of all citizens and the economic advancement of the country.2. The acquisition, transfer, resumption and disposal of land.
3. To provide appropriate survey and mapping services.
4. To provide necessary services in relation to calculation of land.
5. To formulate policies and proposals for planning urban resettlement.
6. To maintain Lands Titles Registration.
7. To formulate and oversee the implementation of policies in the
following areas:i. Land use planning and subdivision urban cost recovery; and
ii. Physical infrastructure needs for urban and rural population
urbanization;8. To supervise and prepare physical plans and exercise planning
control; and -
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9. To administer the provisions of the Physical Planning Legislation;
and10. To provide services to the Land Board, Valuers Registration Board,
Physical Planning Board and standing or ad hoc committees relating
to the functions of the Department.11. To expeditiously collect Land Rent.
12. To enforce Lease covenants.
13. To make available land for development on commercially realistic
terms.27.2. The Committee accepts that the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning manages and is responsible for the operations of at least:1. The Papua New Guinea Land Board; and
2. The Papua New Guinea Valuers Registration Board; and
3. The National Physical Planning Board
27.3. The Department of Lands and Physical Planning is responsible for
administration in whole or in part of a number of important statutes. These
are, at least the:1. Land Act 1996.
2. Land Groups Incorporation Act (Ch. 147);
3. Land (Ownership of Freeholds) Act; and
4. Land Registration Act (Ch.191); and
5. Local Government Act – S. 91 (Ch. 57); and
6. Physical Planning Act 1989; and
7. Street Closing Act (Ch. 201); and
8. Survey Act – except S. 11 (Ch.95); and
9. Town Boundaries Act (Ch 8); and
10. Valuation Act – except S. 113 (Ch. 327).
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27.4. The Department of Lands and Physical Planning has not enjoyed a
reputation for transparency or efficiency over the last ten years.27.5. The State has suffered huge losses due to the non collection of Land Rents
and the Department has not maintained contact with commercial reality
and market place imperatives in its dealings with the allocation of land.27.6. The Inquiry by the Public Accounts Committee seeks to examine the
handling of, accounting for and protection of State property, assets and
public monies by the Department of Lands and Physical Planning.28. PART ONE – EXAMINATION OF THE REPORTS OF THE AUDITOR
GENERAL OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS & PHYSICAL PLANNING
FOR THE YEARS 2000 – 200428.1. The Public Accounts Committee considered reports of the Auditor
General on the Department of Lands and Physical Planning for the years
2000 – 2004.28.2. The Committee must report serious concerns at some parts of those
Reports – in particular the performance of the Department in revenue
collection for the State29. REVENUE AND DEBT COLLECTION BY THE DEPARTMENT OF
LANDS & PHYSICAL PLANNING.29.1. The Department of Lands and Physical Planning is responsible for the
assessment, levying and collection of Tender prices, reserve prices and
Land Rentals for all State Leases in Papua New Guinea.29.2. This revenue is a significant portion of the National economy.
29.3. During the period 2000 – 2004, the following revenue was collected by
the Department.2000.
Land Rental K. 16, 093,407
Licence Fees and Royalty payments K. 20,650
Sale of Allotments K. 12,680
Survey fees K. 21,861
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Surveyors Registration Fees K. 4,075
Valuation Fees K. 254,843
Valuers Registration Fees K. 13,000
Objection Fees K. nil
Sales of Maps etc. K. 255
Surplus earnings and rentals K. nil
Lodgement Fees K. 38,805
Recovery from materials etc. K. 87,762
Physical Planning Fees K. 9,122
Sundry receipts K. 1, 303, 343
29.4. However, the Auditor General noted a shortfall in the total collection
estimated for the year against the annual revenue budget of K21,144,500
by K2,124,197.29.5. The Report of the Auditor General dated 15th May 2001 identified a
number of weaknesses and failures within the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning.29.6. They were:
An unexplained shortfall in respect of various heads of revenue;
• 3,468 lessee rental payees outstanding to a value of K7,853,342 did
not have the correct address for billing purposes;• Potential revenue to the State was lost as a result of 206 rental
records with outstanding rents amounting to K92,507 were without a
client. This indicates that land which was supposed to have been
leased out to clients was not leased and remained unoccupied or
under dispute.• The Auditor General noted consistent failures in updating the list of
the land rentals and significant uncollected accumulated Land
Rentals totaling K54,912,718.49. This Committee further examines
unpaid land rental (infra). -
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• Valuation fees were outstanding for the year ending the 31st
December 2000 for properties charged on debit notes in a sum of
K138,831. K91,303 of this amount was outstanding since 1986.
The Department had failed to make any follow up on valuations.• The Auditor General finds “negligence of duty and lack of co-
operation between line divisions concerned” which resulted in
records maintained by the Revenue Division being unreliable and the
State missing out on substantial amounts of revenue.• Outstanding cheques in a sum of K 905,508.81 – K 893,470.18 of
which were current to the year 2000 with no evidence to suggest
follow up action – especially for the years 1998 and 1999.• Significant problems in respect of budgetary controls and payment of
accounts were identified.• The Land Acquisition Trust Account maintained two sets of cash
books – manual and computerized cash books – which did not
reconcile. Cancelled cheques to a value of K311,150 were not
entered in the manual cash book.• There were omissions in the Asset Register, no evidence of a
physical stocktake during the year 2000 and the Register was not
maintained properly, was incomplete and therefore could not be
relied upon.29.7. The Office of the Auditor General summarized its findings for the year
2001. The Office of the Auditor General identified:• Deficiencies in revenue collections;
• Weaknesses in the collection of Land Lease Rentals;
• Shortcomings in the preparation of Drawing Account Bank
Reconciliation;• Weaknesses and irregularities in budgetary control procedures;
• Non-compliance with procurement and payment procedures;
• Shortcomings in the purchase of motor vehicles;
• Weaknesses in acquittal of advances;
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• Irregularity in the payment of motor vehicle allowances;
• Weaknesses in operation of trust accounts;
• Weaknesses in maintenance of lost records; and
• Weaknesses in internal controls.
29.8. The Auditor General also noted outstanding matters from previous audit
reports as follows:• From 1999, there remained a non-compliance to procurement and
payment procedures;• Inadequate control over payment and acquittal of advances;
• Lapses in commitment control;
• Weaknesses in Drawing Account Reconciliation; and
• Lack of maintenance of the Trust Accounts.
29.9. Revenue for the year 2001 was recorded as:
Land Lease Rentals K 16,315,072
Licence Fees and Royalty payments K 25, 845
Sale of Allotments K 621,075
Survey fees K 23,362
Lodgement Fees K 26,291
Recovery from Material & Services K 33,556
Physical Planning Regulations K 8,604
TOTAL K 17,053, 805
29.10. The Budget of Revenue Statement from the Department of Finance total
K23,015,000. The Auditor General finds a shortfall of K5,961,195.2002
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29.11. In 2002 the Auditor General reported the following findings:
• Deficiency in revenue collections;
• Deficiencies and weaknesses in the collection of land lease rentals;
• Shortcomings in the preparation of Drawing Account Bank
Reconciliation;• Weaknesses and irregularities in budgetary and expenditure control
procedures;• Non-compliance with procurement and payment procedures;
• Irregularities in payment of professional and consultancy fees;
• Weaknesses in control over Assets;
• Weaknesses in control of motor vehicle fleet;
• Irregularities highlighted in Internal Audit Report; and
• Shortcomings in compliance to Public Accounts Committee
Directives.29.12. The following matters are outstanding from 2001 Audit:
• Non-compliance with procurement and payment procedures;
• Deficiencies in collection of Land Lease Rentals; and
• Weaknesses in Drawing Account Reconciliation.
29.13. More concerning to the Committee were the Internal Audit findings that
no action had been taken by the Department for recovery of a fraudulent
payment of K18,599.00 to a stationery company and payment of an
entertainment allowance and no action had been taken in respect of an
incomplete Asset Register in accordance with both the internal and
external audit findings and recommendations.29.14. Further, the Committee finds that its own directives had not been
complied with by the Secretary for the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning in that: -
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• An amount of K 465,507 for Land Lease Rental payments from a
private company held in Maladinas Lawyers Trust Account was not
remitted to the Department and remained to be recovered.• A payment of K 18,559 to a private stationary supplier had not been
recovered. The Auditor General further identified an advance payment
of K504, 300 to a private surveying firm to carry out surveying and
town planning work at 8 and 9 Mile in the National Capital District.• The follow up audit for the years 2001 – 2002 revealed no evidence
available to vouch for the services paid for and value for money
received by the Department.29.15. The budgeted revenue collection was K25,010,000. The actual collection
was K17,551,000 – yielding a shortfall of K7,459,000. This represented
29.82% as opposed to 22.02% in 2001.29.16. The 2003 revenue figures are:
Lease Rentals K 16,914,840
Licence Fees and Royalties K 21,612
Sale of Allotments K 64,130
Survey Fees K 18,834
Surveyor’s registration Fees K 3,660
Valuation Fees K 13,782
Valuers Registration K 680
Objection Fees K Nil
Sale of Maps K Nil
Surplus earnings on rentals K Nil
Lodgement Fees K 39,635
Recovery from materials and Services K. 212,674
Physical Planning Fees K 1,035
Sundry receipts K 1,034, 408
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TOTAL K 18,325,290
29.17. The net shortfall in revenue collection for 2003 totalled K4,919,423.
29.18. There was a further problem with revenue. The Auditor General
compared the total revenue collected as shown by the Department ledgers
against the Department of Finance – Public Accounts – Statement “J”.
This revealed a net difference of K650,787.00. This meant that the total
revenue of the Department was understated by K650,787.00 in the
Departmental ledgers. The Auditor General concludes that:“Prudent management practices called for reconciling of records
between two different entities, bodies etc, for purposes of ensuring
correctness of balances reported and to avoid duplication of payments,
receipts etc.,The Department should ensure that its accounting records and data are
accurate and reconciliation is one of the management tools to ensure
correctness and completeness.”30. LAND RENTALS
30.1. The Committee finds that the Department of Lands and Physical Planning
has, for many years, failed to collect or enforce the payment of Land
Rental to any acceptable standard.30.2. The Committee finds that, as a result of that failure, the Department and
the Head of Department are in breach of the requirements of the Public
Finances (Management) Act and will make certain referrals in this
respect later in this Report.30.3. The Committee finds that during the period 2000 – 2005, huge amounts of
Land Rentals have not been collected by the Department, to the
considerable detriment of the State.30.4. From the Departments own documents and records, the Committee
concludes that the following aggregated or accumulated amounts of Land
Rental remain outstanding:2000 K. 54, 912, 718 . 49
2001 K. 57, 692, 508 . 37
2002 K. 63, 765, 757 . 39
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2003 K. 65, 835, 960 . 58
2004 K. 73, 505, 636 . 99
2005 K. 77, 445, 204 . 11
30.5. By any measure this is a significant loss to the State. It is unacceptable.
30.6. The Committee notes that this total does not include Land Rental owed by
Statutory Corporations which was waived by the NEC.30.7. The Auditor General calculates even more Land Rental to be outstanding
but no ageing of these debts is possible due to poor record keeping by the
Department.30.8. The Committee sought an explanation for this failure to collect and / or to
forfeit, from the Secretary of the Department, Mr. Pepi Kimas.30.9. The Secretary blamed the lack of resources, lack of funding, lack of
records, lack of staff and lack of cooperation by the Offices of the
Solicitor General and the Attorney General and his own staff. The
Committee does not accept these excuses.30.10. To some extent, the Department has manpower problems, but the
Statutory mechanism to forfeit Leases for non payment is simple and a
readily available coercive device, which has not been used by the
Department, adequately or at all – to the considerable detriment of the
State.30.11. The Committee considers that the failure by the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning to collect Land Rental in a timely manner – or at all – is
a failure of Management over many years and a breach by past and present
Departmental Secretaries of their responsibilities under the Public
Finances (Management) Act, in respect of which this Committee will
make referrals for investigation and prosecution.30.12. Further, the Committee will recommend that Government take urgent
action to address this failure.31. OBLIGATIONS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS & PHYSICAL
PLANNING TOWARD THE PUBLIC ACCOUNTS COMMITTEE31.1. The Departmental Head and Secretary of the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning is charged, by Section 5 of the Public Finances
(Management) Act, with the responsibility to ensure that information -
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required by the Public Accounts Committee is submitted to that
Committee accurately and promptly – (Section 5 (1) (j) ).31.2. The responsibility of that Departmental Head is not derogated from or
reduced by reason of any delegation of functions by him to another
person.31.3. The Committee concludes that the Secretary and Departmental Head of
the Department of Lands and Physical Planning, Mr. Pepi Kimas, is the
Officer responsible for attending, liaising and co-coordinating the
attendance and co-operation of his Department with this Inquiry by the
Public Accounts Committee.31.4. At this point, the Committee states that the obligations imposed on a
Departmental Head are onerous. He takes, in some cases, personal
responsibility for the failures of either himself or his Officers and a
Departmental Head may be responsible for a very large and varied
Department. For instance, the Department of Labour and Industrial
Relations administers no less than 18 Acts of Parliament with all the
attendant staff, accounting complexities and lines of command and control
upon which the Head of Department must be entitled to rely, but for which
he is also responsible.31.5. It is the Committee’s opinion that the duties of the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning are clearly set forth in the Land Act and other Acts
which it administers. Senior Officers of that Department are long-serving
and could be expected to know their duties and to be placed to train their
staff to ensure that those obligations are efficiently and effectively carried
out.31.6. Moreover, the Secretary of the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning gave sworn evidence to the effect that he understood the
statutory obligations imposed on him by the Public Finances
(Management) Act – which include cooperation and compliance with the
Public Accounts Committee.31.7. In his role of responsible Head of Department, the Secretary for the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning has the power to obtain full
and free access at all times to all accounts and records of accountable
officers that relate directly or indirectly to the collection, receipt,
expenditure or issue of public money and the receipt, custody, disposal,
issue of stores or other property of the State.31.8. Furthermore, he is empowered to inspect and inquire into and call for all
information arising from those accounts and records at any time. -
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31.9. On the 5th day of September 2005, the Public Accounts Committee issued
and served on the Secretary for Lands and Physical Planning, a Notice
pursuant to Section 23 (1) (b) of the Permanent Parliamentary
Committees Act 1994.31.10. That Notice required the production of a large number of documents, files
and records relevant to the Inquiry. A copy of that Notice appears in
Schedule 3 to this Report.31.11. The Committee reports that the Secretary of the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning failed to produce to the Public Accounts Committee
when directed to do so, a significant number of documents, records and
files.
31.12. In this regard the Secretary breached his statutory duty and was referred to
the Office of the Public Prosecutor for investigation, pursuant to Section
23 (3) (b) (iii) of the Permanent Parliamentary Committees Act 1994.31.13. On the 24th November 2005, the Public Accounts Committee issued and
served a Summons to Produce Documents on the Secretary of the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning, pursuant to Section 89 of the
Public Finances (Management) Act.31.14. That Summons required the production of all missing documents, files and
records. A copy of that Summons appears in Schedule 3 to this Report.31.15. The Secretary produced some of those materials, but all production was
inadequate and, in many instances, non-existent. The Secretary proffered
no acceptable explanation for this failure.31.16. It is notable that no documentary material at all was produced which was
relevant to any land transaction which was unlawful, corrupt or otherwise
tainted by Departmental misconduct.31.17. It is also notable that no records at all were produced in respect of any
Land Board which was either incompetently convened or did not sit at all
– despite the fact that State Leases were issued by the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning from those non- existent Boards.31.18. The Committee again referred the Secretary for prosecution for this failure
pursuant to Section 23 of the Parliamentary Powers and Privileges Act.31.19. The Committee sees no excuse at all for the failure of the Secretary for the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning and his Management Team to
produce even basic records, documents and files to the Public Accounts
Committee. -
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31.20. This Committee can only conclude that the Department, its Secretary and
Senior Managers refused or failed to comply with a Notice and a
Summons of the Public Accounts Committee in a calculated and
contemptuous manner, wherever they perceived that the refusal would
assisted their witnesses and Departmental Officers or where the contents
of documents would reflect unfavorably on the Department or individuals
within the Department.31.21. The Committee also concludes that the Secretary for the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning has no or no adequate control over his staff
or their activities and that either the Secretary actively shields corrupt and
/or incompetent staff or is directed by his staff – rather than the other way
around.31.22. The Committee concludes that the Secretary is aware that documents are
destroyed or removed within his Department, but refuses or fails to rectify
the situation.31.23. We have previously referred to the frank sworn admission made to the
Committee by Mr. Pepi Kimas, to the effect that his staff are paid to
destroy documents and records. See Para 6.15 of this Report.31.24. A more candid admission of criminal conduct cannot be imagined.
