Papua New Guinea Country Facts - Tips
Papua New Guinea Country Facts
Bureau of East Asian and Pacific
Affairs
October
2007
Background Note: Papua New Guinea Country
Facts
Detail of funerary pole from
Papua
New Guinea, June 19, 2006. [©
AP
Images]
Papua New Guinea flag: divided diagonally from upper left corner.
Upper
triangle: red with a yellow bird
of paradise; lower triangle: black with
Southern Cross constellation-5 white, 5-pointed
stars.
PROFILE
OFFICIAL
NAME:
Independent State of Papua New
Guinea
Geography
Land area: 462,860 sq. km.; about the size of
California.
Cities: Capital--Port Moresby (254,158). Other cities--Lae (78,038),
Mt.
Hagen
(27,789).
Terrain: Mostly mountains with coastal lowlands and rolling
foothills. The
largest portion of the population lives in
fertile highlands valleys that
were unknown to the
outside world until the 1930s, but that
supported
agriculture some
10,000 years ago, possibly before agriculture was developed
elsewhere.
Climate: Tropical. NW monsoon, Dec.-Mar.; SE monsoon,
May-Oct.
People
Population (2005 est.): 5.8
million.
Annual growth rate:
3.1%.
Languages: Three official: English, Tok Pisin, and Motu. There
are
approximately 860 other
languages.
Education: Years compulsory--0.
Literacy--57.3%
Health: Infant mortality rate--68.4/1,000. Life expectancy--56.0
yrs.
Government
Type: Constitutional monarchy with parliamentary
democracy.
Constitution: September 16,
1975.
Branches: Executive--British monarch (chief of state), represented
by
governor general; prime
minister (head of
government).
Legislative--unicameral parliament. Judicial--independent; highest is
Supreme
Court.
Administrative subdivisions: 19 provinces and the national capital
district
(Port
Moresby).
Major political parties: National Alliance (NA), People's Progress
Party
(PPP), Pangu Pati, People's Democratic
Movement (PDM), and Melanesian
Alliance
(MA).
Suffrage: Universal over 18 years of
age.
Economy (2005
est.)
Nominal GDP: U.S. $4.94
billion.
Growth rate:
3.7%.
Per capita GDP: U.S.
$855.
Natural resources: Gold, copper ore, oil, natural gas, timber,
fish.
Agriculture
(38% of GDP): Major products--coffee, cocoa, coconuts, palm oil,
timber, tea,
vanilla.
Industry (25% of GDP): Major sectors--copra crushing; palm oil
processing;
plywood production; wood chip production;
mining of gold, silver, and copper;
construction; tourism; crude oil
production.
Trade: Exports--66% of GDP: gold, copper ore, oil, timber, palm oil,
coffee.
Major markets--Australia, Japan, China, Germany, U.K.,
Indonesia.
Imports--31% of GDP: machinery and transport equipment, manufactured
goods,
food, fuels, chemicals. Major suppliers--Australia,
Singapore, New Zealand,
China, Japan,
Malaysia.
PEOPLE
The indigenous population of Papua New Guinea is one of the
most
heterogeneous in the world. Papua New Guinea has several thousand
separate
communities, most with only a few hundred
people. Divided by language,
customs, and tradition, some of these communities have engaged in
low-scale
tribal conflict with their neighbors for millennia.
The advent of modern
weapons and modern
migration into urban areas has greatly magnified
the
impact of this
lawlessness.
The isolation created by the mountainous terrain is so great that
some
groups, until recently, were
unaware of the existence of neighboring groups
only a few
kilometers away. The diversity, reflected in a folk saying, "For
each village, a different culture," is perhaps best shown in the
local
languages. Spoken mainly on
the island of New Guinea--composed of Papua New
Guinea and the
Indonesian province of West Papua--some 800 of these languages
have
been identified; of these, only 350-450 are related. The remainder seem
to be totally unrelated either to each other or to the other major
groupings.
Most native languages are spoken by a few hundred to a few
thousand, although
Enga, used in part of the highlands, is spoken by
some 130,000 people.
However, the
Enga people are subdivided into clans that regularly conflict
with each other. Many native languages are extremely complex
grammatically.
