12-04-2012, 02:04 PM
Aussie Foreign Minister Carr has pledged specified dollars to a health initiative as requested by O'Neill and parliament. They had asked for money to be targeted specifically; they got what they've asked for. Carr likes what he sees so far.
"AUSTRALIA'S Foreign Minister Bob Carr says Papua New Guinea is set to play a bigger role internationally under the government of Prime Minister Peter O'Neill.
Senator Carr is in PNG visiting health and education facilities in the nation's western highlands, ahead of a joint PNG/Australian ministerial conference in Port Moresby on Thursday.
"I think all the messages the O'Neill government is sending are very, very positive and I think we'll see a corresponding rise in the status of PNG," he told reporters on Tuesday.
"Certainly the message about political stability and rule of law is very reassuring.
"It's an astonishing achievement for a country with this topographical diversity and this ethnic mix ... to have pulled off a vast democratic election. If Papua New Guinea can do it, there's no country in the world that can't do it."
For 10 months from August 2, 2011, PNG was mired in a political crisis over who was the country's prime minister - the parliament-backed Peter O'Neill against the court-supported Sir Michael Somare.
Shortly after becoming foreign minister Senator Carr drew the ire of some PNG politicians after he said Australia would organise sanctions against the Pacific nation if it cancelled the 2012 elections.
Following the July/August vote, Mr O'Neill was returned to the prime ministership and heads a coalition made up of 94 of PNG's 111 MPs.
Senator Carr was speaking to reporters at the Mt Hagen general hospital where he announced a $A66 million commitment to reducing child and maternal deaths in PNG.
The money will provide up to 1,400 nursing and midwifery scholarships, with the aim of passing skills to PNG health workers.
Five pregnant women die in PNG every day, and a woman in PNG is 80 times more likely to die with pregnancy complications than a woman in Australia.
Senator Carr said the scholarships will provide for 450 nurses and 500 midwives by 2013.
Immigration Minister Chris Bowen is also in PNG to visit Australia's Manus Island asylum seeker detention centre.
Mr Bowen and Senator Carr will join Trade Minister Craig Emerson and Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare at the ministerial forum on Thursday."