31.25. The Public Accounts Committee concludes that the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning and its senior officers – in particular Mr. Pepi
Kimas – have failed to cooperate and assist the Public Accounts
Committee and failed to give frank and full evidence before the
Committee – in particular concerning certain unlawful land transactions
and illegal grants of State Leases for no or no adequate benefit to the
State.31.26. Further, the Department and its officers have failed to comply with a
Notice to Produce Documents and a Summons to Produce Documents,
when it was in their power to so comply.31.27. This amounted to a defiance of the Directives of a Parliamentary
Committee and a breach of the basic principles of accountability of the
Department.31.28. Finally, the Committee concludes that the failure by the Secretary and
Managers of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning to co-operate
with the Public Accounts Committee when taken with other failures and
mismanagement, reveals a management team that should be removed and
replaced and a Department devoid of viable and competent lines of control
and command – and thereby accountability and responsibility. -
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32. PART TWO – PERFORMANCE OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
LANDS AND PHYSICAL PLANNING 1999 – 2002.32.1. The Committee chose, at random, five portions of alienated State Land
which were granted into private hands prior to 2002.32.2. Of these five parcels of land, four were previously unallocated Reserved
Land, National Park or public land and one parcel was the subject of an
Agricultural Lease.32.3. The first purpose of this phase of the Inquiry was to ascertain if this land
was lawfully granted into private hands.32.4. The second and principal purpose was to assess such issues as revenue
collection, whether the Department carried out its duties to apply the law
when granting and registering the Leases, the state of Rental arrears,
tender prices collected, compliance by Leaseholders with Lease covenants,
the protection of State assets and documentation, the keeping of accounts
and action taken by the Department and its officers to protect the State and
preserve national assets at any time since 1999.32.5. The third purpose of this phase of the Inquiry was to consider what steps,
if any, the current Management Team of the Department had taken to
recover illegally issued land or land in respect of which Land Rental was
outstanding or other Lease Covenants had been breached.32.6. The Committee now reports in respect of each of those grants of State
Lease:33. PORTION 1597 MILINCH GRANVILLE, FOURMIL MORESBY AT
PAGA HILL – GRANT TO PAGA HILL DEVELOPMENT COMPANY
LTD.BACKGROUND:
33.1. On the 18th December 1997 Paga Hill Land Holding Company (PNG)
Pty. Ltd. was granted an Urban Development Lease (“UDL”) over
Portion 1597 Granville Port Moresby. This land comprises 13.7 hectares
of Paga Hill in Port Moresby – virtually all the hill. This Committee
concludes that the Grantee was Paga Hill Development Co. (PNG) Ltd.33.2. A large number of onerous conditions attached to the UDL – none of
which, the Committee concludes, have been complied with by the Lessee. -
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33.3. This land was a Gazetted National Park and could not be granted away to
private hands.33.4. The Committee finds that this land was of great National importance and a
prime piece of recreational land for the residents of Port Moresby.33.5. How the land came to be given to private speculators is a good illustration
of the failings and corrupt conduct of the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning.33.6. The continuing refusal of the Department to recover the land for the State
well illustrates the continued acquiescence of the Department in corrupt
dealings and clearly shows the extent to which private interests control the
Department at the expense of the State and the citizens of Papua New
Guinea.33.7. This Inquiry was seriously impeded by the Departmental failure to
produce any records or documents at all concerning the issue of the
original UDL or a subsequent Lease – despite a Notice and Summons to
do so.33.8. The Committee concludes that there should have been many pages of
feasibility reports, assessments, surveys and plans produced to and
maintained by the Department before the UDL could be converted to
another form of State Lease. The Secretary for Lands produced only nine
pages of material – much of which was irrelevant.33.9. In light of the evident illegality which attended the grant of this Lease, the
Committee concludes that the Department of Lands and Physical Planning
deliberately refused to comply with legitimate directives and a Summons
from this Committee to protect either or both the recipients of the Lease
Grant and/or Departmental Officers involved in the grant process.33.10. The only excuse proffered by the Secretary for this failure, was a
suggestion that the files “may possibly” be with the Ombudsman
Commission. The Committee questioned the Secretary on this suggestion,
but neither the Secretary nor other Departmental officers had any interest
in establishing the true whereabouts of the relevant files and documents.33.11. The Committee concludes that Mr. Kimas would rather be prosecuted for
failure to produce documents, than reveal that the documents either never
existed or be prosecuted as a result of their contents becoming known.33.12. The Committee treats this failure as a very serious breach of the Law.
-
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33.13. The following analysis of how this National Park came to be in private
hands is therefore made with no assistance at all from the Department or
its officers.34. THE LAND
34.1. Portion 1597 Milinch Granville, Fourmil Moresby comprising two parts
containing a total area of 13.1198 hectares was reserved from Lease by a
Declaration in the National Gazette G59 dated the 10th September 1987 for
the purposes of “Open Space” to be managed by the National Parks Board.
In other words the land was preserved for future generations as a National
Park.34.2. There were good reasons for this to occur. The Land is of considerable
historical importance to the nation, containing as it does, Wartime
Bunkers, Gun Emplacements, tunnels and, apparently, significant pre-
historical sites.34.3. Further, the situation of the land in the centre of a growing city offers
superior recreational facilities to the occupants of Port Moresby. It is now
and will increasingly be a vital recreational area for central Port Moresby.34.4. Part of the land was occupied by a Police Mess Hall and Police Hall
apparently owned and operated for the benefit of Police Legacy. In
recognition of this, the Police were granted a “Certificate Authorising
Occupancy of Land” over part of the land – issued on the 11th September
1987.34.5. There is no apparent Gazettal of Revocation of the Reservation of Lease or
the Certificate Authorising Occupancy of Land until the National Capital
District Physical Planning Board by Meeting 2a/2000 rezoned the land
from Open Space to Commercial, Part Residential, Part Public
Institutional and Part Utilities by Gazette Notice dated 22nd May 2000.34.6. Precisely how, why and at whose request this was done remains totally
unclear in the absence of documents or records from the Department.34.7. The Committee cannot conclude on the reasoning behind the Revocation
of the Land as a National Park.34.8. In or about 1995, the National Parks Board ceased to exist. There was no
management of the Park and it is fair to assume that speculators saw the
land as ripe for acquisition.34.9. The State, in general, and the Department of Lands and Physical Planning
in particular allowed and co-operated in the taking of this National Park -
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from the citizens of Papua New Guinea by profiteers who, subsequent
events showed, had no capacity to develop the land at all.35. THE URBAN DEVELOPPMENT LEASE.
35.1. Four applications for grant of this Land were referred to Papua New
Guinea Land Board No. 1991 (Item 2) each seeking a grant of a Business
(Commercial) Lease over the land – one of which was Paga Hill Land
Holding (PNG) (sic). The Land was still a National Park.35.2. The Committee can establish that Land Board No.1991 purported to
convene on Friday 22nd August 1997. The Board was chaired by Mr.
Ralph Guise.35.3. The Land Board apparently completely ignored the fact that the land was a
National Park and could not be the subject of such tenders or of a Grant of
Lease.35.4. Police Legacy advised the Land Board in writing of its interest in and
development plans for part of the land. Representatives of Police Legacy
apparently attended the Land Board.35.5. It seems that the Land Board No 1991 recommended that “Paga Hill
Land Holding PNG” (sic) be granted a Lease over Portion 1597 Milinch
Granville Fourmil Moresby – with an orally imposed condition that the
land area the subject of Police Legacy’s interest was to be excised from
Portion 1597 by the “Developer” and that Police Legacy would be
granted appropriate title thereafter.35.6. Thus far, the only record of such a condition is a hand written memo or
record apparently signed by the Chairman of the Land Board Mr. Ralph
Guise. That memo records:“Recommendations:
Of Papua New Guinea Land Board go in favour of Paga Hill Land
Holding Co. Ltd. to develop and improve portion 1597 Granville over
(sic) five year period to a value of K M 300.Foot Note:
Company appears to have access to sufficient funds to fulfill
requirements.1. Annexation of Police Mess to be undertaken by developer in favour
of RPNGC -
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2. Dept. and developer maintain a close liaison to accommodate
requirements as highlighted by Department.”35.7. There would appear to be no real protection at all for the property of
Police Legacy. The Committee concludes that this charitable Police asset–
and therefore State or public asset – has simply disappeared with no
protection given by the Department.35.8. An Improvement Covenant is clearly set out in that UDL. It requires
improvements to a value of K 300 million to be undertaken in the first five
years of occupation.35.9. Such a covenant would be onerous to a large well resourced company. As
of March 2006, there is no development on the land at all. How the Land
Board concluded that the Grantee could meet the Improvement Covenant,
is unknown in the absence of any documentation.35.10. That Lease contained strict covenants requiring detailed reports on all
aspects of the proposed development before the UDL could be surrendered
and a Business Lease issued – none of which have apparently been met by
the Lessee. If they have been met, the Department has failed or refused to
produce any documents at all which show this compliance.35.11. The Committee concludes that, in order to comply with the UDL
Covenants, at least the following documents had to exist:• Records of Land Board meeting No. 1991
• Minutes of Land Board No. 1991
• Recommendations of Land Board 1991
• Advertisement or call for tenders or
• Exemption from advertisement
• Applications for Grant of Lease
• Supporting documents to those applications
• Internal working papers relating to the issue of the UDL
• Approvals for the Grant of UDL by Departmental Officers
• Ministerial paperwork on the issue of the UDL
-
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• Copies of the UDL
• Land Rent records
• Records of improvement expenditure by the Lessee
• Records of Planning or Surveying
• Any Gazette Notices at all
• Instructions to the Government Printer
• Submissions or proposals for Capital expenditure on Public Open
Space• Submissions or proposals for upgrading or rehabilitation of war
Relics or plans therefore• Compliance with any one of the Covenants in the UDL
• Records of arrangement, discussion or payment to the National
Housing Corporation in respect of National Infrastructure• Proposals or actual steps taken to protect Police Legacy
• Revocation as Open Space in 2000
• Records of legal advice and action taken in respect thereof
• Reserve of tender price levied or paid
• Proof of Land Rental paid
• Any submissions of reports, Plans, Zoning Reports, development
plans, infrastructural and utility service details, cadastral boundary
survey plans, area survey for conservation purpose, demarcated
areas for NCDC Parks and Open Space and waterfront
development details to your Office for approval• Approvals by Physical Planning Board, Eda Ranu, NCDC
engineers, Surveyor General, Department of the Environment,
Harbours Board, IPA and Tourism Promotion Authority -
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• Proof of compliance with Improvement Covenant or capacity to do
so.This list is not exhaustive.
35.12. Not a single sheet of paper was produced in respect of any of these matters
and no explanation as to that failure was made.35.13. Further, due to the non-production of documents, this Committee cannot
know the identity of the other supposed applicants for State Lease or the
nature of the successful tender and can make no findings on the legality
and transparency of the tender process.35.14. The failure to comply with the UDL covenants, particularly the
Improvement Covenant, should have resulted in the Department forfeiting
the Lease – or at the least, not issuing a Business Lease.35.15. More properly, the Department of Lands should have cancelled the Lease
years ago on the basis that it was unlawfully issued.35.16. The Committee finds that the grant of the UDL was and is now unlawful
for a number of reasons. They are at least:i) There was no quorum at the original Land Board. The Solicitor
General advised the Department of Lands that the Grant of the Lease
was illegal for this reason, but the Department ignored the advice.ii) The Land Board could not have been reasonably satisfied that the
applicant could raise K.300 million in five years. Indeed, the
Committee finds that the Lessee cannot pay the Land Rental and has
sought relief from that obligation, much less fund a development of
the magnitude required.iii) The land was a National Park zoned Open Space. The land should
have been zoned as sub-divisional land in order that a UDL could
issue, but was not and could not have been so zoned.35.17. The Committee finds a complete and inexplicable failure of the
Department to ensure that even the most basic legal requirements were
either imposed or met and this resulted in a total failure to protect State
Land and public assets.36. THE BUSINESS LEASE
36.1. In 2000, a company called Paga Hill Development Co. (PNG) Ltd was
formed. -
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36.2. On the 01/09/2000, a Business Lease over Portion 1597 Granville was
granted to Paga Hill Development (PNG) Ltd. This Lease was registered
as State Volume No. 24 Folio 159. How and why this new Company,
rather than the original Grantee, was able to obtain this Lease is unknown.36.3. The Lease should have been issued to the same company that held the
Urban Development Lease.36.4. This Business Lease issued out of the UDL granted to Paga Hill Land
Holding Company (PNG) Ltd. in 1997. It should have been issued to
that company.36.5. The Department itself states that the UDL has not been surrendered – so
two Leases appear to exist over the same land. In a memo to the Secretary
for Lands, dated the 18th March 2003, the issue of the Business Lease is
described as “dubious”.36.6. Further, the Business Lease related to the entire area and assumed that all
the land was zoned “Commercial”. This was not the case. There were
varied zonings and the Lease was illegally issued.36.7. This Lease contained only very basic covenants requiring payment of
Land Rent and an Improvement Covenant requiring improvements to a
minimum of K 10 million within five years of issue of the Lease – on the
1/09/2000. Neither covenant has been complied with. No attempt has been
made to forfeit the Lease by the Department for this failure.36.8. This Business Lease could not have lawfully issued. The reasons are at
least:i) The UDL was unlawfully granted and issued (see above Para 25.16).
ii) None of the stringent conditions in the UDL had been met. In
particular the Department has produced no evidence that:a) the 10% dedicated as Open Space has been excised; or
b) the historical relics have been returned to the Department of
Heritage; orc) the Lessee could or did meet the capital cost of establishing Open
Space and renovation of the heritage sites or that they have been
handed back to the respective authorities; or -
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d) any arrangement with National Housing Corporation for
compensation by the Lessee for demolishing government
Institutional improvements; ore) the Lessee submitted a Master Plan to the Secretary for Lands
within 12 months of the grant or that the Master Plan contained
any of the matters prescribed; orf) that any Master Plan had approval of the Physical Planning Board,
Eda Ranu, NCDC Engineers, Surveyor General, Dept. of
Environment and the Tourism Promotion Authority or the
Harbours Board; org) that the Secretary for Lands approved (or even saw) any Master
Plan (if it ever existed).h) the improvement covenant in the UDL had not been met in whole
or in part; andi) rent was in arrears and remains in arrears; and
j) The Lessee had failed to meet all conditions and clearly had no
capacity to do so; andk) The works proposed and covenanted for in the UDL must be
approved by the Physical Planning Board – there is no evidence
that this ever occurred.l) The Lease contravenes Section 67 of the Land Act as it contradicts
the multi Zoning of the Land36.9. The unimproved value of the Land was assessed at K 5,000,000 in which
case the correct Land Rental, at 5% of that value, should be K 250,000 p.a.
This is the Rental appropriate to a Business Lease.36.10. On the 24/05/ 2001, the Lease was changed by handwritten notation which
reduced the Land Rent from K 250,000 per annum to K 50,000.36.11. The Committee finds that there is no power to correct the record in this
fashion.36.12. When questioned as to the identity of the Officer who changed the amount
and the legal basis so to do, both the Secretary and Deputy Secretary of
the Department could not tell the Committee. -
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36.13. There is no explanation for this reduction. This means that with the active
collusion of the Department, the State has lost a minimum of
approximately K 900,000 from 2000 until 2005.36.14. Further, the Committee finds that the amended Land Rent of K 50,000 is
1% of the unimproved value – this is the Rent applicable to an Urban
Development Lease which, apparently, was surrendered in 2000.36.15. The Committee was advised that the Lessee could not pay even this
reduced amount. A Departmental Officer then agreed to allow the Lessee
to pay the Land Rent over a period. This Officer had no power to do so.
Why then was the Department prepared to unlawfully allow such a Lessee
time to pay?36.16. The Committee sought to identify the Officer who entered the
arrangement.36.17. The transcript shows the following exchange:
HON. JOHN HICKEY MP:
“Mr Kila Pat did you make some arrangements with the Leaseholder to
allow payment of Land Rent over a period?MR. ROMMILLY KILA PAT (Deputy Secretary of the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning)“Chairman I think I have done that in writing”.
And later
MR. KILA PAT;
“Considering the fact that if …..any other Lessee if they have any
difficulties in paying one up payment in front they can come to the
Department to arrange for payments over a period of time within which
they should be able to settle all or whatever the outstanding fees are”HON JOHN HICKEY MP:
“That is quite difficult for us to accept when there are clearly stated
………..covenants you know, the covenant on the land for development
was K 300 million in five years and here you have a Lessee who said
they had K 300 million to spend on developing the land and they come
along and say we cannot pay the K 250,000 rents per year which is
nothing compared to K 300 million. -
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Who allowed this Leaseholder to pay less Rent…..Did you make
arrangements with the Leaseholder?MR. ROMILLY KILA PAT:
“The arrangements were basically based on the figures that were
outstanding at the time, but in terms of paying out rental I do not have
the authority to say you don’t pay this much”.36.18. The reduction in rent was made by Mr. Pat, as was a time payment
arrangement for the benefit of the Lessee. This was quite unlawful – as
Mr. Pat acknowledged. The Committee was prevented from following this
line of Inquiry as Mr. Pat departed Papua New Guinea for a study course
in Australia whilst under Summons to this Committee – with no
notification to the Committee.36.19. Even at the reduced amount, Land Rent owing to the State was K 237,000
in arrears as at 28th February 2006. The Committee notes that as of the
28th February 2006, the last payment of Land Rental was made on the 30th
March 2005.36.20. As if these illegalities were not enough, on the 21st October 2002, the then
Minister for Lands agreed to a request from the principal of Paga Hill
Development Company limited, to waive all past and future rentals until
January 2006.36.21. The reason for the request by the Lessee was that the Land Rental could be
better used in sourcing international investors to develop the land – a
contention with which the Minister agreed.36.22. The Minister further agreed to extend the Improvement Covenant from
five to ten years – a decision made with no legal basis at all.36.23. The Committee concludes that, for once in this transaction, the
Department acted quite correctly in refusing to accept the Ministerial
waiver of Land Rental.37. FINANCIAL LOSS TO THE STATE
37.1. The Committee concludes that the State has been deprived of Rental
payments by the illegal expedient of retrospectively changing the Lease
condition and by the failure of the Department to recover the land either
by forfeiture or by cancellation of the Lease. -
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37.2. In the absence of any evidence to the contrary from the Secretary for
Lands and Physical Planning or his Officers, the Committee concludes
that no Tender or Reserved Price has been applied.37.3. This failure has cost the State at least K 3,000,000.00 – representing 60%
of the unimproved value. The Department appears to have taken no steps
at all to protect the position of the State in this regard.37.4. Why the Lease has not been forfeited is unknown. Land Rent is in arrears
and no development at all has taken place. Non-compliance with the
Leasehold improvement covenant and/or non-payment of land rent for six
months constitutes grounds for forfeiture.37.5. Why the lease has not been cancelled for want of lawful issue is unknown.
Moreover, the Lessee has attempted to sell shares in the Lessee Company
with no apparent attempt to even start the development of the site. In
2005, 50% of the shares in the Company Paga Hill Development
Company Ltd were offered to a Western Province Landowner Company
for K 27 ,000,000.00.37.6. If this is a true valuation of the Company (the only asset of which seems to
be the Paga Hill Land) the loss to the State by under-calculated Land
Rental and tender and Reserve Price is huge.37.7. Further, the Committee concludes that Paga Hill Development Company
Ltd. has done nothing to protect the interest of Police Legacy at all.