Melanesian Pidgin serves as the lingua franca. English is spoken by
educated
people and in Milne Bay Province. The overall population
density is low,
although pockets of
overpopulation exist. Papua New Guinea's Western Province
averages one
person per square kilometer (3 per sq. mi.). The Chimbu Province
in
the New Guinea highlands averages 20 persons per square kilometer (60 per
sq. mi.) and has areas containing up to 200 people farming a square
kilometer
of land. The highlands are home to 40% of the
population.
A considerable urban drift toward Port Moresby and other major
centers has
occurred in recent years. The trend toward
urbanization accelerated in the
1990s, bringing in its
wake squatter settlements, ethnic
disputes,
unemployment, and attendant social problems, especially violent
crime.
Approximately 96% of the population is Christian. The churches with
the
largest number of members are the
Roman Catholic Church, the Evangelical
Lutheran Church, the United Church, and the Seventh Day Adventist
church.
Although the major churches are under
indigenous leadership, a large number
of missionaries remain in
the country. The bulk of the estimated 2,000
Americans resident in Papua New Guinea are missionaries and their
families.
The non-Christian portion of the indigenous
population, as well as a portion
of the nominal Christians, practices
a wide variety of religions that are an
integral part of traditional
culture, mainly animism (spirit worship) and
ancestor
cults.
Foreign residents comprise about 1% of the population. More than half
are
Australian; others are from the United Kingdom,
New Zealand, the Philippines,
and the United States, most of whom are
missionaries. Since independence,
about 900
foreigners have become naturalized
citizens.
Though cultures vary widely, traditional Papua New Guinea social
structures
generally include the following
characteristics:
*The practice of subsistence
economy;
*Recognition of bonds of kinship with obligations
extending beyond the
immediate family
group;
*Generally egalitarian relationships with an
emphasis on acquired, rather
than inherited,
status;
and
*A strong attachment of the people to land, which
is held communally.
Traditional communities do not recognize a permanent transfer
of
ownership when land is
sold.
*Though land and other possessions may be inherited
through the female
line in
some cultures, women generally are considered and treated
as
inferiors. Gender
violence is
endemic.
*Patterns and frequency of sexual activity, though
never publicly
discussed, contribute to the current rapid
spread of
HIV.
Most Papua New Guineans still adhere strongly to this traditional
social
structure, which has its roots in
village
life.
HISTORY
Archeological evidence indicates that humans arrived on New Guinea at
least
60,000 years ago, probably by sea from Southeast Asia
during an Ice Age
period when the sea
was lower and distances between islands shorter. Although
the first
arrivals were hunters and gatherers, early evidence shows
that
people managed the forest environment to
provide food. There also are
indications of gardening having been practiced at the same time
that
agriculture was
developing in Mesopotamia and Egypt. Early garden crops--many
of which
are indigenous--included sugarcane, Pacific bananas, yams,
and
taros, while sago and pandanus were
two commonly exploited native forest
crops.
Today's staples--sweet potatoes and pigs--were later arrivals,
but
shellfish and fish have long been mainstays of
coastal dwellers' diets.
When Europeans first arrived, inhabitants of New Guinea and
nearby
islands--while still relying on bone, wood, and stone tools--had a
productive
agricultural system. They traded along the coast, where
products mainly were
pottery, shell ornaments, and foodstuffs, and in
the interior, where forest
products were exchanged for shells
and other sea
products.
The first Europeans to sight New Guinea were probably the Portuguese
and
Spanish navigators sailing in the South
Pacific in the early part of the 16th
century. In 1526-27, Don Jorge
de Meneses accidentally came upon
the
principal island
and is credited with naming it "Papua," a Malay word for the
frizzled
quality of Melanesian hair. The term "New Guinea" was applied to the
island in 1545 by a Spaniard, Íñigo Ortiz de Retes, because of a
fancied
resemblance between the islands'
inhabitants and those found on the African
Guinea coast.
Although European navigators visited the islands and explored
their coastlines for the next 170 years, little was known of the inhabitants
until the late 19th
century.
