ABC | Radio Australia
IN THE LAST 12 MONTHS, PNG has been consumed by the conflict between Peter O'Neill and the man he replaced as prime minister, Sir Michael Somare.
But on Tuesday night, as the counting continues in the general election, the two men came together and pledged to work to form the next government.
At a press conference the two men reportedly hugged and held hands.
In a joint statement, they said it was clear Mr O'Neill's People's National Congress will win the most seats and be invited to form government.
Alongside them were elected MPs from several other parties, including former PM Sir Julius Chan who pledged the support of his People's Progress Party.
The deadline for the return of writs in PNG's elections has been extended, with counting still progressing, but Mr O'Neill's PNC party has already won nearly 20 seats.
Parliament is due to resume within two weeks.
PNG's long-running political deadlock began when Sir Michael, who was the country's first leader after independence, suffered ill health in 2011.
His family announced last June that he had resigned as leader while hospitalised in Singapore.
But he recovered and returned to challenge Mr O'Neill, who had been elected by lawmakers to the top job in August, and won the support of judges who said he should be reinstated.
Are O’Neill and Somare trying to isolate Namah?
KEITH JACKSON
WITH THE NEWS THAT prime minister Peter O’Neill is in talks with his rival Sir Michael Somare over a possible coalition deal, is the new game in town ‘let’s isolate Belden?’ And will it work?
Not one of the 42 registered political parties in Papua New Guinea will go anywhere near commanding a majority in its own right.
O’Neill’s People’s National Congress is easily doing the best and can probably look forward to winning between one-quarter and one-third of the seats in the new parliament.
With volatile PNG Party leader Belden Namah announcing during the campaign that he’d take on O’Neill for the prime ministership, it seems unlikely he’d want his party to join any coalition put together by O’Neill.
Although stranger things have happened in PNG politics.
Instead, Namah will be working hard on persuading minor parties and independents to join cause with him. The rewards he’ll be offering will be munificent.
It seems O’Neill is also talking seriously to Don Polye, whose Triumph Heritage Empowerment Party is running second, former PM Sir Julius Chan (People’s Progress Party) as well as Somare (National Alliance) and other smaller parties.
The O’Neill-Somare alliance is especially intriguing as it’s only a few week ago that the Grand Chief said the Young Turk should face gaol for what the old man (and, it might be added, the Supreme Court) saw as O’Neill’s unconstitutional prime ministership.
On present indications, a coalition between O’Neill, Somare, Chan and Polye would go very close to gaining a parliamentary majority.
On seeing that this might be the likely outcome, a host of other minor parties and independents could be expected to join the O’Neill bandwagon.
This would leave Namah out in the cold as a rather frustrated and one would imagine embittered opposition leader.
But that’s just one permutation in a dynamic calculus that has many twists and turns left in it yet.
It’s become a cliché to refer to PNG as the “land of the unexpected”.
But time and again it manages to live up to this reputation.
asopa.typepad.com/asopa_people/2012/07/are-oneill-and-somare-trying-to-isolate-namah.html