Neither has the Department of Lands and Physical Planning. Both entities
are in breach of their obligations in this regard and the State through
Police Legacy has lost a significant asset.37.8. Examination of the few documents produced to this Committee and the
evidence given by witnesses show clearly that prime land and a National
Park, has been illegally given to a private, foreign speculator with no
ability to even pay the Land Rental, much less build anything on the site.38. FAILURES BY THE DEPARTMENT
38.1. In this transaction, the Committee concludes that the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning has failed in its obligation to ensure that:i) the offering of land for tender was lawfully carried out; and
ii) the land exposed to public tender was lawfully available; and
iii) the Papua New Guinea Land Board understood the basic legal
requirements for the offering of land for tender; and -
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iv) the Land Board and the Department understood and complied with
Land Zoning and Reservation; andv) the Papua New Guinea Land Board understood the law under
which it operates and the procedural requirements for its meetings;
andvi) the Papua New Guinea Land Board be properly advised in its
deliberations; andvii) any defects in the grant of Leases be identified and rectified, before
Leases issued or that the Lease not issue at all; andviii) legal advice received be acted upon; and
ix) Departmental officers understand the relevant law and act upon
legal advice received; andx) Departmental officers understand their obligations to obey the law
and their role and function in protecting the interests of the State
over those of private enterprise; andxi) the forfeiture provisions of the Land Act be acted upon for
breaches of covenants or legal obligations; andxii) the Lease was cancelled for illegal issue; and
xiii) Departmental Officers not proceed in any transaction unless and
until all legal obligations, conditions or covenants whatever are
complied with by applicants; andxiv) Departmental Officers understand and obey their duty to properly
calculate and collect monies owed to the State; andxv) the Departmental Officers understand and fulfil their statutory
obligations in all respects – in particular that the Department
competently and lawfully manage land, collect and account for
monies owed to the State and that all Managers and Officers of his
Department obey directions and implement legal requirements; andxvi) the Departmental Secretary promptly reply to letters from
interested parties and not delay or ignore obviously relevant
matters; and -
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xvii) no person or company be given preferential or favoured treatment
– particularly where that person or company is in breach of lawful
obligations and in particular where the unlawful alienation of State
Land is sought; andxviii) interests of the State and the citizens of Papua New Guinea prevail
over those of a private foreign company; andxix) it protected the State and State assets from misappropriation or
misuse.xx) the terms of the Land Act be applied; and
xxi) transparency and honesty prevail in the processes of tender for and
grant of State Leases.39. FAILURES BY THE SECRETARY FOR LANDS
39.1. This Grant was made before the current Secretary for Lands, Mr. Pepi
Kimas was appointed, but the Committee considered what, if any, steps
the past or current Secretaries had taken to rectify this matter.39.2. In the opinion it would have been proper for this Lease to have been
cancelled or forfeited at any time.39.3. Despite the fact that the Secretary for Lands and Physical Planning failed
to produce relevant documents and files to the Public Accounts
Committee, it is clear to the Committee that the Secretary is well aware of
this transaction and of the illegalities attending the issue of the Lease over
Paga Hill.39.4. The Committee finds that Mr. Kimas has done nothing. He and his
management team have failed to protect the position of the State, and he
has thereby breached his statutory duties as Departmental Secretary and
Head of Department.39.5. The Committee questioned Mr. Kimas on this failure. The Committee also
questioned Mr. Kimas on similar failures in respect of other State Leases
illegally given into private hands.39.6. The explanations proffered to the Committee for these failures were
contradictory and without any force.39.7. The Committee notes that on the 29th day of November 2005, the
Secretary for Lands undertook to the Committee, while on oath, to serve
Notices to Show Cause on the Lessee of the Paga Hill Land, as a precursor -
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to a forfeit of the land. He undertook to do so within 48 hours. The
evidence was:HON JOHN HICKEY MP
“There are a whole lot of illegalities attached to it (Paga Hil). Illegalities
caused by greed. And if we do not do anything about it, it is in the hands
of two foreigners who do not live in our country. ………As we speak this
land is falling into the of two foreigners. Secretary please you and your
officers’ action this immediately – get this land back to us before the
February hearing.MR PEPI KIMAS
“Chairman, I’ll give the copies of the Notice to Show Cause to the
lawyers within 48 hours from now.”Evidence given to the Committee 29/11/2005.
39.8. So far as the Committee can ascertain, despite this undertaking, nothing
has been done.39.9. Nowhere is the cavalier and contemptuous attitude of the Secretary toward
a Parliamentary Committee better illustrated than by this hollow
undertaking.39.10. The Committee concludes that the Secretary for Lands completely failed
in respect of this transaction alone:a) to produce any records at all relating to the cancellation of the UDL
and grant of a Business Lease to Paga Hill Development Company
(PNG) Ltd.. The Committee therefore concludes that the documents
do not exist.b) that the proper legal requirements for grant of a Lease were not met
– and that the Secretary knows this, but has done nothing to rectify
the situation; andc) to meet his obligations imposed by the Public Finances
(Management) Act, in that he has failed to levy and collect State
revenue in accordance with Law despite giving sworn evidence that
he knew and understood those duties; andd) to enforce the provisions of the Land Act and other statutory
requirements; and -
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e) to properly and adequately control his Department and officers; and
f) to act in a prudent and competent manner to ensure that State assets
and property are protected as soon as illegality or abuses became
known to him; andg) to meet his obligations and duty under the Public Finances
(Management) Act and in particular to obey Section 5 (a), (b), (c),
(e), (g), (h), (i), (j) and (k) – and is thereby open to surcharge,
penalty and disciplinary action for these failures – See Section 5 (3)
Public Finances (Management) Act 1995.h) to exercise his powers as Departmental Head to obtain full and free
access to all accounts and records relating to collection, receipt
disposal or custody of property or monies of the State.i) to exercise disciplinary powers over his staff; and
j) to act in a professional, competent and lawful manner in the
exercise of his duties and responsibilities; andk) understand the importance of his role in controlling or reversing this
transaction and ensuring that the law is enforced; andl) to obey Section 112 of the Public Finances (Management) Act
1995 and thereby committed an offence by failing to produce
documents under his control when required to do so.m) to give candid and frank evidence to the Public Accounts
Committee; andn) To take any or any adequate steps to serve the interests of the State
over those of the Lessee.39.11. The PAC has sound jurisdiction to inquire into this grant. That jurisdiction
lies at least under Section 86 (1) (d) (iv) and (f) of the Public Finances
(Management) Act 1995 and Section 17 of the Permanent Parliamentary
Committees Act 1994 because:i) The State and the public has been deprived of a valuable asset; and
ii) the UDL was apparently unlawfully granted; and
iii) the subsequent State Lease has been unlawfully granted for a number
of reasons; and -
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iv) the true reserve price was possibly as much as K 3,000,000. The
State has received nothing; andv) the true Land Rent is possibly as much as K 250,000 per annum not
the K 50,000 now applying – which is significantly in arrears – the
State has lost revenue thereby; andvi) the Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary Legacy fund has lost a
valuable asset which is a public asset and subject to the Public
Finances (Management) Act 1995; andvii) the Grantee has failed to comply with any undertaking or covenant in
the UDL and the Department failed to enforce those covenants; andviii) detailed protection of a National historical assets on the land
comprised in the UDL has completely disappeared in the State
issued Business Lease. The State and public interest in preserving
the considerable historical sites on the land (which was a major
reason that the land was Gazetted a National Park) has been given
away; andix) the State and public interest in preserving the recreational value of
the land ( which no doubt was one reason for Gazetting the land as a
National Park) has disappeared; andx) the means by which the land ceased to be a National Park (if it ever
did cease) is entirely unclear. The State appears to have been
deprived of the asset for no good reason; andxi) the Lessee had and has no ability to fulfil the Improvement
Covenant, hence the State has lost revenue thereby; andxii) the Grantee has failed to pay rent, rates or comply with improvement
covenants. The Department has failed to do anything to collect or
forfeit the Lease; andxiii) the Grantee is clearly only intending to make profit at the expense of
the State and the citizens of Papua New Guinea; andxiv) even if the land had been lawfully allocated into private hands,
absolutely no development has occurred at all. Very significant
development covenants have been ignored and/or not enforced by
the Department. The State may be said to have lost revenue thereby;
and -
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xv) The original grant was invalid for want of a quorum at the Land
Board and despite advice from the State Solicitor, no action to forfeit
or cancel the Lease has occurred. The Department has failed to act in
a lawful manner and has clearly chosen to ignore the Law in favour
of the interests of the Grantee – at the expense of the State; andxvi) not only has the Department of Lands and Physical Planning failed
to impose and collect appropriate rent, an Officer of the Department
has apparently agreed to accept a reduced amount as land Rent
payment – with no power so to do. The State has lost revenue
thereby; andxvii) an Officer of the Department has, unlawfully, permitted the Lessee
to pay Land Rent over a period – which agreement the Lessee has
breached, with no action from the Department: andxviii) knowing some or all of these deficiencies, the Department and the
Secretary in particular have failed to do anything to reverse the grant
or to protect the interest of the State over that of individuals.39.12. The Committee makes further recommendations and referrals later in this
Report.40. SECTION 122 HOHOLA.
40.1. This is a complicated matter, but well illustrates both inept decision
making by the Land Board in the period 1999 – 2002 and the influence
that certain entities have exercised over that Board.40.2. The Land Board has Granted and the Department has issued, State Leases
over land that was, and still is, zoned as Reserved open Space Land for the
benefit of the public.40.3. Consideration of the facts shows a clear pattern of conscious illegality in
the Lands Board and (at best) cooperation by the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning.40.4. The dealings also well demonstrate the paralysis of action that attends the
Department of Lands, even when the illegalities of Lease issue are known
to the Department and have been publicly acknowledged by it.40.5. The history of this parcel is complex. A précis is presented below, but the
grants and issues of private title over all of Section 122 Hohola are
unlawful and require immediate action from the National Government to
rectify the defects and/or reinstate this valuable public asset – if indeed it
is not too late to do so. -
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40.6. The Committee directed the Secretary of the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning to produce documents and records by Paras. 6, 7, 8, 27,
28, 29 and 30 of the Notice to Produce Documents dated the 5th September
2005 – See Schedule 3 to this Report.40.7. The Secretary produced records of payment which were generally
adequate and responsive, but all other documentation was inadequate.
There have been no documents produced at all to show the decision
making process leading to the issue of Leases and no records of the
relevant Land Board meetings.41. THE GRANT AND SUBDIVISION:
41.1. This large tract of land lies opposite the SP Brewery and extends to the
Gordons Police Station. It was zoned as “Reserved Land” and is used as
public recreational land. The land has been subdivided and been
unlawfully granted to private ownership.41.2. The Committee finds that there are five sequential Survey Plans for this
land which have variously subdivided the area into Allotments. With each
Plan the designation of the Allotments has changed. These Plans are:Survey Plan Date of Registration Comment.
49/901 1969 Section 122 Hohola.
49/1507 23/11/1982 Lots 1 – 7 Section
122 Hohola –
supersedes Plan
49/901.49/1867 10/07/1990 Lots 6 – 10 Section 122
Hohola, formerly Lots 8 and
9, formerly part Allotment 1
Section 122 Hohola.
This Plan partly supersedes
Plan 49/1507 and is
concurrent with 49/1887.49/1887 10/07/1990 Allotment 11 Section 122
Hohola formerly Allotments
1,2, 3 and 4 Section 122 -
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Hohola, part 15 metre road
and 3 metre and variable
width reserve on Plan
49/1507; this Plan partly
supersedes Plan 49/1507 and
is concurrent with Plan
49/186749/2276 17/03/1997 Allotments 12 and 13 Section
122 Hohola plus Freeway
widening ; this Plan
supersedes Plans 49/1507
and 49/1887 and cancels
Allotment 11 Section 122
Hohola.41.3. This means that on and from the 17/03/1997, Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 11
Section 122 Hohola were cancelled – they ceased to exist. This
progressive Sub-divisional change was presumably done with the
cooperation of the NCDC.41.4. There now follows a descriptive tracing of subsequent dealings with
Allotments 1, 2, 12 and 13 by the Land Boards and the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning – despite the fact that they were either
cancelled or reserved as “Open Space”. Although dealings with other
Allotments are equally legally doubtful, these selected Allotments are the
easiest to understand.41.5. From this examination, the Committee concludes that the State has been
deprived unlawfully, of a large and valuable tract of land for no or no
adequate recompense, that the State has been exposed to liability by
Departmental actions and failures and that the public have been deprived,
quite illegally, of prime recreational land.42. ALLOTMENT 1 SECTION 122 HOHOLA:
42.1. Allotment 1 Section 122 was “Reserved from Lease” for the purposes of
“Public Recreation” at page 1085 of the National Gazette dated the 28th
November 1985 and thereby was the subject of a trusteeship vested in the
NCD Interim Commission by Gazettal at Page 334 of the National Gazette
G17 dated the 26th March 1987.42.2. Allotment 1 Section 122 was cancelled by Survey Plan No. 49/1887
registered on 10 July 1990. -
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42.3. Despite the cancellation and the overall reservation as Public Space, Land
Board No. 2006 Item 101, heard an application from the NCDC and
granted a Special Purpose (Park Reserve) Lease over Allotment 1
Section 122 Hohola and this recommended grant was formalized by
Gazettal Notice on the 17th June 1999.42.4. The Lease may not have actually issued – quite correctly given that the
Lot had been cancelled – but the fact of issue illustrates the inept quality
of Land Board decision making.43. ALLOTMENT 2 SECTION 122 HOHOLA.
43.1. This Allotment also ceased to exist on the 10th July 1990.
43.2. Despite this, Land Board 2006 Item 102, heard and granted an application
from the NCDC for the grant of a Special Purposes (Park Reserve)
Lease over Allotment 2, and this recommended grant was formalized by
Gazettal Notice on the 17 June 1999.43.3. Clearly such a grant cannot issue as the Allotment ceased to exist.
44. ALLOTMENT 12 SECTION 122 HOHOLA.
44.1. Papua New Guinea Land Board No. 2017 did not convene as scheduled
on either the 24th November 1999 or the 10th December 1999. No meeting
was ever held.44.2. However, the Chairman of the Land Board, Mr. Ralph Guise, unlawfully
and improperly signed a typeset Notices of Grant purporting to derive
from that Land Board. The Chairman had no power to do so.44.3. State Lease Volume 23 Folio 182 comprising a Business (Commercial)
Lease over Allotment 12 Section 122 Hohola (apparently zoned “Public
Institutional”) did issue in favour of Mr. Andrew Mald – although this title
was cancelled by the Registrar of Titles on the 10th August 2000, as it
should have been.44.4. The title was reinstated by the National Court upon application by Mr.
Mald – apparently lawyers representing the State did not oppose the
application – and so far as the Committee can ascertain, may not have
attended the court at all.44.5. In early 2006, this land was sold and transferred as unimproved land. This
transfer was made by the Department of Lands regardless of a
Departmental prohibition on such transfers. -
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44.6. The sale price was K 1.3 million for land which was illegally granted and
subsequently illegally transferred. The Department thereby lost the one
opportunity it had to recover this land for the State.45. ALLOTMENT 13 SECTION 122 HOHOLA.
45.1. Allotment 13 (previously Allotments 1, 2, 3 and thence Allotment 11)
Section 122 Hohola was and still is zoned “Open Space”.45.2. Section 67 of the Land Act states that a Lease cannot be granted :
“ ….in contravention of the zoning of the subject land.”
45.3. Despite these facts, this 6.49 ha. of prime land was the subject of an
application by Virgo No.65 Ltd for the grant of a Business (Commercial)
Lease. This Application was listed before Land Board No. 2006 (Item 20).45.4. Furthermore, this land was exempted from advertisement – presumably in
accordance with one of the grounds in Section 69 (2) of the Land Act
1996, although none of the provisions in that Section seems to apply. The
Department of Lands have attributed this exemption to persons within the
Office of the then Minister for Lands.45.5. There was at least one other Application that pre-dated this dubious
exemption and, considering that an exemption relates to land and not to a
particular applicant, all applications received before the exemption should
have gone to the Land Board – although here no application should have
been sent to the Land Board at all as neither Application complied with
the “Open Space” zoning.45.6. Although not directly relevant, it is notable that PNG Land Board 2006
also heard and granted another application by Virgo No.65 Ltd for a
Business (Commercial) Lease over two allotments in Mount Hagen –
despite the fact that this land is zoned “Open Space” – as was Allotment
13 Section 122 Hohola. Two Business (Commercial) Leases have issued
to Virgo No. 65 Ltd for the land in Mount Hagen.45.7. It is an inexplicable fact that the same Land Board hearing this application
(which stated that Allotment 13 previously comprised Allotments 2 and 3
Section 122) also considered and recommended the grant to NCDC of a
Special Purposes (Park Reserve) Lease over Allotments 1 and 2 Section
122 Hohola – which no longer existed.45.8. The Land Board therefore managed to deal with the same land in two
different forms – one existing and the other not – for two different -
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applicants, notwithstanding that the land was zoned “Open Space” and
could not be dealt with at all. One grant to Virgo No.65 Ltd and the other
(over Lot 2 – actually Lot 13) to NCDC.45.9. The Grant was subsequently cancelled by Gazettal for want of compliance
with Section 67 of the Land Act 1996. This is to the credit of the
Department. However, the National Court, in the absence of opposition
from the State, ordered the title to issue – an Order that the Minister for
Lands obeyed.45.10. This Committee concludes that the NCDC and the public had lost zoned
Reserved Land, the State had received no payment and the whole
transaction was totally unlawful. More worrying is the failure of the
Department to protect this asset in the first place.45.11. The dealings with Section 122 Hohola well illustrate the shortcomings of
the Land Board system and these transactions are by no means isolated.
The dealings are not consistent with mere incompetence.46. ALLOTMENTS 14, 15, 16 AND 17 SECTION 122 HOHOLA.
46.1. These Allotments are zoned “Open Space”. They are not the subject of
any cadastral survey and therefore still probably form part of Allotment 13
Section 122 Hohola.46.2. Three applications, each seeking the grant of a “Business and Special
Purposes Lease” (note it should be a Business or Special Purposes
Lease) were made for this Land by Rohn No.3 Ltd, Pohn Ltd and Itu
Development Ltd. and were listed before PNG Land Board 2005 (Items
132, 133 and 134) – one day before the Land Board was due to sit. This
contravened Section 58 (3) Land Act 1996.46.3. Nevertheless, each of the three “recommended grants” were Gazetted in
National Gazette G39 on the 17/03/1999.46.4. As with other Allotments on this Section, title is probably void due to the
fact that Allotment 13 Section 122 Hohola does not exist – given that it
derived from Allotment 1 Section 122 Hohola – which was “Reserved
from Lease” and never revoked.46.5. Once again, the State and the public have been deprived of reserved land
quite illegally.46.6. The Department of Lands, despite knowing of this illegality, has done
nothing to rectify the situation. -
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47. THE LEGALITY OF DEALINGS IN ALLOTMENTS AT SECTION 122
HOHOLA:47.1. A summary of the defects in the Land Board deliberations over this parcel
of land follows:i) “Open Space” land has unlawfully passed into private hands with no
apparent concern for the legal status as public land.ii) Researches have not revealed any evidence that the “Reservation
from Lease” was ever revoked. If this is correct, this will mean that,
at least;a) Subsequent Survey Plans are invalid and / or should be
cancelled; andb) All dealings in the land deriving from the subsequent
subdivision of Allotment 1 Section 122 Hohola are equally
unlawful; andc) The State may be liable to Leaseholders or successors in title –
see below.iii) Allotment 13 Section 122 arguably did not exist at the time it was
granted by Land Board 2006 due to the deliberations of Land Board
2005, and could not therefore have been lawfully dealt with.iv) The NCD also applied for the Allotments 1 and 2 (which became Lot
13) as Park Reserve Lease. That conflict between private and
public use meant that the Land Board should be immediately
adjourned.v) The Land Board managed to grant Leases to NCDC and Virgo over
the same parcel of land.vi) At least one Land Board did not sit at all and the typeset notices
giving rise to the Leases were forgeries.47.2. The Committee concludes that, if the Reservation of this land was never
revoked, the State has an exposure to all holders or past holders of title in
any land on Section 122 that derived from the subdivision of Allotment 1
Section 122, upon the basis that the title issued is defective due to the
unlawful conduct of the Land Board and the Department as well as the
failure of the State and its legal advisers to protect public assets. -
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47.3. Peremptory searches suggest that the State may be exposed to at least the
following claims:Allotment Section Comment
8 122 The Filipino Association had been
granted a lease over Allotments 6
and 7 (Consolidated) Section 122
Hohola. Despite this, the DOL
advertised a Special Purposes Lease
over Allotments 7 and 8 Section 122
Hohola for Tender. A subsequent
grant to Land Bank Holdings Ltd.
deprived the Filipino Association of
Allotment 7. There seem no lawful
grounds for this to occur.9 122 Granted to the PNG Family Planning
Association but title never issued.13 122 See extended review (supra).