New
Guinea
With Europe's growing need for coconut oil, Godeffroy's of Hamburg,
the
largest trading firm in the
Pacific, began trading for copra in the New
Guinea Islands. In 1884, Germany formally took possession of the
northeast
quarter of the island and put its
administration in the hands of a chartered
company. In 1899, the
German imperial government assumed direct control of
the
territory, thereafter known as German New Guinea. In 1914,
Australian
troops occupied German New Guinea, and
it remained under Australian military
control until 1921. The British
Government, on behalf of the Commonwealth of
Australia, assumed a
mandate from the League of Nations for governing the
Territory of New Guinea in 1920. That mandate was administered by
the
Australian Government
until the Japanese invasion in December 1941 brought
about its suspension. Following the surrender of the Japanese in 1945, civil
administration of Papua as well as New Guinea was restored, and under
the
Papua New Guinea Provisional Administration
Act, 1945-46, Papua and New
Guinea were
combined in an administrative
union.
Papua
On November 6, 1884, a British protectorate was proclaimed over the
southern
coast of New Guinea (the area called Papua) and its adjacent
islands. The
protectorate, called British New
Guinea, was annexed outright on September 4,
1888. The possession was
placed under the authority of the Commonwealth of
Australia in 1902. Following the passage of the Papua Act of 1905,
British
New Guinea became the Territory of Papua, and
formal
Australian
administration began in 1906. Papua was administered under the Papua
Act
until the Japanese invaded the northern
parts of the islands in 1941 and
began to
advance on Port Moresby and civil administration was
suspended.
During the war, Papua was governed
by a military administration from Port
Moresby,
where Gen. Douglas MacArthur occasionally made his headquarters. As
noted, it was later joined in an administrative union with New Guinea during
1945-46 following the surrender of
Japan.
Postwar
Developments
The Papua and New Guinea Act of 1949 formally approved the placing of
New
Guinea under the international trusteeship
system and confirmed the
administrative union of New Guinea and Papua under the title of
"The
Territory of
Papua and New Guinea." The act provided for a
Legislative
Council (established
in 1951), a judicial organization, a public service, and
a system of
local government. A House of Assembly replaced the Legislative
Council in 1963, and the first House of Assembly opened on June 8,
1964. In
1972, the name of the territory was changed to Papua
New
Guinea.
Elections in 1972 resulted in the formation of a ministry headed by
Chief
Minister Michael Somare, who pledged to lead
the country to self-government
and then to independence. Papua
New Guinea became self-governing in December
1973 and achieved
independence on September 16, 1975. The 1977
national
elections confirmed Michael
Somare as Prime Minister at the head of
a
coalition led by the
Pangu Party. However, his government lost a vote of
confidence in 1980 and was replaced by a new cabinet headed by Sir
Julius
Chan as Prime Minister. The 1982 elections
increased Pangu's plurality, and
parliament again chose Somare
as Prime Minister. In November 1985, the Somare
government lost a vote
of no confidence, and the parliamentary majority
elected Paias Wingti, at the head of a five-party coalition, as
Prime
Minister. A
coalition, headed by Wingti, was victorious in very
close
elections in July
1987. In July 1988, a no-confidence vote toppled Wingti and
brought to
power Rabbie Namaliu, who a few weeks earlier had replaced Somare
as
leader of the Pangu
Party.
Such reversals of fortune and a revolving-door succession of prime
ministers
have characterized Papua New Guinea's national politics.
From 1988 to 2002,
the country had numerous prime ministers. A
plethora of political parties,
coalition governments,
shifting party loyalties, and motions of no confidence
in the
leadership all lent an air of instability to political proceedings.
For the first 27 years of independence, a "first past the post"
electoral
system resulted in many parliamentarians
elected with less than 15% of their
constituency. Fractious politics
and a 75% loss rate for incumbents precluded
the development of strong
political parties or a stable national leadership.
Many hope that
limited preferential voting, introduced in 2003, and
an
organic law on political
parties will stabilize national
politics.
In the 2002 elections, virtually the entire previous cabinet lost
their
seats. The government was formed
by a coalition of several parties, and Sir
Michael Somare, the
leader of the National Alliance (and the nation's first
Prime
Minister in 1975), was elected Prime Minister. The 2007
elections
returned Somare as Prime
Minister. His government was the first to complete a
5-year term since
independence.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL
CONDITIONS
Papua New Guinea, a constitutional monarchy, recognizes the Queen of
England
as head of state. She is represented by a Governor General
who is elected by
parliament and who performs mainly ceremonial
functions. Papua New Guinea has
three levels of government--national,
provincial, and local. There is a
109-member unicameral parliament, whose members are elected every 5
years.
The parliament in turn elects the prime minister,
who appoints his cabinet
from members of his party or
coalition.