14, 15, 16 and 17 122 See review (supra).
(Consolidated)47.4. The Secretary for Lands and Physical Planning produced to the
Committee, sparse documentation concerning this Land, but the
Department clearly has not understood the zoning or considered the
legalities of issuing State Leases for this Land – which was and is reserved
as Open Space i.e. for public recreation.47.5. The Committee concludes that the Secretary has failed in his duty to
produce documents and records to this Committee. The Department has
produced some Rent records, a few old zoning plans (out of date) and one
Survey Plan (out of date), but there are clearly huge gaps in the
Departments understanding and records of these crucial matters. In these
circumstances it is not surprising that the Department was and remains
ineffectual.47.6. The whole saga is very complicated and should be the subject of a deeper
Inquiry, however the important fact for this Committee is that the State
has again been deprived of an asset for no realistic payment, exposed to
litigation by the incompetence of the Department and the Land Board, has
not received Land Rent and its interest has not been protected by the
Department. -
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47.7. More concerning to the Committee is the fact that gross breaches of law
appear not to have been detected by the Department or, if they were
detected, were ignored. Some of these defects are:(1) That private title to public land has been given in suspect and/or
illegal circumstances by the Department for no fee and with
significant Rental losses to the State.(2) Allotment 1 Section 122 Hohola – this Allotment was apparently
cancelled in 1990. Yet Land Board 2006 granted the NCDC a
Special Purpose Lease in 1999 – over a Lot that apparently did not
exist.(3) Allotment 2 Section 122 Hohola – This Allotment apparently ceased
to exist on 10th July 1990. Yet the Land Board granted a Special
Purpose Lease over the land in 1999.(4) Leases over Allotments 2 and 3 Section 122 Hohola was granted for
no fee, but Land Rent is now in arrears in a sum of approximately K
34,000. There has been no apparent action by the Department.(5) Allotment 7 appears to have been given to two different applicants at
the same time – this requires an inquiry and review by the
Department, but none has occurred.(6) Allotment 12 Section 122 – Land Board 2017 did not convene at all.
Yet a State Lease issued from that Board over Allotment 12 –
apparently from a typeset, but not published, Gazette Notice. This is
either gross negligence or a corrupt dealing. There has been no
compliance with an Improvement Covenant and Land Rental was in
arrears. The Department has done nothing in respect of these
matters.(7) Allotment 13 Section 122 Hohola – in the absence of any
documentation from the Department the Committee believes that this
Allotment was and still is zoned Open Space. Despite this, it came
before Land Board 2006, having been exempted from advertisement
for no apparently lawful reason. That Land Board granted a Lease to
Virgo No. 65 Ltd for no ascertainable tender or reserve price and
contrary to Section 67 of the Land Act.The Committee also finds that Virgo No. 65 Ltd owes arrears of
Land Rent for this land in a sum of approximately K 13,000. The
Department appears to have done nothing to forfeit the land. -
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It seems that the same Land Board at the same sitting also gave this
same Open Space land to the NCDC – the same blocks of Public
Land were granted to different Lessees – for no price.(8) Allotments 14, 15, 16 and 17 Section 122 Hohola – Land Board
2005 considered three applications for grant of a Lease over these
Allotments – despite the fact that each application appears to have
breached Section 58 (3) of the Land Act, that the Allotments
probably do not exist at all, that the land was “Reserved From
Lease”, that no tender price was received, that the land was and still
is zoned “Open Space” and in breach of Section 67 of the Land Act.Shortly before the printing of this Report, the Committee became
aware of a further State Lease issued to Virgo No. 65 Ltd over
Allotment 14 Section 122 Hohola.47.8. At least in relation to the Leases issued to Mr. Andrew Mald and Virgo
No. 65 Ltd, there is good reason to conclude that there has been
interference in or by the Department – at best the Department has failed to
carry out its duty to ensure that the Law attending the issue of State Leases
was obeyed.47.9. In summary, the Committee finds an almost total failure by the
Department to control the illegal dealings with this Open Space land, both
at the time of the original unlawful grants and subsequently.48. PORTIONS 109 AND 110 MADANG, MADANG PROVINCE VOLUME 12
FOLIO 113 (PREVIOUSLY VOLUME 65 FOLIO 26)48.1. This land was owned by the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Papua New
Guinea, which held an Agricultural Lease issued in 1924 for a period of
99 years – plus an extra five years to take account of the period of the
Second World War.48.2. Rents were up to date, all covenants had been complied with and the Lease
was still current until at least 2027.48.3. The net area of the land is 83.989 hectares – of which 2.627 hectares are
reserved for roading.48.4. The land sits astride the area identified as the site of the township serving
the Ramu Nickel project.48.5. In 2005, the Church discovered that its title had apparently been cancelled
and an Agriculture Lease issued to the Ganglau Landowner Company
Limited. -
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48.6. It is now apparent that the land had been compulsorily acquired –
unknown to the Church and by some means reissued to the current
Leaseholder by a Land Board decision. The original owner had no
knowledge of this and has received no compensation.48.7. The matter is now before the National Lands Title Commission, but
seemingly this very valuable land was neither advertised, not exempted
and the true owner has been deprived quite unlawfully of its asset.48.8. The Department was directed to produce certain documents and records by
Paras. 31, 32, 33, 34 and 35 of the Directives dated the 5th September
2005. See Schedule 3 to this Report.48.9. These documents were finally produced after the Committee issued a
Summons to the Secretary. The Department is apparently addressing the
matter, but failed to do so before or immediately after the problem arose.
Matters do not appear in the Land Board without Departmental approval
and listing. Clearly the Department failed in its duty to protect the lawful
titleholder.48.10. The Committee cannot understand how this situation was allowed to
occur. It seems that the Department of Lands has no control over its
Officers, maintains no effective oversight of dealings or is an active party
to these illegal dealings.48.11. Whatever the situation, the fact that this Committee can, with no
difficulty, find examples of blatantly illegal dealings and decisions within
the Department of Lands and Physical Planning suggests that there is a
very significant problem.48.12. The Committee is further concerned that the State may have been exposed
to potential litigation as a result of the failures by the Department
regarding this particular parcel of land and has certainly been deprived of
revenue.48.13. We are further concerned that a year has passed with little action from the
Department to rectify the matter.48.14. The Committee finds that the Department of Lands has failed to co-
operate with this Committee or to assist in the Inquiry into Portions 109
and 110 Madang.48.15. The Committee makes certain further findings and recommendations in
respect of this matter (infra). -
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49. ALLOTMENTS 2 AND 3 (CONSOLIDATED) SECTION 111 BOROKO:
STATE LEASE 27 FOLIO 20249.1. This is a parcel of prime land in the heart of the Boroko business district.
It is 0.220 hectares in size.49.2. Land Board 2006 of 1999, granted a Business Lease over the land to
Bluehaven No.7. Ltd.49.3. The Business Lease sets the Land Rent at K 19,825.00 per annum and an
improvement Covenant to a value of K 200,000 within the first three
years.49.4. As of the 8th February 2006, the Land Rent arrears was K129,704.38 and
no improvement at all had taken place. The land remains vacant and
undeveloped.49.5. The Committee concludes that the Lessee is therefore in breach of the
Lease conditions, but no effective attempt has been made by the
Department to forfeit the land.49.6. More significantly, there was no tender price at all. The land was given
away. Land Rent is 5% of the unimproved value. Using the assessed Land
Rent, the unimproved value of the land was K. 396,500.49.7. The Reserve or Tender price should have been K. 237,900. The State has
lost this amount together with the Land Rent arrears – a total to date of K
367,604.38.49.8. The Secretary of the Department was directed by the Committee to
produce records and documents concerning this transaction by Paras. 36,
37 and 38 of the Directives dated the 5th September 2005. See Schedule 3
to this Report.49.9. No files or records relating to the grant of the Lease were produced at all.
49.10. Only in response to a Summons did the Secretary for Lands produce three
pages of Land Rental and Tender Price record.49.11. This Committee has once again been impeded in its Inquiry by
Departmental failure or refusal to produce documents showing the history
of this matter. In the absence of any explanation by the Secretary for
Lands, the Committee concludes that the Department does not want the
Committee to know what has occurred and therefore the documents have
been hidden or destroyed. -
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49.12. On the 13/05/2003, Mr. Daniel Katakumb, the Director Land Management
Division of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning, wrote to the
Government Printer enclosing Notices of Forfeiture of the subject land in
1999. The failure to advertise these notices at that time was excused as an
administrative oversight.49.13. For once, the Department of Lands and Physical Planning actually
commenced a forfeiture proceeding for non-payment of Land Rental, but
failed to proceed with it. The Committee cannot ascertain why the Lease
should continue when the Leaseholder is in breach of its obligations. Even
at this late stage, the Department was more intent on protecting the
interests of the Grantee rather than the State.49.14. The Committee is also concerned that this land has remained undeveloped
and unimproved for six years. The Department has failed totally to enforce
Lease covenants as it is required to do by the Land Act.49.15. In respect of this particular Grant and issue of Lease, the Committee finds
that the Secretary for Lands and Head of the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning, both past and current has:• Breached his obligations to ensure the timely and full collection of
State revenue under the Public Finances (Management) Act.• Breached his duty to provide documents to this Committee under the
Public (Finances) Management Act.• Committed an Offence under Section 112 (b) of the Public Finances
(Management) Act by willfully neglecting to produce books,
accounts or other documents when required to do so.• Prima facie, breached Section 5 (a), (b), (c), (g), (h) and (i) of the
Public Finances (Management) Act.• Failed to apply properly or at all the Land Act and to ensure that all
legal steps were taken to protect the State.49.16. The Committee makes recommendations and referrals concerning this
matter, later in this Report.50. ALLOTMENT 69 SECTION 229 HOHOLA.
50.1. This Grant of a State Lease well illustrates both the arrogant disregard of
Departmental Officers for decisions of the Land Board and the Law and
the failure of past and present Departmental Management to control or
reverse or even acknowledge illegal dealings. -
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50.2. A Special Purpose Lease was granted to the Sisters of Charity in 1999 by
Land Board 2014, for the purpose of building a hospice for the dying and,
in particular, for HIV AIDS sufferers on this land. The Grant was Gazetted
on the 23rd December 1999.50.3. However, Willing Pacific (PNG) Pty. Ltd., applied for a Town
Subdivision Lease (“TSL”) in 1991.50.4. A TSL can only be granted for five years. The Registrar ultimately gave
Willing Pacific (PNG) Pty. Ltd. a Residential Lease over the land in
1999, despite the grant to the Sisters of Charity by the Land Board.50.5. This Lease was for a 99 year period, despite the fact that the applicant had
only applied for a five year Lease and that the land had been granted to the
Sisters of Charity.50.6. In doing so, the Committee concludes that the Registrar has completely
ignored the Land Board recommendation and has acted unlawfully.50.7. In the absence of documentary records, how this State Lease came to be
issued is not known but the Committee concludes that the issue was
unlawful as the land was Granted to the Sisters of Charity.50.8. The TSL could and should not have issued in the absence of a Sub-
divisional Plan and the actual provision of infrastructure on the land. Only
when those services are established can such a Lease issue.50.9. Once again, the State has lost land to private hands for no benefit, a Lease
has been issued illegally, the Department has failed to take any steps to
rectify the situation, the Land Rental is in arrears with no attempt to forfeit
the Lease, the Improvement Covenant has not been complied with and the
Department of Lands has done nothing to fulfil its statutory duties.50.10. In short, the Department has allowed the Lessee to control the dealing
instead of the Department controlling it.50.11. An Improvement Covenant applied. It required the erection of buildings to
a value of K 20,000 “…from the date of registration of the transfer of
the lease from Willing Pacific (PNG) Ltd to Department of Foreign
Affairs and Trade…….”. This curious and meaningless covenant
requires the Lessee to do nothing, but enables him to sit on undeveloped
land for 99 years. -
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50.12. The Committee directed the Secretary to produce documents and records
in respect of this Lease issue by Paras. 39, 40 and 41 of the Directive
dated the 5th September 2005. See Schedule 3 to this Report.50.13. The Land Rent records are reasonably complete but the records of the
issue of the Lease and the proceedings of Land Board 2014 are incomplete
and inadequate. In the view of the Committee the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning has again deliberately refused to assist the
Committee in its Inquiry.50.14. The Committee concludes that the Lease issued to Willing Pacific (PNG)
Ltd. was given with no reserve price paid to the State, with Land Rent
assessed at K 450.00 per annum for the first ten years – which means the
unimproved value of the land was K 45,000.00 – an extremely low figure.
Even on this valuation, the reserve price should have been K 27,000.00.50.15. The Committee finds that the issue of this Lease was not transparent and is
attended by illegality. The Lease was not advertised or tendered, but
simply issued in defiance of the Grant by the Land Board.50.16. During the course of the Inquiry into the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning by the Public Accounts Committee, the Committee
received many reports of gross delay by the Department in answering
correspondence or dealing with the public – particularly in dealing with
matters of complaint or where illegal or suspect transactions were
involved.50.17. The Sisters of Mercy have been writing to the Department seeking
rectification of their Grant for five years and, until recently, received no
response at all.50.18. A letter was finally received from Mr. Daniel Katakumb on the 27th June
2005, advising that Willing Pacific (PNG) Ltd had indefeasible title and
that the Sisters should buy the land from that company. This statement is
wrong in law. Clearly the Department is not intending to rectify the grant
according to law, but are content to act as a sale agent for the Leaseholder.50.19. The Department has failed to action the Land Board Grant in any way. No
letter or publication of the Grant has been made. No attempt to forfeit the
land has been made and the legal obligations on the Department have been
ignored in favour of an unlawful Lessee.50.20. Why this should be the case is a matter for conjecture, but the Committee
considers that the Departmental failures are consistent with either gross
incompetence or corrupt dealings – or both. Whatever the truth, the
situation is unacceptable and the Committee detects no will in the -
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Department to change the culture of indolence and apathy – unless forced
to do so.50.21. The Committee makes further recommendations and referrals in respect of
this matter later in this Report.51. PART 3 – PERFORMANCE OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS
AND PHYSICAL PLANNING 2002 – MARCH 2006.51.1. The Committee next examined randomly chosen Grants of State Leases
made during the period 2002 – March 2006 inclusive, to establish the
truth of assertions made to the Committee by the Secretary for Lands and
Physical Planning, that the Department had improved its governance and
systems to eradicate illegal practices.51.2. The Committee cannot detect any improvement in the performance of the
Department in the control of illegal dealings or protection of the State and
its interests.52. PORTION 1555 MILINCH GRANVILLE, FOURMIL MORESBY,
NATIONAL CAPITAL DISTRICT.52.1. The issue of this State Lease shows that the malpractices of the past still
exist with no attempt by the Department to stop them.52.2. This is a large and particularly valuable block of land at the end of
Chesterfield Street, Ela Beach.52.3. By Gazettal Notice G17 of the 18th November 1999, a company called
Kembis Holdings Ltd. was granted an Urban Development Lease
(“UDL”) over the land by Land Board 2012.52.4. The UDL expired after five years – in 2004.
52.5. By Gazette Notice G137 dated the 15th September 2005, Kembis
Holdings Ltd. was granted a renewal of the UDL. This Notice records the
decision to renew as being made by Land Board Meeting 3/2004, Item 23.52.6. Land Board Meeting 3/2004 was a Morobe Land Board, held in Lae. Item
23 is a call for Tender for a Business (Commercial) Lease over Allotment
72 Section 336 (Tentsiti Settlement) City of Lae, Morobe Province,
Tender No. 25/2003.52.7. It was not Portion 1555 Granville.
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52.8. Legitimate Grants from this Land Board were Gazetted on the 16th
September 2004.52.9. The Committee notes that the Gazettal Notice granting the renewal of the
UDL to Kembis Holdings Ltd. was actually published a year later – in
2005.52.10. The Committee cannot locate any Land Board that decided any such
renewal.52.11. There was apparently no call for Tender, no tender, no sitting of a Land
Board, no power to renew, no tender price, no reserve price and no
compliance with the original UDL.52.12. The State has been again deprived of a valuable tract of land with no
advertisement, no tender, no transparency and no basis in law.52.13. The State has received no revenue, no Land Rental and no development
has taken place at all on this land.52.14. The Committee notes that the Chairman of the Land Board, Mr. Francis
Tanga, apparently signed the Gazettal Notice in 2005. He has no power to
do so.52.15. This is an unlawful Gazettal, an unlawful Grant and an unlawful issue of a
State Lease.52.16. The Committee concludes that if the Chairman of the Land Board did sign
the Notice, he must have known that the matter was never before the Land
Board and no decision had been made.52.17. This illegal issue was sanctioned by the Department with no or no
adequate inquiry into the legality of the purported Grant.52.18. The Department of Lands and Physical Planning have taken no steps to
reverse or remedy this illegal issue and appear not to have detected the
illegality at all.52.19. Clearly, the vested interests of a speculator have been favoured over that
of the State and the citizens of Papua New Guinea.52.20. The Committee concludes that, despite the assurances of the Secretary for
Lands to the effect that the Department of Lands and Physical Planning
had eradicated fraud and maladministration since 2002, abuses continue to
the detriment of the State and citizens of Papua New Guinea. -
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52.21. The Committee makes findings and referrals in respect of this matter later
in this Report, but does consider that every officer of the Department
involved in this illegal issue of Lease and the Chairman of the Land Board
should be removed from the positions they hold.53. PORTION 2415 MILINCH GRANVILLE FOURMIL MORESBY, PORT
MORESBY, NCD.53.1. This land is located on the top of Burns Peak.
53.2. By decision of the Native Land Commission the land was and still is
customarily owned.53.3. On the 08th September 2005, the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning issued a Licence Numbered 006/2005 SR to a company called
Global Transfers Ltd to occupy the land and perform “feasibility
studies”. The Licence was issued under the hand of Mr. Romilly Kila Pat.53.4. A Licence can only issue in limited circumstances – and not over
Customary Land. We understand that the licensee has taken an application
to the Physical Planning Board to obtain Town Planning Approval –
Customary Land cannot be so considered.53.5. This issue of the Licence is unlawful and has been made during the tenure
of the current Secretary for Lands. Appeals from the putative Landowners
to the Department resulted in an agreement to review the Licence, but no
apparent action has occurred since the Appeal was lodged in 2005.53.6. Again, the Committee does not accept that change has occurred in the
Department of Lands since 2002 and that there are still deep problems of
incompetence, illegality and negligence within the Department.54. PORTION 2399 MILINCH GRANVILLE FOURMIL MORESBY, PORT
MORESBY, NCD54.1. This land is predominately or substantially Customary Land situate at the
top of Burns Peak.54.2. By Gazette Notice G121 dated the 18/08/2005, entitled “Notice under
Section 69 (2) (d) Exemption from Advertisement” the Lands
Department preceded a Grant to Garamut Enterprises Ltd.54.3. This land was somehow rezoned to “Subdivision Zone” – which is
impossible given that it is still Customary Land. Further, the exemption
meant no competitive tender and no revenue to the State. -
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54.4. Moreover, in the rush to exempt the land, the Department Gazettal notice
actually preceded the Zoning Gazettal, ignored the three month appeal
period and was incorrect in that it related to all Portion 2399 – not just the
southern part which was the subject of the application for rezoning.54.5. Once again it seems that Customary Land has been given away by a
Department apparently unable to read Plans and Survey maps. This is not
acceptable.54.6. The Landowners have referred this matter to the Secretary in August 2005
but have received no response.54.7. The Department does not respond to letters or petitions and the State and
its citizens continue to suffer loss as a result of this attitude.54.8. The Committee has examined Departmental performance on a number of
occasions since 2002 and we have been told of plans and strategies to
improve the Department and how effective the current stewardship has
been in eliminating abuses.54.9. The Committee does not agree.
54.10. We see no change. We see no improvement in performance and, we
suspect, no lessening in unlawful allocations of Leases and land. We see
no improvement in revenue collection. We see no change in the
Departmental failure to protect the State or its assets.54.11. The Committee does not consider that further questioning or Directives
will change anything – because the current management cannot and will
not do what is required. Significant action is needed from the Parliament
to force change on the Department.55. PORTION 2228 MILINCH GRANVILLE FOURMIL PORT MORESBY:
55.1. This particular transaction is addressed later in this Report, but came
before the Department in 2005 in suspicious circumstances.55.2. This land was reserved for the development of a Fire Station. It was taken
from the State and given for no payment to the State by the Lands Board
and the Department of Lands.55.3. The Committee finds that the agenda for Land Board 2005 listed 134
matters. That Land Board sat on the 21st and 22nd January 1999. -
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55.4. On the 29th October 1999 the Grant of a Business (Light Industrial)
Lease by that Land Board to Tomonga Holdings Ltd. was gazetted as
Land Board Item 135 – an Item which never existed.55.5. Moreover this was State Reserved Land. Any grant of the land would
conflict with a Certificate Authorising Occupancy of Land No 2033,
granted in 1992, whereby this Portion was handed to the Office of the
Prime Minister to establish a Fire Station.55.6. On the 20 May 2005 (during the tenure of Mr. Kimas as Secretary) the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning issued a State Lease in
respect of Portion 2228 Milinch Granville Fourmil Port Moresby. –
thereby confirming the unlawful Grant made six years before, not by a
Land Board but by a forged and fraudulent Gazettal Notice.55.7. To compound the Departmental failure, the Committee finds that the
Department had a clear understanding that this Gazettal Notice was
fraudulent well before the actual issue of the State Lease in 2005.55.8. Moreover, the Lease issued by the Department shows the Lease as
commencing on the 03/08/1999 but there was no Gazette of that day. The
Lease is false and breaches Section 81 Land Act.55.9. Not only did the Department take no steps to protect the position of the
State, but actively connived and abetted the illegal issue of the State Lease
some six years later.55.10. The Committee finds that this transaction is an excellent example of both
the incompetence of Departmental management to control its own staff
and the impunity and immunity with which the Departmental officers
engage in corrupt activity.55.11. The Committee finds that the much vaunted “new systems and traps” cited
by the Secretary for Lands are either imaginary or ineffective – or
probably both.55.12. By co-incidence, on the day of the Inquiry by the Committee into this
transaction, this same unimproved block of land was advertised for sale in
the daily National newspaper for K 2.5 million. No development has
taken place in six years; the State has lost a very valuable block of land
and has received no revenue at all from the process.55.13. Further, the interests of a private speculator have again been given
precedence over the legal rights of the State – by the States own Officers. -
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55.14. The Committee concludes that every Officer involved in this transaction
up to and including the Secretary of the Department should be removed
and referred to the Royal Papua New Guinea Fraud and Anti-Corruption
Squad for investigation.55.15. Regrettably the Committee must report that this incident is not an isolated
one.55.16. The Committee makes further findings and resolutions in respect of this
incident later in this Report (infra).56. PART 4 – ANALYSIS OF LAND BOARDS 1999 – 2005.
56.1. The Papua New Guinea Land Board is a statutory Board constituted under
the Land Act.56.2. It is arguably one of the most powerful Statutory entities in Papua New
Guinea.56.3. The Board is responsible for the allocation of Land and the consideration
and granting of tenders for State Leases.56.4. As land has become more scarce, so the power and the importance of the
Land Board has increased.56.5. However, at the same time, the quality and transparency of decision
making and performance by the Land Board has decreased.56.6. The performance of the Land Board is integral to the operations of the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning. Almost everything that goes
to or comes from the Department is considered by the Land Board.56.7. Equally, matters going to or coming from the Land Board are considered
and approved or actioned by the Department.56.8. The Committee considers that incompetent or illegal practices cannot exist
in one of those entities without the co-operation or connivance of the
other.56.9. The Board plays a vital role in the economic development of the country.
Membership of the Land Board requires high standards of probity,
efficiency, experience and accountability.56.10. The Committee concludes that, in the last decade, the performance of the
Land Board and certain of its Members have failed to meet these
standards. -
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56.11. The Committee concludes that many of the problems manifested in the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning can be traced to the decline in
the performance of the Land Board in the period 1995 – 2003.56.12. In its turn, much of this decline in performance and honesty was directly
caused by political interference in and pressure on the composition and
workings of the Land Board.56.13. The Committee chose certain Land Board meetings at random, to consider
the quality of performance of the Land Board over the last ten years.56.14. The Committee concludes that, while the statistics show a small
improvement in 2004 – 2005, the Land Board is not performing
adequately, is subject to external influences, is directly responsible for
illegal dealings and unlawful decision making in respect of Grants of
Lease, fails to understand its role or the law that it is required to
administer, fails to comply with procedural requirements and seems
unaccountable to and uncontrolled by the Department.56.15. The Committee detected a clear pattern of illegal conduct by certain
Members – particularly Chairmen – of the Land Board over a long period
and continuing to the present day.56.16. The Secretary of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning in his
evidence before the Committee, agreed with this finding.56.17. The Committee is concerned that the Land Board Members are not
adequately trained or experienced to competently carry out their function
and overwhelmingly owe their appointments to political patronage rather
than merit.56.18. The Committee received into evidence a Handbook for the use of the Land
Board. This is apparently the only training or reference manual available
to the Board. It is the opinion of the Committee that the material is
inadequate and outdated.56.19. The Committee will make further findings and recommendations in
respect of the Land Board (infra).56.20. The Committee considered the following randomly chosen Land Board
meetings:57. PAPUA NEW GUINEA LAND BOARD NO. 2005 – ITEMS 130, 131, 132, 133
AND 134. -
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57.1. This meeting is a good example of the incompetent and careless approach
taken by Land Boards to the procedural requirements for its meetings.57.2. It also clearly shows Departmental failures to control Land Board excesses
by refusing to implement Grants which were unlawfully made or, if
implemented, to cancel or forfeit subsequently issued Leases.57.3. These five items were added to the Land Board agenda by Gazette Notice
dated the 20th January 1999 – and the Land Board convened on the 21st
and 22nd January 1999.57.4. The Committee finds that Section 58 (3) of the Land Act was therefore not
complied with and that these five items were unlawfully considered. This
Section requires the Land Board to meet not less than seven days and not
more than 42 days after the publication of the agenda for a particular
meeting.57.5. The purpose of Section 58 (3) is to give members of the public knowledge
of and the opportunity to participate in the hearing of any Item and thereby
assures transparency and a maximized return to the State from a Grantee
best able to develop the land – not mere speculators.57.6. The Grant of Items 132, 133 and 134 were formalized by Gazettal at Page
4 of the National Gazette G39 dated the 17th March 1999 and three
Business (Commercial) Leases were issued despite the fact that:i) The Agenda items were not lawfully before the Land Board; and
ii) The land was and still is zoned “Open Space” at the time, meaning
that the land was public land and had not been revoked – this
contravenes Section 67 of the Land Act 1996; andiii) Allotments 14, 15, 16 and 17 Section 122 Hohola were not then and
are not now the subject of a registered Plan of Survey and could not
have been Granted.57.7. Further, Land Board 2005 (which convened on the 21st and 22nd January
1999) was later the subject of a one page Gazette on the 29th October 1999
which belatedly:i) Corrected the description of the land the subject of Item 131, the
incorrect Grant of which had been Gazetted on the 17th March 1999;
and -
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ii) Gazetting the Grant of a Business (Light Industrial) Lease over
Portion 2228 Milinch Granville, Fourmil Moresby to Tomonga
Limited, citing Item 135 of the Land Board No. 2005.57.8. The Committee finds that the corrigendum Gazetted unlawfully one day
before the Land Board 2005 convened, added just five items to the agenda
– there was never an Item 135.57.9. This grant was unlawful either because of fraud and/or because it
conflicts with Certificate Authorising Occupancy of Land No. 2033 (S/R)
issued on the 23rd November 1993, whereby portion 2228 was handed
over to the Department of Prime Minister and National Executive Council
(PNG Civil Fire Service) for a new fire station.57.10. The State has lost this land by the incompetence or corruption of the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning.57.11. As already stated by the Committee, the Departmental Secretary, Mr. Pepi
Kimas, despite knowing of these illegalities, has done nothing to protect
the position of the State, but rather permitted the issue of a State Lease to
Tomonga Ltd in May 2005 – See Para. 34.42 et seq.58. PAPUA NEW GUINEA LAND BOARD NO. 2006, (ITEMS 20, 101 AND
102).58.1. The unlawful Grant of Leases over Allotments at Section 122 Hohola has
been considered earlier in this Report (supra).58.2. The Committee now considers the actions of the Land Board which
purported to make these Grants of State Lease.58.3. This Land Board granted a Business (Commercial) Lease over
Allotments 2 and 3 (now known as Allotment 13 Section 122 Hohola.).58.4. Allotment 13 Section 122 Hohola was zoned “Open Space” and the grant
contravened the zoning of the land and Section 67 Land Act 1996. That
Section requires State Leases to be consistent with zoning and physical
planning decisions.58.5. Further, the State and the public have been deprived of land reserved for
public recreation.58.6. Moreover, Allotments 14, 15, 16 and 17 were granted by Land Board
2005. It can be strongly argued that Allotment 13 Section 122 Hohola
ceased to exist with the aforementioned Grants even though there is no -
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Plan of Survey of these four allotments – despite which, three Leases have
been issued.58.7. The Board then considered Items 101 and 102. It managed to allocate or
grant the same land to two different applicants – this land is also Open
Space land and should never have been before the Board at all.58.8. Items 101 and 102 comprised applications by the NCDC seeking the grant
of two Special Purpose (Park Reserve) Leases over Allotments 1 and 2
Section 122 Hohola.58.9. These allotments ceased to exist with the registration of Survey Plans Cat
Nos. 49/1867 and 49/1887 on the 10th July 1990.58.10. Further, another applicant, Virgo No.65 Ltd also applied for a Grant of the
land. In such circumstances, the respective applications should have been
deferred.58.11. Instead, Virgo No 65. Ltd. was granted a Business (Commercial) Lease
over Allotments 2 and 3 now known as Allotment 13 Section 122 Hohola
and the NCDC was granted two Special Purpose (Park Reserve) Leases
over Allotments 1 and 2 Section 122 Hohola. Therefore, the grant to Virgo
No. 65 Ltd and the NCDC conflict, as both have been given different
grants over Allotment 2.58.12. The Registrar has actioned and Gazetted a Grant of Lease to Virgo No.65
Ltd when:i) The land was Open Space incapable of being granted at all unless the
Open Space classification was revoked – which it was not; andii) The grant conflicts with the grant to the NCDC and zoning as Open
Space; andiii) The State has been wrongfully deprived of land; and
iv) Section 67 of the Land Act has been breached.
58.13. 150 matters were Gazetted for consideration by Land Board 2006.
Nevertheless, by Gazettal notice dated the 23rd September 1999, a
corrigendum numbered 151 to Land Board 2006 was published. This
Grant was for relaxation of the Improvement Covenant over Allotment 2
Section 429 Hohola.58.14. The corrigendum adding Item 151, was Gazetted on the 22nd October 1999
– seven months after the Land Board convened in March 1999 and one -
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month after the Grant in favour of Waim No. 92 Ltd. purporting to derive
from Land Board 2006 (Item 151) had been Gazetted. The Committee
have established that this was the portion of land which featured so
prominently in the NPF Inquiry.58.15. The Committees Inquiry into this Land Board has been significantly
impeded by an almost total lack of any relevant records, files or
documents.58.16. The Committee directed the Secretary to produce all records, files and
Gazettal Notices relating to the deliberations and decisions of PNG Land
Board 2006 by Directive 2 of the 5th September 2005. See Schedule 3 to
this Report.58.17. The Secretary failed to produce anything.
58.18. This Land Board considered 150 matters. It was the biggest Land Board
ever, yet not a single piece of paper can be found in the Department.58.19. The Committee is concerned at a handwritten note produced by the
Department, which reads“Land Board 2006 withdrawn and was not convened / held at all, when
and how did these items (items 20, 101 and 102) were deliberated (sic)”58.20. The Committee considers that this comment well illustrates the depths to
which the Land Board had sunk by 1999. Illegality and incompetence
attended the Land Board decision making processes to the detriment of the
State and all citizens of Papua New Guinea.58.21. These excesses were either not noticed by the Department or were
ignored. That situation still prevails.58.22. The Secretary for Lands, Mr. Pepi Kimas, caused a notice to be published
in the local media in 2002, stating that 12 illegal Leases had been issued
by the Land Board and the Department. Yet he has failed to do anything at
all to rectify the situation. When questioned by the Committee on this
failure, the Secretary proffered no acceptable explanation at all for his
inaction.58.23. In the opinion of the Committee, the Department should be rid of officers
that cannot or will not understand or attend to their duties. The Committee
makes further referrals and recommendations later in this Report. -
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59. PAPUA NEW GUINEA LAND BOARD 2014.
59.1. Sections 58 (1) and (3) Land Act clearly prescribe that the Agenda for a
Land Board must be Gazetted not less that seven days before the sitting
date of a Land Board.59.2. This Land Board convened on the 1st October 1999, however the Agenda
for this Board was Gazetted on the 28th September 1999 – and was
followed by a corrigendum advising an additional 10 matters.59.3. This corrigendum was Gazetted on the 30th September 1999.
59.4. The agendas were unlawfully Gazetted and the Land Board should have
been deferred.59.5. Further, Sections 58 (10) and 62 (1) Land Act prescribe a statutory appeal
period of 28 days commencing from the date of notification. The
notifications were issued on the 29th October 1999 – the appeal period
expiring on the 26th November 1999.59.6. Notwithstanding these requirements of law, the Grants from Land Board
2014 were Gazetted on the 8th November 1999. This was unlawful.59.7. The Department of Lands and Physical Planning reassessed the grants
from Land Board 2014 and a total of 27 Grants were Gazetted on the 23rd
December 1999.59.8. However the agenda for Land Board 2014 totalled 49 items – a total of 32
grants were improperly Gazetted on the 8th November 1999, of which 19
were included in the subsequent Gazettal on the 23rd December 1999.59.9. Thirteen Grants were excluded and the status of those Grants is uncertain
because they were Gazetted in the 28 day appeal period – but due to the
failure to comply with Section 58, all Grants are invalid.59.10. These unlawful Grants and issues of Leases open the State to liability from
Leaseholders or purchasers. This meeting clearly shows that the Land
Board had no ability to understand the terms of the Land Act or intention
to obey the law.59.11. The Department of Lands and Physical Planning failed to appreciate the
invalidity of the Grants and has failed to take any steps to rectify the
situation in the last six years. -
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59.12. The Committee reiterates its comments made in respect of Land Board
2006. It makes referrals and recommendations later in this Report.60. PAPUA NEW GUINEA LAND BOARD NO. 2017
60.1. The Committee finds that this Land Board meeting is the most blatant
example of fraud and criminal activity by the Land Board and certain of
its Members.60.2. The Committee also finds that the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning has known of this illegal issue of Leases for six years, but has
failed to take any remedial steps at all.60.3. An agenda of 20 items were Gazetted on the 11th November 1999 and the
15th November 1999, for a Land Board meeting on the 24th November
1999.60.4. The meeting was stopped by Mr. Morris Alalaku – then Departmental
Secretary.60.5. A further 17 items were added by Gazettal on the 2nd December 1999 and
an attempt to reconvene this Land Board meeting was stopped again by
Mr. Alalaku.60.6. Despite the fact that the Land Board had not met, a grant purporting to
derive therefrom was Gazetted on the 6th December 1999, by which Waim
Ltd. was granted a relaxation of a Improvement .Covenant over Allotment
2 Section 429 Hohola. This Gazettal was utterly unlawful. This was the
“NPF land” that featured so prominently in the NPF Inquiry.60.7. Further, the Chairman Mr. Ralph Guise (dec’d), prepared a “Schedule” of
Grants purporting to derive from Land Board 2017 for referral to the
Government Printers Office over his own name when he was neither the
Minister nor the Delegate of the Minister.60.8. That “Schedule” was typeset for publication however, due to Lands
Department intervention, the publication was stopped.60.9. Despite the fact that the Land Board did not meet and that the bogus
“Schedule” was not printed, the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning subsequently issued at least two titles from this Land Board.
They are:State Lease Volume 23 Folio 182.
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60.10. This was a Business (Commercial) Lease issued over Allotment 12
Section 122 Hohola (then “Open Space”) in favour of Mr. Andrew Mald.