Members of parliament are elected from 19 provinces and the national
capital
district of Port Moresby. Parliament introduced reforms in
June 1995 to
change the provincial
government system, with regional (at-large) members of
parliament
becoming provincial governors, while retaining their
national
seats in
parliament.
Papua New Guinea's judiciary is independent of the government. It
protects
constitutional rights and interprets the laws.
There are several levels,
culminating in the
Supreme
Court.
Papua New Guinea's politics are highly competitive with most members
elected
on a personal and ethnic basis within their constituencies
rather than as a
result of party affiliation. Members of
parliament are now elected in a
limited
preferential voting (LPV) system. There are several parties,
but
party allegiances are not strong. Winning
candidates are usually courted in
efforts to forge the majority
needed to form a government, and allegiances
are fluid.
No single party has yet won enough seats to form a government in
its own
right.
Papua New Guinea has a history of changes in government coalitions
and
leadership from within
parliament during the 5-year intervals
between
national elections.
New governments are protected by law from votes of no
confidence for the first 18 months of their incumbency, and no votes
of no
confidence may be moved in the 12 months preceding
a national election. In an
effort to create greater stability by
reducing incessant votes of no
confidence, the Integrity of Political Parties Act was passed in
1999,
forbidding members of each
party in parliament from shifting loyalty to
another
party.
In 2003, the electoral system was changed to limited preferential
voting,
which many hope will encourage politicians
to strike alliances and to be
responsive to
constituent concerns once elected. The new system was first
used in a 2004 by-election with modest, but positive
results.
On Bougainville Island, a 10-year rebellion was halted by a truce in
1997 and
a permanent cease-fire was signed in April 1998. A peace
agreement between
the Government and ex-combatants was
signed in August 2001. Under the eyes of
a regional peace-monitoring
force and a UN observer mission, the government
and provincial
leaders established an interim administration and
made
significant progress
toward complete surrender/destruction of weapons. A
constitution was drafted in 2004 and provincial government elections
were
held in May 2005. The elections were deemed to
be free and fair by
international observers, and Joseph Kabui was elected to serve as the
first
president of the Autonomous Bougainville
Government.
Principal Government
Officials
Governor General--Sir Paulias
Matane
Prime Minister--Sir Michael
Somare
Deputy Prime Minister--Puka
Temu
Foreign Minister--Samuel
Abal
Ambassador to the United Nations--Robert
Aisi
Ambassador to the United States--Evan
Paki
Papua New Guinea maintains an embassy at 1779 Massachusetts Ave.
NW,
Washington, DC
20036 (tel. 202-745-3680; fax 202-745-3679). The Papua New
Guinea mission to the United Nations is at 801 Second Avenue, New
York, NY
10017 (tel.
212-682-6447).
ECONOMY
Papua New Guinea is rich in natural resources, including minerals,
timber,
and fish, and produces a variety of commercial
agricultural products. The
economy generally can be
separated into subsistence and market sectors,
although the distinction is blurred by smallholder cash cropping of
coffee,
cocoa, and copra. About 75% of the country's population
relies primarily on
the subsistence economy. The minerals,
timber, and fish sectors are dominated
by foreign
investors.
Manufacturing is limited, and the formal labor sector consequently
also is
limited. High commodity prices in 2005 continued
to lift both sectors after
several years of
declines.
Mineral
Resources
Papua New Guinea is richly endowed with gold, copper, oil, natural
gas, and
other minerals. In 2005 mineral export receipts
accounted for 49.7% of GDP.
Government revenues and foreign
exchange earnings depend heavily on mineral
exports. Indigenous
landowners in areas affected by minerals projects also
receive royalties from those operations. Copper and gold mines are currently
in production at Porgera, Ok Tedi, Misima, and Lihir. A consortium
led by
Exxon/Mobil hopes to begin the
commercialization of the country's estimated
22.5 trillion
cubic feet of natural gas reserves through the construction of
a
liquefied natural gas (LNG) production facility. Interoil,
an
American-owned firm, opened Papua New Guinea's first oil refinery in
2004. It
has the capacity to produce 30,000 barrels of product a
day.