Despite the illegality of this issue, it was signed off by the Ministers
Delegate and the Registrar of Titles. To the credit of the Department it was
subsequently cancelled.60.11. However, a National Court decision restored the title to Mr. Mald after the
Solicitor General failed to oppose the grant. Costs were ordered against
the State together with a compensation award against the State.60.12. The Committee cannot understand how this result could possibly have
been obtained.State Lease Volume 23 Folio 132.
60.13. This was a Business (Commercial) Lease over Allotment 5 Section 59
Town of Alotau in favour of PNG Deep Sea Fishing Ltd. Once again this
was signed off by the Ministerial delegate and the Registrar of Titles.60.14. Despite the fact that PNG Land Board 2017 did not meet, that the Gazettal
of the Grants supposedly issuing from that Land Board did not occur, that
the “Schedule” (although not printed) wrongly identified the land and that
the Gazettal was stopped by Departmental intervention, State Lease
Volume 23 Folio 132 comprising a Business (Commercial) Lease over
Allotment 5 Section 59 Town of Alotau, did issue.60.15. Given Jimmy Maladinas involvement in the company PNG Deep Sea
Fisheries Ltd, NPF have lodged a caveat over the property. However, the
value of a caveat over an unlawfully issued title is moot.60.16. The Committee finds that certain Departmental Officers attempted to
intervene and stop the Land Board and to prevent the illegal Gazettal and
issue of State Leases.60.17. However, more powerful Officers were intent on achieving a result for the
Grantees utterly irrespective of the Law.60.18. Once again, no attempt has been made to recover these lands for the State
in the last six years, despite the fact that the current Secretary knew of the
illegal issue and actually publicized it in the media.60.19. The Committee will make further referrals and recommendations later in
this Report.61. PAPUA NEW GUINEA LAND BOARD 2026
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61.1. The agenda for this Land Board (convened on the 25th May 2001)
included a total of 31 items Gazetted on the 8th May 2001 and a further 14
items Gazetted on the 17th May 2001. A total of 24 grants were ultimately
Gazetted.61.2. Page 4 of the National Gazette G160 dated the 13th December 2001
Gazetted the Grant of a Business (Light Industrial/Hotels) Lease over
Allotment 44 (previously Allotments 9,10,11 and 12 Section 7 Granville
in favour of Kakbuk Investments Ltd. and advised that this grant related to
Item 43 of PNG Land Board 2026 – when there were only 31 items.61.3. The Committee cannot find any evidence that a Land Board ever
considered this matter at all.61.4. The Committee can find no evidence that the Department of Lands
detected this Gazettal or did anything about it.61.5. The Committee reiterates its comments made in respect of Land Board
2006 (supra). The Department has failed to take any steps to recover this
land. It failed to take any steps to prevent the unlawful issue of the Lease –
in fact it actually issued and registered it.61.6. The Committee makes recommendations and referrals in respect of this
purported Grant later in this Report.62. PAPUA NEW GUINEA LAND BOARD NO. 2033.
62.1. This Land Board considered 14 items lawfully Gazetted.
62.2. Item 14 was an application seeking a Business (Light Industrial) Lease
over Allotment 16 Section 35 Boroko, the title of which had been forfeited
by Gazettal dated the 25th January 2002.62.3. This land was exempted from advertisement by Gazettal dated the 31st
January 2002 and thence added to the agenda for the Land Board by
Gazettal on the 18th February 2002 i.e. all within the 28 day period for
appeal from a decision to forfeit a title.62.4. The Land Board recommended that a Business (Light Industrial) Lease
be granted over Allotment 16 Section 35 Boroko despite the fact that the
land is zoned “Residential” in which case the Grant contravenes Section
67 of the Land Act and despite the fact that the property accommodates a
total of 33 houses.62.5. Again, the Land Board has failed to apply the procedural requirements of
the Land Act and has delivered a Grant which was unlawful. -
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62.6. This is one of the few instances where the Department appears to have
intervened and stopped the Grant – at the request of the original
Leaseholder.62.7. The Committee cannot understand why the Department could not do the
same thing in other instances on behalf of the State.63. SUMMARY
63.1. A comparative précis of Land Board performance during the period from
1993 – 2005 follows:YEAR NO. OF NO. OF ITEMS MEETINGS ITEMS PER
MEETINGS CONSIDERED PER MONTH MEETING1993 23/26 1267/1283 1.92/2.17 55/49
1994 16 900 1.34 56
1995 31 1160 2.59 37
1996 19 723 1.59 38
1997 13 457/ 462 1.09 35/35
1998 6 370 0.50 62
1999 12 1070 1.00 89
2000 5 239 0.42 48
2001 6 335 0.50 56
2002 7 262 0.50 37
2003 9 365 0.75 40
2004 8 309 0.60 38
2005 11 490 0.90 4563.2. The performance of the Land Board from 1999 to 2004 was poor.
63.3. In 19 months from August 2000 until April 2002, only 16 Land Board
sittings were scheduled. The downward slide in performance continued
until 2005, when slight improvement is noted in the first eight months of
the year.63.4. One sitting was a Special Land Board, five were Provincial Lands Boards
of which one was deferred and another did not take place and two more –
Meetings 2024 and 2027 – simply disappeared.63.5. The Land Board convened eight times and considered 282 items – a poor
performance. -
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63.6. The Board chaired by Mr. Ralph Guise (dec’d.) became notorious for the
constant unlawful Grants of Land made by it. The Committee considers
this reputation to be justified.63.7. Political interference in the composition of the Land Board has crippled
the Board in recent years. For example, on the 14th May 2004 a new Land
Board was appointed and Gazetted on the 3rd June 2004 – G59 page 3.
That Board lasted five days.63.8. On the 8th June 2004, that Board was removed and another panel of
Members appointed – National Gazette G64, Page 1. That Board lasted 37
days. On the 29th July 2004 another Board was appointed in National
Gazette G87 page 2.63.9. The net result of this instability was a Land Board that met only four times
in 2004 and did not meet at all for eight months.63.10. Although the Government has the right to make such appointments, the
constant renewal process requires the new Board to re-learn the
appropriate processes. During this period, productivity drops and the
quality of decision making is poor.63.11. Finally, during research for this Inquiry, it became evident that the Land
Board in 2005 was dealing with many very old matters. The huge delay in
bringing matters before the Lands Board inhibits development and
commercial sales. In 2005, the Land Board considered 94 applications
which were five years older or more. The oldest dated back to 1991!63.12. However, the Committee does conclude that the Land Board is catching
up on the backlog of tenders waiting for determination.63.13. Also apparent to the Committee were very considerable delays in getting
matters before the Physical Planning Boards. Some outstanding matters
are years old. How can development occur if Zoning Applications and title
applications or tenders are undecided?63.14. The Committee concludes that at least the following matters must be
addressed if the Land Board is to work effectively:i) Matters been delayed for years before coming to the Land Board.
This needs to be addressed immediately; andii) there seems to be no induction, training or resource material for new
members of the Land Board; and -
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iii) there is no or no adequate Handbook, Standing Orders or
Instructional Manual for members of the Land Board. How are
members to learn or understand their roles and duties?The Secretary for Lands was asked to produce all handbooks and
guidelines for the Land Board. The Committee received one slim
volume that in our view would be of limited value to any new
member; andiv) the Secretary and the Department failed to produce virtually any
Land Board records at all. There appears to be no system of
preservation or protection of records and it became clear to the
Committee that neither the Department nor its officers placed any
value or priority on record keeping. This is a matter of national
importance and should be immediately attended to; andv) systems to ensure timely and accurate and informed decision making
by the Land Board must be implemented; andvi) this Inquiry has shown a failure by the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning to ensure either that Land Board decisions are
implemented at all, to ensure that titles are issued strictly in accord
with Land Board decisions or not issued where the Land Board acts
unlawfully. Further, Leases were issued by the Department when the
Land Boards had not sat at all. A system of checks and some form of
remedial intervention by the Department must be implemented; andvii) the Committee notes that in 2004 political interference in the Land
Board appointments resulted in the appointment of three Land
Boards in three months and no Land Board sittings for eight months.
This should not occur; andviii) the Department should have a greater ability to advise on or approve
candidates for appointment to the Land Board; andix) members should be chosen for their merit, experience, training and
qualification; andx) despite the fact that Departmental officers were wrongly issuing
titles on the basis of non-existent Land Board decisions and despite
the fact that those officers are still employed in the Department, we
see nothing in the material before this Committee that suggests any
action against these persons at all. Disciplinary and criminal
prosecutions should be immediately and forcefully applied to these
Officers; and -
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xi) it is clear to the Committee that Chairmen of the Land Board have
exceeded their powers and abused their office. The Department
appears to have ignored these excesses or not to have known about
them. Constant scrutiny and checking (particularly of the National
Gazette) should occur in the Department and systems of report and
intervention to stop these illegal practices should be implemented;
andxii) the Committee concludes that the Land Board has failed to
understand or to comply with Zoning decisions, Planning decisions
or the terms of the Land Act and other Statutes relevant to its
functioning. This lack of resource, training and knowledge must be
addressed.63.15. The Committee accepts that the Department has referred several officers
for disciplinary action for minor theft, misrepresentation and breaches of
procedural practices. For this we congratulate the Department but we find
nothing to suggest that it has tackled the huge fraud and corruption
problems in the Department.63.16. Despite appearing before this Committee now for years we see no
improvement at all. What the Committee has heard is every excuse
imaginable to avoid doing the very task that the Department exists to
perform i.e. manage and advance the National Estate and fiscal position by
controlling Land dealings and acquisition to the benefit of the State and its
citizens.63.17. The Committee also concludes that there is no apparent accountability at
all for that failure. We do propose to make recommendations for
significant change later in this Report.63.18. Finally, the Committee gave Notice to Produce documents, files and
records pertaining to these Land Board meetings. The Secretary for Lands
produced two files only and claimed to have no records of other Land
Board meetings. The Committee does not accept this.63.19. The Committee finds that the Department of Lands and Physical Planning
has failed to preserve and store records and files and, by the admission of
the Secretary, has allowed Departmental Officers to corruptly destroy files
and records of suspect dealings.64. FAILURE BY THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS & PHYSICAL PLANNING
TO CO-OPERATE WITH THE PUBLIC ACCOUNTS COMMITTEE. -
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64.1. Throughout this Report, the Committee has recorded consistent failures by
the Secretary of the Department of Lands and his staff to either produce in
part or at all documents, files and records when ordered to do so.64.2. The Secretary did produce some scant records in response to a Notice to
Produce. A record of that response is annexed to this Report in Schedule
2.64.3. The Committee extracted a few more documents after referring the
Secretary for prosecution for failure to comply and issuing a Summons to
Produce, but these were incomplete, where they were produced.64.4. The Committee then referred the Secretary for prosecution for failure to
comply with a Summons to Produce and a few more documents were
delivered to the Committee on the last day of Inquiry. These were also
scant and inadequate.64.5. That a Parliamentary Committee should need to refer a Head of
Department for prosecution before co-operation is forthcoming (and then
only grudging and partial co-operation) is not acceptable.64.6. The duties of a Head of Department toward the Public Accounts
Committee are clearly set out in the Public Finances (Management) Act
and the Secretary acknowledged that he was aware of those obligations.64.7. The Committee has made three conclusions from these failures. They are:
i) That the Head of Department has no control over his staff and cannot
or would not compel them to produce documents or assist the
Committee; andii) the Department has failed to preserve, store or protect files,
documents and records and has allowed records to be removed or
destroyed; andiii) as addressed earlier in this Report, the Department deliberately and
intentionally failed to co-operate with the Public Accounts
Committee Inquiry.64.8. The classes of documents sought by the Committee are fundamental and
irreplaceable records of the management of State Land, State Leases,
proceedings of the Land Board, Zoning decisions, Planning decisions and
other documents of similar type. They should be readily available and
securely stored. -
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64.9. The Committee concludes that urgent attention must be given to this
problem by Government and makes certain relevant recommendations in
this Report (infra).65. POTENTIAL LIABILITY OF THE STATE
65.1. Throughout this Inquiry and Report the Committee considered the
potential liability of the State for the failures of the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning.65.2. The Committee concludes that the incompetence and outright corruption
which has existed in the Department for years has exposed the State to
liability.65.3. That liability may arise in a number of ways, but the Committee has
identified at least the following areas of risk:i) The Government must identify and deal with illegally issued State
Leases if credibility is to be restored to the Land Registration system
in Papua New Guinea. In the event that unlawful State Leases are
cancelled or revoked by forfeiture, successors in title, original
Leaseholders and the finance industry may look to the State for their
remedy.The Committee concludes that there may be many such State Leases
and while the possible extent of State liability is unknown, it is likely
to be considerable. Section 122 Hohola is an example of this
category.ii) Where State Leases have been issued inconsistently with Zoning or
Planning decisions, Leaseholders or successors in title have no valid
Lease at all. Moreover, they have a State Lease document that may
not allow them to do anything with the Land.These Leases should never have been issued in the first place and the
State may have a liability to Leaseholders and their successors in
Title for initial outlay and failed expectation. Again Section 122
Hohola and Portion 1597 Paga Hill are examples of this category.iii) Banks or other lenders may, in the event that the State ever cancels
or forfeits illegal grants of State Leases, be deprived of their Security
for no reason of their making.This situation did arise in Emas Estate Development Pty. Ltd. v. The
Secretary for Lands and Physical Planning (1993) PNGLR 215. The
State should seek advice from its legal advisers in this regard. -
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65.4. In respect of the potential liability of the State arising from actions and
decisions of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning, the
Committee makes certain recommendations later in this Report (infra).66. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE BANKING AND FINANCE INDUSTRY
AND THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS & PHYSICAL PLANNING.66.1. The Committee, having considered the performance of the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning over many years, expressed its concern that
little confidence could be had by the banking and finance industry in the
integrity of the Land Registration System in Papua New Guinea, nor in the
value of State Leases as security – given the failures of the Department to
lawfully issue State Leases or ensure that issued State Leases are lawful.66.2. The Committee questioned the Secretary on this topic. The Secretary
showed little understanding of the importance of his Department in this
regard and seemed unable to appreciate that unlawful titles may not give
any security at all for loans.66.3. The Committee had before it evidence that Banks are reluctant to release
original titles to the Department because the Department loses documents
and that Legal firms employ full time clerks to deal with the Department
because the level of Departmental performance and response to the public
is poor.66.4. The Committee concludes that a deeper Inquiry is needed into this matter.
The Register should be cleansed of illegal or unlawfully issued State
Leases by a process of forfeiture or cancellation.66.5. This will restore confidence in the system and reassure lenders as to the
quality of their security.66.6. The Department needs to address urgently its standards of service, security
and competence.67. THE PERFORMANCE OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS & PHYSICAL
PLANNING AND NATIONAL ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL
DEVELOPMENT67.1. The Department of Lands and Physical Planning manages the most
important asset in the country – land.67.2. While the Department only oversees approximately 3% of the land mass
of the country, that land is the basis of all economic and social
development in Papua New Guinea. -
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67.3. The Committee cannot find that the Department is capable of competent
management of even this tiny portion of the country. State land is stolen
from or given away by the Department for no return to the State. The
Department of Lands is incompetent in nearly all its areas of operation –
particularly in its failure to control its own Officers.67.4. The Committee considers that the Department of Lands is the most crucial
agency in the planned and progressive building of the national economy
and social development. If land acquisition and development is properly
controlled, the development of wealth, employment and therefore
improvement in all social indicators will follow.67.5. The Committee considers that the Department and all its officers should
be aware of this vital role and be imbued with the task of competently
managing their statutory tasks.67.6. The Committee concludes that Officers at all levels in the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning lack this understanding and neither know nor
care about the important national role that they should play.67.7. Further, the Committee finds that Departmental Officers do not understand
that they control land dealings – land dealings and dealers do not control
the Department. It is not their purpose to do the bidding of private
speculators at the expense of the State.67.8. Neither is the Department a Real Estate Agent for the unplanned or
random allocation of State Land for no benefit to the State, either social,
fiscal or developmental.67.9. The Department has declined over the last ten years to a point where it
cannot manage even simple statutory functions – such as collecting Land
Rent. The Department is held in low esteem and it is clear to the
Committee that corruption and criminal collusion by senior managers is an
accepted incident of the Departments functioning.67.10. How then can other employees be expected to perform to any better
standard in the absence of real Leadership?67.11. The Committee considers that this Departmental disintegration is a matter
of National importance in that economic progress and improvement is
retarded by the Department.67.12. The State must take immediate action to force change in the Department
and this Committee makes further recommendations in this regard in this
Report (infra). -
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68. RESOLUTIONS OF THE COMMITTEE
68.1. The following Resolutions were made unanimously by the Public
Accounts Committee:1. The Committee will make a Report to Parliament under Section 86
(1) (c ) and (d) Public Finances (Management) Act 1995 with
findings and recommendations concerning the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning.2. The Committee concludes that the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning is not functioning to any acceptable standard and
its Management is ineffective. The Department has failed to carry
out its duties and has failed to protect the interests of the State and
the citizens of Papua New Guinea.3. The Committee concludes that there is an urgent need to restaff and
restructure the Department of Lands and Physical Planning and the
Management of that Department. This is a matter of National
importance.4. The Committee recommends to the Government that assistance be
sought from foreign aid donors to recruit and retain expert managers,
trainers and administrators to assist the Department to become
functional and effective.5. That the Government review relevant statutes and, if appropriate,
amend them to assist the restructuring of the Department and to
restore confidence to the Papua New Guinea Land Registration and
administration system.6. That the Government immediately commission a Report addressing
potential exposure of the State to claims arising from Departmental
actions or inactivity, into revenue losses and methods of collection,
into the recovery of State Land wrongly alienated into private hands,
into customary land wrongly alienated and preservation of such
lands in the interim.7. That the Government immediately commence the process of
reviewing all State Leases granted by the Land Board and issued and
registered by the Department of Lands and Physical Planning in the
period 1996 – 2006 with the intention of identifying those State
Leases that were unlawfully issued. -
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8. That the Government immediately cancel all State Leases identified
as unlawfully Granted.9. That the Government immediately commence the process of
forfeiting all those State Leases, the Lessees of which are in breach
of any Lease Covenant.10. That the Government immediately commence recovery of all Land
Rentals outstanding for more than 90 days.11. That the Government take immediate action to recover Portion 1597
Paga Hill and declare and preserve that land as National Park.12. That the Committee accepts the findings of the Office of the Auditor
General for the years 2000 – 2004, and will report to Parliament on
necessary changes to those matters set down in Section 86 (1) (d) (i –
iv) of the Public Finances (Management) Act 1995.13. To endorse and accept the findings set forth in Para. 69 herein.
14. To accept and endorse the referrals set forth in Para. 70 herein
15. That the Chairman brief the Minister for Lands on the findings and
resolutions of this Committee.69. FINDINGS:
69.1. As to the performance of the Department of Lands and Physical Planning,
the Committee makes the following findings:1. The Committee, on all the evidence before it, finds that the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning has:a) failed to protect the State against loss of revenue through
failure to collect land Rental in a timely manner (or at all). The
losses to the State are very significant ; andb) failed to forfeit land for unpaid Land Rental or other breach of
covenant, thereby contributing to loss by the State; andc) failed to forfeit or cancel titles to land which the Department
knew or should have known were fraudulently or corruptly
issued; and -
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d) failed to correct Gazettal notices of issue of titles which the
Department knew or ought to have known were fraudulent,
forged or otherwise illegal; ande) failed to take any or any adequate steps to protect the State and
its land from fraudulent dealings; andf) failed to maintain adequate internal controls and systems to
ensure timely collection of revenue; andg) failed to action in a timely fashion or at all, recommendations
or directions of the Auditor General, to the detriment of the
State; andh) failed to action adequately or at all, directives or
recommendations of the Public Accounts Committee, to the
detriment of the State; andi) failed to perform its Statutory duties under the Land Act
adequately or at all; andj) failed to perform its statutory duties under the Public Finances
(Management) Act adequately or at all; andk) failed to protect the State against claims for loss and damage or
compensation for losses arising from the fraudulent issue of
land titles; andl) failed to take any or any adequate steps to protect the interest
of the State or to protect the State against liability arising from
illegal dealings by Departmental Officers of which the
Department was or should have been aware; andm) failed to control lawfully or at all, the agendas of Land Boards
to ensure that only properly and lawfully available land tenders
were considered by the Land Board; andn) failed, when the Department knew of illegal decisions or
dealings by the Land Board, to prevent Gazettal of illegal
grants or registration of illegally issued Leases; ando) promoted private interests over those of the State and its
citizens; andp) actively tolerated collusion and corrupt practices by its own
staff; and -
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q) exposed the State to claims for loss, damage or compensation
arising from land titles fraudulently or unlawfully issued ; andr) failed to take any or any reasonable action to rectify the issue
of fraudulent titles; ands) failed to store, keep or protect documents, records, files and
correspondence properly, adequately or at all; andt) failed to produce documents, records and files when ordered to
do so by the Public Accounts Committee; andu) failed to cooperate with the Public Accounts Committee; and
v) failed to comply with or to apply the requirements of the Land
Act and other Statutes, the administration of which is the duty
of the Department; andw) permitted staff members corruptly to destroy or remove files,
records and documents; andx) negligently and unlawfully allowed the transfer of State and
Reserved Land to private ownership; andy) failed to manage properly or at all land allocation, payments,
forfeiture and all other aspects of land management; andz) caused loss to the State by failing to levy accurately or at all,
tender or reserve prices for land allocation; andaa) caused loss to the State by failing to levy accurately or at all,
Land Rental payments to favoured Grantees and Leaseholders;
andbb) failed to defend adequately or at all litigation arising from
Departmental mismanagement, illegality or negligence; andcc) failed to establish and maintain a competent system of
management and accountability; anddd) failed to properly and adequately account for public funds and
revenue; and -
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ee) failed to implement systems to comply with the terms of the
Public Finance (Management) Act – particularly Section 5
thereof; andff) issued Urban Development Leases over Reserved Land with
out requiring compliance with any Lease or Licence covenants;
andgg) tolerated revocation of certain lands with no legal basis, to the
detriment of the State; andhh) failed to read or understand Zoning and Land Use restrictions
before issuing Leases; andii) failed to maintain Zoning records or Land Use records and
failed to produce same to the Public Accounts Committee; andjj) issued Leases to more than one recipient over the same land;
andkk) gave Public land to speculators at no or no proper cost or price,
thereby depriving the State of money and assets; andll) failed to carry out Land Board recommendations; and
mm) illegally issued Leases where no Land Board had either sat,
deliberated or decided the matter; andnn) ignored Land Board decisions completely; and
oo) generally become a distrusted, disorganized and chaotic
Department incapable and disinterested in performing its
function.pp) failed to respond in a timely manner, or at all, to complaints or
requests for intervention by citizens – particularly in cases of
fraudulent issue of titles; andqq) that the Secretary and his senior management have failed to
correct abuses which they knew were occurring ( e.g. the
Secretary made a clear sworn admission that his staff were paid
by unnamed parties to destroy documents and records and was
clearly aware of at least twelve illegal dealings in land); and -
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rr) that the Secretary and his Management allowed abuses and
corrupt dealings to continue with no apparent attempt to stop
them; andss) that the Department deliberately obstructed the work of the
Committee by failing to produce documents and records when
ordered to do so. At best, this failure clearly demonstrated that
the Secretary has no control over his staff;2. That these failures (or any of them) have an immediate and
deleterious effect on the economic development of the country. The
Department of Lands in its quality of management of the National
Estate is the most important arm of Government insofar as economic
and social development is concerned.3. That the failure of the Department to guarantee sound titles means
that the finance and Banking Industries can have no confidence in
land as security and investors can have no confidence that they have
good title at all.4. That the State cannot manage competently even 3% of the
landmass which has been alienated. This does not bode well for the
further mobilization of Customary Land.5. That the Department has little credibility in the business sector.
Banks will not send titles to the Department because they never get
them back. Missing files and slovenly performance by the
Department is a daily occurrence. This must be unacceptable to a
Government which professes policies of economic development and
investor confidence.6. That the Department has, quite unlawfully, issued titles to State
Reserved Land and National Parks. Moreover two such parcels of
land examined by the Committee showed that the recipients of the
titles had no ability to satisfy Improvement Covenants, pay Land
Rental or do anything but sell the land for huge profits. The land was
given away to speculators for no benefit to the State and to the
detriment of the public who are deprived of the use of this land.7. That, as a result of mismanagement and malpractice by the
Department, the State has been deprived of revenue and assets.
Failure to collect Land Rentals, failure to levy appropriate prices for
land and the failure to prevent fraudulent dealings have so deprived
the State for many years. -
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8. That the State has been exposed to significant losses by way of
claims for damages and compensation by persons and companies
deprived of titles, granted defeasible titles or who were otherwise the
victims of fraud or malpractice in the Department.9. That the Committee has only discovered a very small part of the
corrupt and negligent practices within the Department. The
Committee concludes that a much deeper Inquiry is warranted with a
view to a complete restructure of the Department and replacement of
the current management10. That political interference in the Land Board has seriously impeded
the work and the effectiveness of that Board.11. That the Land Board performance in the period 1999 – 2005 has
been poor, but that there has been a slight improvement in 2005.12. That the Land Board requires immediate restructuring with an
emphasis on controlling the actions of Chairmen and on making the
Board transparent and accountable.13. That training and resourcing of the Land Board is poor and needs
urgent improvement.14. That membership of the Land Board should be made strictly on merit
and qualification – not political patronage.15. The Committee concludes that the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning and its Management are in such a state of failure,
that a recommendation should move to the Public Service
Commission and the Parliament to suspend the Secretary ans senior
management pending a further Inquiry and their replacement with
competent senior management or a senior management team charged
with beginning the process of rebuilding the Department.16. That the current Government has inherited a Department which is
incompetent and disloyal to the State and its citizens. It is the
product of a decade of political and criminal influence on
Departmental officers and exists to serve the interests of a few.
Honest or competent Officers , seemingly, have little or no influence
in the workings of the Department70. REFERRALS
-
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70.1. The Committee resolves that the Secretary of the Department of Lands
and Physical Planning, Mr. Pepi Kimas, is referred to the Office of the
Public Prosecutor, the Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary and the
Office of the Ombudsman for investigation and possible prosecution for
the following breaches of the Public Finances (Management) Act, in that
he:i) failed to comply with Section 5 (1) (a) in that he has not complied with
nor ensured that his Department has complied with the terms of the
Public Finances (Management) Act; andi) failed to comply with Section 5 (1) (b) in that he did not ensure that all
records and accounts relating to the functions of the Department are
properly maintained; andii) failed to comply with Section 5 (1) (g) in that he failed to safeguard
property of the State; andiii) failed to comply with Section 5 (1) (h) in that fees, taxes or charges for
which the Department is responsible were not collected promptly and to
the fullest extent. This includes Land Rental, reserve price and tender
prices; andiv) failed to comply with Section 5 (1) (i) in that fees, charges or taxes for
which the Department was responsible were not reviewed at least once
in every year; andv) failed to comply with Section 5 (1) (j) in that he failed to submit
information to the Public Accounts Committee when directed by Notice
and Summons so to do.70.2. The Departmental Secretary is also referred for disciplinary action under
the Public Service General Orders for breaches of the Public Finances
(Management) Act and failure to comply with Notices and Summonses
from the Public Accounts Committee, for which he has already been
referred.70.3. The Committee refers the Departmental Secretary to the Office of the
Public Prosecutor for investigation and possible prosecution for breach of
Section 112 (1) (b) Public Finances (Management) Act in that both
persons refused or willfully neglected to produce documents when
required to do so by the Public Accounts Committee.70.4. The Committee refers the Secretary to the Public Service Commission for
consideration of the imposition of a surcharge under Section 102 (d), (e)
and/or (g) Public Finances (Management) Act – particularly in relation to -
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the continuing failure to collect Land Rentals and to protect State assets,
thereby constituting a deficiency in public monies and State property.70.5. The Committee refers the Secretary to the Public Service Commission and
the Department of Personal Management for investigation and possible
disciplinary action under the Public Service (Management) Act 1995 and
General Orders made thereunder for failure to assist the Public Accounts
Committee and failure to comply with the terms of the Public Finances
(Management) Act– See Section 113 Public Finances (Management)
Act.70.6. The Committee concludes that certain land transactions made by the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning be referred to the Offices of
the Solicitor General and the Attorney General for appropriate action to
protect the interests of the State. The Paga Hill land, the twelve illegal
titles identified by the Secretary as fraudulently issued, those titles issued
on the authority of a non-existent Land Board etc are examples. At the
very least the Solicitor General may consider caveating titles, pending
further action.71. RECOMMENDATIONS;
71.1. The findings and resolutions of the Committee, to be effective, need to be
actioned by the Government, without delay.71.2. Replacement of incompetent Departmental management, implementation
of competent accounting and control systems, establishment of the precise
number of unlawful Leases issued, establishment of likely State Liability,
rectification of the Land Register, return to the State of all land either
wrongly allocated or liable to forfeit and+ collection of outstanding Land
Rentals are matters which must be attended to immediately.71.3. The Committee considers that the Government should institute an further
deeper Inquiry into past land allocations by the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning over the last decade with a view to establishing the
extent and numbers of corruptly or illegally issued State Leases and the
exact number of State Leases that should be either cancelled or forfeited
for either illegality or breaches of Lease covenants.71.4. That Inquiry should be properly resourced and given wide terms of
reference. The Committee considers that such an Inquiry will require only
a matter of months to complete its work if it receives assistance from the
Department of Lands staff – which should be enforced by Government.71.5. Shortage of land for development has significantly contributed to the
disintegration of the Department. As land has become more valuable, so -
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the temptation to acquire it by any means has resulted in the blatant
malpractices that this Report records.71.6. This motivation, coupled with a nil chance of detection or interference by
the Department has brought the system of land allocation and, more
importantly, security, into contempt.71.7. The Committee also suggests that the system of land release and allocation
be reviewed by persons expert in assessing future needs and the role
played by such matters in overall National development.71.8. We recommend that the Land Board and every facet of the operations of
the Department of Lands Department be given urgent attention by
Government in order that the National Estate is protected from further
depredations and that the State recovers both its assets and revenue owed
to it.71.9. More specifically, the Committee concludes that the present system of
land management requires high standards of honesty and competence –
attributes that the Department lacks. We commend a review of this system
with a view of developing systems of checks and balances that cannot be
circumvented, to ensure that the Department and the Land Board carry out
their tasks with honesty, competence and pride.71.10. The Committee has found a large number of Ministerial exemptions
granted by Departmental officers in very suspicious circumstances. Such
exemptions should be granted only in exceptional circumstances – and
then strictly in accordance with the terms of the Land Act.71.11. The exemption given in respect of Lot 10 Section 23 Granville Paga Hill
is a good example. This prime land was removed from the Department of
Justice, exempted from advertisement and given to a Company with no
apparent assets or ability to develop the block, for no fee and in a closed
tender. This land, if it was lawfully offered at all, was capable of a
substantial return to the State and there is no legitimate reason for
exempting it from open tender.71.12. Pending further Inquiry or action, we recommend that Ministerial
Delegation be removed from the Department entirely. The few instances
where such exemptions are legitimately made can easily be met by the
Minister himself.71.13. The Committee recommends that all the allocations of State Land
examined by the Committee in this Inquiry, be immediately referred to the
Solicitor General for urgent action to prevent any further alienation or
dealing in that land, pending further recovery action by the Government. -
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71.14. Finally, the Committee states that it only examined a small portion of
those transactions referred to it by before and during this Inquiry.
However, all transactions reported to the Committee will be referred to the
appropriate agencies for action as soon as possible.72. CONCLUSIONS
72.1. The Committee has been deeply concerned by the revelations made
during and as a result of this Inquiry.72.2. That such a vital Government Department could have reached such levels
of incompetence and be so riddled by illegality, should be a matter of
profound National concern.72.3. The Department and its officers show every intention of continuing as
they have for the last decade and clearly have neither the capacity nor the
ability to change.72.4. Therefore we conclude that the State must intervene without any delay to
force reform, in the national interest.72.5. This Committee hopes that this may be the beginning of positive change
for this Department and that our system of land administration becomes a
model of its type for developing nations and we will urge the Parliament
to act quickly and decisively in this regard. -
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SCHEDULE ONE
LIST OF WITNESSES
30th April 2003Names of Witnesses Comments
Mr. Pepi Kimas Secretary, Department of Lands & Physical
Planning
Mr. Romilly Kila Pat Deputy Secretary – Corporate &
Regulatory Division
Mr. Ian Kundin Senior Legal Officer and Acting Human
Resources Manager
Mr Tony Luben Acting Deputy Secretary – Lands Services1st September 2005
Names of Witnesses Comments
Mr. Pepi Kimas Secretary, Department of Lands & Physical
Planning
Mr. Francis Tanga Chairman, PNG Land Board
Dr. Tonges Zanggo Deputy Chairman, PNG Land Board
Kutt Paonga Member, PNG Land Board
Ian Kundin Manager, Legal Services, DLPP
Gabriel Donump Co-ordinator, Manam resettlement
Darcy Tamia Chief Internal Audit, DLPP
Romilly Kila Pat Deputy Secretary, Operations and
Ministerial Delegate
Gideon Simeon Manager, Finance
George Oli Director, Corporate Services
Frend Morove Acting Executive Officer24th November 2005
Names of Witnesses Comments
Mr Pepi Kimas Secretary, Department of Lands & Physical
Planning25th November 2005
Names of Witnesses Comments of Witnesses
Mr Pepi Kimas Secretary, Department of Lands & Physical
Planning -
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29th November 2005
Names of Witnesses Comments
Mr Pepi Kimas Secretary, Department of Lands & Physical
Planning28th February 2005
Names of Witnesses Comments
Mr Pepi Kimas Secretary, Department of Lands & Physical
PlanningSCHEDULE TWO
LIST OF EXHIBITS AND DOCUMENTS BEFORE THE INQUIRY
Directive Number Number of Pages
1 Nil
1-32 4–6
3–53 1–6
1–2
-
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127
1 – 146
4
Nil
1-5
1 – 61
1 – 645 1 – 12
6 1-4
6 – 12
1-77 Nil
8 Nil
Nil9 Nil
10 Nil
Nil
11 Nil
12 Nil
13 Nil
6 – 46
-
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128
16 Nil
17
Nil
18
Nil18 Nil
19 Nil
20 Nil
Nil
2122 Nil
23 Nil
27 Nil
28 Nil
29 Nil
34 Nil
37 Nil
39 Nil
40 Nil
41 Nil
-
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129
43 Nil
44 Nil
45 Nil
46 Nil
47 Nil
53 Nil
53
1 – 1558 Nil
Nil
59
-
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130
Miscellaneous Files
No. of files Titles of the files
1. Allotment 1, Section 122, Hohola – NCD
2. Allotment 2, Section 122, Hohola – NCD
3. Allotment 6, Section 122, Hohola – NCD
4. Allotment 7, Section 122, Hohola – NCD
5. Allotment 8, Section 122, Hohola – NCD
6. Allotment 9, Section 122, Hohola – NCD
7. Allotment 10, Section 122, Hohola – NCD
8. Allotment 13, Section 122, Hohola – NCD DC/122/013
9. Allotment 13, Section 122, Hohola – NCD: – Virgo No. 65 Ltd
10. Allotment 14, Section 122, Hohola – NCD
11. Allotment 15, Section 122, Hohola – NCD
-
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Response by Secretary for Lands to “Summons to a Witness”
NO. OF APPENDICES DETAILS
FILE
1 Appendices File Files, records and information relating to the
National Court ruling regarding Portion 08C, M/L
Wasus, F/M Markham Morobe Province cancelling
the State Lease Granted to Piu Land Group
Incorporated and others.2 “01” All files, Directives, and records relating to a
decision to exemption from advertisement
Allotment 16, Section 35, Boroko, Gazetted on
31/01/20023 “02” All files, directives, and records relating to and in
respect of Portion 1597, M/L Granville (Paga Hill)
as well as grant of an “Urban development Lease”
and subsequently Business Lease over Portion 1597
M/L Granville4 “04” All documents and records relating to the
“06” A detail statement of reasons for the cancellation of
a Lease held by the Lutheran church of Papua New
Guinea and the issue of a State Lease to the Ganglau
Landowner company over Portion 109 and 110 M/L
Pommern, F/M Madang“07”
All files, records and documents showing how the
Ganglau Landowner Company Ltd. obtained a State
Lease over Portion 109 and 110, M/L Pommern and
F/M Madang5 “10” A report on all matters referred investigated by the
Governance and compliance unit and the result of
each inquiry.6 “11” A list of all matters referred by the Governance and
Compliance Unit to the Ombudsman or the Police
and the outcome of each referral or complaint. -
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INTERNAL AUDIT FILES
NO. OF FILE TITLES OF FILES
1 Brief on unauthorised trip to Manus by Lease Coordinator,
Islands Regions.
2 Brief on Section 32, Lot 27 Granville
3 Brief on changes to PNG National Land Board & National
Physical Planning Board
4 Report on fraudulent Loan application to Vini Finance Co. Ltd
5 Report on fraudulent Loan application to Muruk Finance Ltd
6 Report on fraudulent payment of K2,475.00
7 Report on payment of entertainment allowance to former
Secretary Guad Zurenuoc, OBE
8 Report on theft K 2,880.00
9 Report on theft of blank cheques
10 Report on abuse of power & position by current Director
Corporate Services (photocopied from my running file)
11 Report on Land Board Members – Albert Varina & others claim
for O/S Land Board entitlements.
12 Report on Section 03, Allotment 20 Hohola
13 Report on Section 38, Allotment 14 Hohola
14 Report on discrepancy of office stationery and furniture.
15 Brief /report on misuse of hired vehicle hired for Wewak storm
water project
16 Brief / report on State Owned Plantations of Asuramba, Mangen,
Malagen & Posdam, Madang.
17 Brief / report into State Owned Plantations in Madang
18 Directives for investigations into Land dealings as per PAC
Directives
19 Statement in responses to PAC Directives -
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SCHEDULE THREE
COPIES OF DIRECTIVES AND SUMMONSES ISSUED.
PERMANENT PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
Telephone: (675) 327-7783 Parliament House
Facsimile: (675) 327-7474 WAIGANI,
NCD
Papua New Guinea
e-mail:[email protected]
_______________________________________________________________________________________5th September 2005
Mr. Pepi Kimas
Secretary
Department of Lands & Physical Planning
PO Box 5665
BOROKO, NCDFax: 301 3105
Dear Mr. Kimas,
I refer to the Public Accounts Committee inquiry into the Department of Lands &
Physical Planning held on the 1st of September 2005 at the Parliament House.Having reviewed the Auditor-Generals Report and considering the responses you
verbally gave for a series of questions put to you at the inquiry, the Committee
has unanimously resolved to issue the following directives to be implemented
before the expiration of thirty (30) working days from the date of these
directives; -
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1) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records, files and Gazettal
notices relating to the deliberations and decisions of Papua New Guinea
Land Board No. 2005 in respect of Items 130, 131, 132, 133 and 134
before that Board.2) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records, files and Gazettal
notices relating to the deliberations and decisions of Papua New Guinea
Land Board No. 2006 in respect of Items 20, 101 and 102 before that
Board.3) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records, files and Gazettal
notices relating to the sittings and deliberations and decisions of Papua
New Guinea Land Board No. 2013 with particular emphasis on the time,
days and locations at which the Land Board convened.4) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records, files and Gazettal
notices relating to the sittings and deliberations and decisions of Papua
New Guinea Land Board No. 2014.5) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records, files, minutes or
transcripts and gazettal notices relating to the sittings and deliberations
and decisions of Papua New Guinea Land Board No. 2017 with particular
emphasis on the time, days and locations at which this Land Board
convened.6) The Departmental Secretary will produce all files, records and other
documents including Gazettal Notices relating to the issue of a Business
(Commercial) Lease over Allotment 12 Section 122 Hohola to Mr. Andrew
Mald.7) The Departmental Secretary will produce Land Rent records to the date of
this directive for Allotment 12 Section 122 Hohola including and in
particular, records of all arrears of Land Rent.8) The Departmental Secretary will produce records of the reserve or tender
price paid by Mr. Andrew Mald for Allotment 12 Section 122.9) The Departmental Secretary will produce all files, records and other
documents relating to the issue of a Business (Commercial) Lease over
Allotment 5 Section 59 Town of Alotau to PNG Deep Sea Fishing Ltd. -
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10) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records of reserve or tender
price paid by PNG Deep Sea Fishing Ltd in respect of Allotment 5 Section
59 Town of Alotau.11) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records of land Rent applied
to Allotment 5 Section 59 Town of Alotau.12) The Departmental Secretary will produce the final and actual agenda for
PNG Land Board No. 2026.13) The Departmental Secretary will produce all Gazettal Notices of grants
made by PNG Land Board No. 2026.14) The Departmental Secretary will produce Land Rent records current to the
date of the directive for Allotments 9, 10, 11 and 12 Section 7 Granville.15) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records of reserved or tender
price paid by KakbuK Investments Ltd in respect of Allotments 9, 10, and
12 Granville16) The Departmental Secretary will produce all documents, files, Gazettal
Notices and records of PNG Land Board No. 2033.17) The Departmental Secretary will produce all files, directives, decisions and
other records relating to the exemption from advertisement of Allotment
16 Section 35 Boroko, Gazetted on the 31st January 2002.18) The Departmental Secretary will produce records showing the zoning of
Allotment 16 Section 35 Boroko on and from the 27th February 2002 until
the date of this directive.19) The Departmental Secretary will produce a record of all litigation in the
National Court of Justice or the Supreme Court either completed or
current arising from or concerning the deliberations and decisions of the
Papua New Guinea Land Board during the period 1997 until the date of
this directive, to which the Department of Lands and Physical Planning,
the Papua New Guinea Land Board, the Secretary for Lands and Physical
Planning or the State is a party.20) The Departmental Secretary will produce a list of all damages awards or
Judgments given against the State (however described) arising from
deliberations or decisions of the Papua New Guinea Land Board during the
period from 1997 until the date of this directive. -
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21) The Departmental Secretary will produce records of the Members of each
Land Board from 1991 until the date of this directive with copies of
relevant Gazettal Notices of appointment and revocation.22) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records all records showing
zoning of Portion 1597 Milinch Granville from the 22nd August 1997 until
the date of this directive.23) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records files, minutes and
other documents relating to the hearing and determination of Papua New
Guinea and Board No. 1911 Item 2.24) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records of any reserved or
tender price paid by Paga Hill Development Co. Ltd or Paga Hill Land
Holding (PNG) or any other person or entity in respect of Portion 1597 at
any time from August 1997 until the date of this directive.25) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records of Land Rental
applied and paid or outstanding in respect of Portion 1597 at any time
from August 1997 until the date of this directive.26) The Departmental Secretary will provide a detailed report on all steps
taken to excise or otherwise protect and preserve the interest of Police
Legacy in Portion 1597.27) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records of zoning of Section
122 Hohola and in particular Allotment 1 Section 122 Hohola as described
in Survey Plan 49/901 showing revocation and change in that zoning from
1969 until the date of this Directive.28) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records of Land Rental
applied and/or outstanding for Allotments numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8,
9, 10, 11, 12 and 13 Section 122 Hohola.29) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records, documents and
accounts of any reserve or tender price paid in respect of Allotments 1, 2,
3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13 Section 122 Hohola.30) The Departmental Secretary will produce a statement of any and all
litigation issued, finalized or current concerning in any way any part of
Section 122 Hohola and to which the Department or the State is a party. -
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31) The Departmental Secretary will produce a detailed statement of reasons
for the cancellation of the Lease held by the Evangelical Lutheran Church
of Papua New Guinea.32) The Departmental Secretary will produce a detailed statement or reasons
for the issue of a State Lease to the Ganglau Landowner Company Ltd
over Portions 109 and 110 Madang, Madang Province.33) The Departmental Secretary will produce to the Committee all files,
documents, records, minutes or notes whatsoever whether in hard or
printed form or in any electronic media relating to or recording the
process by which the Ganglau Landowner Company Ltd obtained a State
Lease over Portions 109 and 110 Madang, Madang Province.34) The Departmental Secretary will produce all Land Rent records for
Portions 109 and 110 Madang, Madang Province for the period 1997 to
the date of this directive.35) The Departmental Secretary will produce evidence of any reserve or
tender price paid by the Ganglau Landowner Company Ltd.36) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records, files and other
documents relating to the application for and issue of a State Lease over
Allotments 2 and 3 Section 111 Boroko to Bluehaven No. 7 Ltd.37) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records of Land Rent and
Land Rent outstanding in relation to Allotments 2 and 3 Section 111
Boroko for the period 1997 to the date of this directive.38) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records, accounts, files and
other documents recording the reserve or tender price fixed and/or paid
by Bluehaven No. 7. Ltd in respect of Allotments 2 and 3 Section 111
Boroko.39) The Departmental Secretary will produce all files, documents, minutes and
other records relating to or recording the proceedings and decision of
Papua New Guinea Land Board 2014 in relation to an application by the
Sisters of Charity for the grant of a State Lease over Allotment 69 Section
229 Hohola.40) The Departmental Secretary will produce all documents, records and files
relating to the grant and issue to Willing Pacific (PNG) Ltd of a State Lease
over Allotment 69 Section 229, Hohola. -
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41) The Departmental Secretary will produce all Land Rent records showing
land Rent paid or owed in respect of Allotment 69 Section 229 Hohola
during the period 1991 to the date of this directive.42) The Departmental Secretary will produce all files and records of
correspondence received by or sent to the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning during the period from 1991 until the date of this
directive.43) The Departmental Secretary will produce all Departmental files (including
Land Board files) and Gazettal Notices relating to the grant and issue of a
Business (Commercial) Lease to PNG Deep Sea Fishing Ltd over Allotment
5 Section 132 Town of Alotau.44) The Departmental Secretary will produce Land Rental statements and
records for this land.45) The Departmental Secretary will produce all records of the reserved or
tender price paid to the State by PNG Deep Sea Fishing Ltd.46) The Departmental Secretary will produce all valuation reports and/or Land
Rental assessment records for Allotment 5 Section 132, Town of Alotau for
the period 1917 until the date of this directive.47) The Departmental Secretary will produce minutes and records of Meeting
No. 08/98 National Physical Planning Board.48) Provide to the Committee a confidential report setting out all officers
suspended or terminated from the service of the Department 1997 –
2005, including reasons for that action.49) Produce to the Committee the approval from the Department of Finance
for all bank accounts maintained by the Department of Lands and Physical
Planning.50) Produce to the Committee the approval by the Department of Finance to
the appointment of Mrs. Lavu Matau as Collector of Public monies.51) Produce to the Committee a full and complete list of all advisers,
consultants or contractors appointed or retained by the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning in the last in the period 1999 – 2005. -
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52) Produce to the Committee all applications or tenders made to the
Department for the supply of services, all records of deliberations and
awards of contracts for services made by the Department in the period
1999 – 2005.53) Produce to the Committee copies of any written guidelines for the Papua
New Guinea Land Board.54) Produce to the Committee any and all correspondence to the office of the
Attorney General or any other Office seeking authority to issue collection
proceedings of outstanding debts.55) Produce to the Committee a confidential report showing instances of
threats made to officers of the governance and compliance unit of the
Department of Lands and Physical Planning including the identity of the
person making the threat, the nature of the threat and action taken in
respect of that threat.56) Produce to the Committee a report on all matters referred to or
investigated by the governance and compliance unit and the result of
each inquiry.57) Produce to the Committee a record of all matters or allegations referred
by the governance and compliance unit to the Ombudsman or the Police
and the outcome of each matter or referral or complaint.58) Produce to the Committee a list of all State Land which, in your opinion,
has been illegally or improperly passed into private hands giving brief
reasons for your conclusions, full title references and details of the
recipient(s) and current owners.58) Within ten days, from the date of these directives, the Department of
Lands and Physical Planning will respond in writing to all queries,
allegations or matters of inquiry by the Auditor General contained in Audit
Reports dated the 21st March 2005. That response will be delivered to the
Office of the Auditor General and to the Secretary of the Committee. -
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You are to implement the above directives within the given time and also you
may contact the Committee Secretariat to clarify any matters that may arise
relating to the directives.Yours sincerely,
HON. JOHN TONGRI HICKEY, MP
Chairman -
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PERMANENT PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
Telephone: (675) 327-7783 Parliament House
Facsimile: (675) 327-7474 WAIGANI,
NCD
Papua New Guinea
e-mail:[email protected]
_______________________________________________________________________________________22 September 2005
Mr. Pepi Kimas
Secretary
Department of Lands & Physical Planning
PO Box 5665
BOROKO, NCDFax: 301 3105
Dear Mr. Kimas,
I refer to the PAC directives issued to you dated 5 September 2005.
There was an inadvertent error which affected directives number 43 and 46.
Please amend directives 43 and 46 to read as “Allotment 5 Section 59 Town of Alotau”
A further additional directive is now being issued to be implemented together with the
previous directives.59) The Departmental Secretary will produce a list of all Ministerial exemptions
from public advertisement and competitive tender, made pursuant to Section
69 (2) of the Land Act during the period 2003, 2004 and 2005 identifying the
subject land and the reasons for each exemption.Yours sincerely,
HON. JOHN HICKEY, MP
Chairman. -
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PERMANENT PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
Telephone: (675) 327-7783 Parliament House
Facsimile: (675) 327-7474 WAIGANI,
NCD
Papua New Guinea
e-mail:[email protected]
_______________________________________________________________________________________INDEPENDENT STATE OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA
Public Finances (Management) Act 1995Act, Sec.89(1)
SUMMONS TO A WITNESSTo: Mr Pepi Kimas
Secretary
Department of Lands & Physical Planning
P O Box 5665
BOROKO NCDYou are summoned to produce to the Committee or the Secretary of the Committee by
2:00pm today the 24th of November 2005 the following books, papers, documents and
articles:-1. All files, directives, decisions and other records relating to a decision to exempt
from advertisement Allotment 16 Section 35 Boroko, Gazetted on the 31st January
2002.2. All records of any reserve or tender price paid by Paga Hill Development Co. Ltd.
or Paga Hill Land Holding (PNG) Ltd or any other person or entity in respect of
Portion 1597 Milinch Granville at any time from August 1997 until the date of
this Summons. -
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3. All records of Land Rent applied and paid or outstanding in respect of Portion
1597 Milinch Granville at any time from August 1997 until the date of this
Summons.4. All documents and records relating to the grant of an Urban Development Lease
and subsequently Business Lease over Portion 1597 Milinch Granville.5. A statement of any and all litigation issued, finalized or current concerned in any
way any part of Section 122 Hohola and to which the Department of Lands and
Physical Planning is a party.6. A detailed statement of reasons for the cancellation of a Lease held by the
Lutheran Church of Papua New Guinea and the issue of a State Lease to the
Ganglau Landowner Company Limited over Portions 109 and 110 Milinch of
Pommern, Fourmil of Madang, Madang Province – Vol. 12 Folio 113 (previous
Volume 65 Folio 26).
7. All files, records and documents showing how the Ganglau Landowner
Landowner Company Ltd. obtained a State Lease over Portions 109 and 110
Milinch of Pommern, Fourmil of Madang, Madang Province – Vol. 12 Folio 113
(previously Vol. 65 Folio 26) and evidence of any reserve or tender price paid by
the Ganglau Landowner Company Ltd. for that land.8. All records, files and other documents relating to the application for and grant of a
State Lease to Bluehaven No.7 Ltd., payment of land rent and reserve or tender
price by Bluehaven No.7 Ltd, over Allotments 2 and 3 Section 111 Boroko.
And/or Allotment 6 Section 111 Fourmil Boroko – Vol. 27 Folio 202.9. All correspondence from the Department of Lands and Physical Planning to the
Office of the Attorney General or any other office seeking authority to issue
collection proceedings for outstanding debts.10. A report on all matters referred to or investigated by the governance and
compliance unit and the result of each inquiry.11. A list of all matters referred by the governance and compliance unit to the
Ombudsman or the Police and the outcome of each referral or complaint.12. A list of all State Lands which in your opinion has been illegally or improperly
passed into private hands giving brief reasons for your conclusions, full title
references and details of the recipients and current owners.You are required to continue in attendance as directed by the Committee or the Chairman
of the Committee until your attendance is no longer required.Dated: 24th November 2005
-
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PERMANENT PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
Telephone: (675) 327-7783 Parliament House
Facsimile: (675) 327-7474 WAIGANI,
NCD
Papua New Guinea
e-mail:[email protected]
_______________________________________________________________________________________22 February 2006
Mr. Pepi Kimas
Secretary
Department of Lands & Physical Planning
PO Box 5665
BOROKO NCDFax: 301 3105
Dear Mr. Kimas,
You are to deliver to the Public Accounts Committee Secretariat on or before the 24th
February 2006, the followings;1. Confirmation that a Ministerial exemption was given in respect of Allotment 10
Section 23 Granville Paga Hill and if so in whose favour was the exemption
granted?2. A written description of all action taken by you to cancel/forfeit or otherwise
return Portion 1597 Paga Hill to the State since the 29th November 2005 and in
particular provide a copy of the Notice to Show Cause which you undertook to
serve within 48 hours of the 29th November 2005 and a statement of the results of
those actions.3. All letters sent by you or your Department to the Office of the Solicitor General
or the State Solicitor seeking assistance or permission to commence collection
proceedings for unpaid Land Rental. -
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4. A written description of all action taken by you since the 29th November 2005, to
cancel/forfeit or otherwise return the 12 blocks of land identified by you as being
unlawfully issued in a press release dated the 19th December 2002, and a
description of the results of those actions.5. Name the person or persons who may place “the security of my officers in
jeopardy” in respect of cancellation / forfeiture of the Lease over Portion 1597
Paga Hill as stated in your sworn evidence on the 29 November 2005.6. A statement showing why you have not produced documents relating to Land
Board 1991 as directed on the 29th November 2005?7. A statement identifying who manually changed the rental payable in respect of
Portion 1597 on the face of the Business Lease? Why did you not provide this
information within five days as directed on the 29th November 2005?8. A statement as to why your Department failed to preserve and produce to this
Committee any documents, records, files or reports regarding the issue of the
Business Lease over Portion 1597?9. A statement clarifying how detailed covenants in the Urban Development Lease
disappeared when the Business Lease was issued.10. A statement as to how a Business Lease issued at all when the applicant had failed
to comply with any of the covenants in the Urban Development Lease.11. A statement setting out the reasons why you took no action to forfeit /cancel the
Lease issued over Portion 1597 for breach of covenant or unpaid Land Rental?12. A statement as to why you have not cancelled / forfeited the Lease over Portion
1597 in light of the advice of the Solicitor General to the effect that the initial
grant was unlawful?13. A statement as to what steps you have taken to protect the interests of Police
Legacy in portion 1597 since the 29th November 2005?14. A copy of the report of Mr. Pius Koriawagan into Portion 1597.
15. A copy of the written arrangement made between the Lessee of Portion 1597 and
Mr. Romilly Kila Pat regarding payment of land Rental for that Portion. You are
to contact Mr. Pat and obtain a faxed statement as to the arrangement.16. A statement of the legal basis to allow payment of reduced or periodic Land
Rental payments.17. The agenda for PNG Land Board 3/2004.
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18. A list of all grants made by Land Board 4/2004.
19. Copy of all Ministerial exemptions made in respect of Portion 1555 Milinch
Granville.20. A statement of all Land Rental outstanding for the years 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003,
2004 and 2005.Yours sincerely,
HON. JOHN HICKEY, MP
Chairman -
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THE NATIONAL PARLIAMENT
OF PAPUA NEW GUINEAPUBLIC ACCOUNTS COMMITTEE REPORT
TO PARLIAMENT ON THE INQUIRY
INTO THE DEPARTMENT OF LANDS
AND PHYSICAL PLANNING
PRESENTED ON:
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