Agriculture, Timber, and
Fish
Papua New Guinea also produces and exports valuable agricultural,
timber, and
marine products. Agriculture currently accounts for 30.4%
of GDP and supports
more than 85% of the population. Cash crops ranked
by value are coffee, oil,
cocoa, copra, tea, rubber, and sugar. About
40% of the country is covered
with exploitable
trees, but a domestic woodworking industry has been slow to
develop.
A number of Southeast Asian companies are active in the
timber
industry, but World Bank and
other donors have withdrawn support from the
sector
over concern for unregulated deforestation and environmental damage.
Recently enacted forestry legislation has exacerbated those concerns.
Papua
New Guinea has an active tuna industry, but much of the
catch is made by
boats of other nations
fishing in Papua New Guinea waters under license.
Papua New Guinea is a signatory to the South Pacific Tuna Treaty
(SPTT),
under which U.S. purse seiners fish
for tuna in the exclusive economic zones
(EEZs) of the Pacific Island
parties. Locally produced fish exports are
confined primarily to
shrimp.
Industry
In general, the Papua New Guinea economy is highly dependent on
imports for
manufactured goods. Its industrial
sector--exclusive of mining--accounts for
only 9% of GDP and
contributes little to exports. Small-scale industries
produce beer, soap, concrete products, clothing, paper products,
matches, ice
cream, canned meat, fruit juices, furniture, plywood, and
paint. The small
domestic market, relatively high wages,
and high transport costs are
constraints to industrial
development.
Trade and
Investment
Australia, Singapore, and Japan are the principal exporters to Papua
New
Guinea. Petroleum and mining machinery
and aircraft have been the strongest
U.S. exports to Papua New
Guinea.
Australia is Papua New Guinea's most important export market,
followed by
Japan and the European Union. The U.S.
imports modest amounts of gold, copper
ore, cocoa, coffee, and other
agricultural products from Papua New Guinea.
Most of
those exports take place through third
countries.
With the 2003 withdrawal of Chevron/Texaco, Australian companies are
the most
active in developing Papua New Guinea's mining and petroleum
sectors. Exxon/
Mobil retains a major share of natural gas reserves
and is currently
exploring the feasibility of building a liquefied natural gas
processing
facility. Interoil, an
American-owned firm backed by an Overseas Private
Investment Corporation (OPIC) loan, operates an oil refinery in Port
Moresby.
China is increasing its investment in Papua New Guinea,
including development
of the $1 billion Ramu nickel
mine.
Papua New Guinea became a participating economy in the Asia-Pacific
Economic
Cooperation (APEC) Forum in 1993. It joined the World Trade
Organization
(WTO) in 1996. It is an observer
at ASEAN and a member of the ASEAN Regional
Forum.
Development Programs and
Aid
Australia is by far the largest bilateral aid donor to Papua New
Guinea,
offering about $300 million a year in
assistance. Budgetary support, which
has been provided in
decreasing amounts since independence, was phased out in
2000, with
aid concentrated on project development. In 2004, Australia and
Papua New Guinea embarked on the Enhanced Cooperation Program (ECP),
under
which Australia agreed to provide direct
assistance, including 210 line
police
officers, to the Papua New Guinea constabulary. The ECP met
with
initial success, but was abruptly
ended when Papua New Guinea's Supreme Court
stripped Australian police
officers of immunity in May 2005. Virtually all
ECP
personnel left Papua New Guinea following the court's decision.
The
governments of Papua New Guinea and
Australia are now involved in protracted
negotiations on a
scaled-down version of the
ECP.
Other major sources of aid to Papua New Guinea are Japan, the
European Union,
the People's Republic of China, Taiwan, the United
Nations, the Asian
Development Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the World
Bank.
Volunteers from a number of
countries and mission church workers also provide
education, health,
and development assistance throughout the country. Foreign
assistance
to Papua New Guinea is approximately $46 per capita. The
U.S.
funds a $1.5 million-per-year HIV/AIDS
project in Papua New
Guinea.
Current Economic
Conditions
After years of decline and government deficit, Papua New Guinea was
bolstered
in recent years by a general rise in commodity prices and by
government steps
toward spending control. The economy continues to
grow modestly and the
government
recorded a modest surplus in 2006. However, the
economic
improvements are based almost entirely on high commodity prices and
the
nation continues to have serious
problems of corruption, a lack of law and
order, land
tenure concerns stifling investment, political interference in
business, and a lack of political will to adopt needed sweeping
reforms.
FOREIGN
RELATIONS
Papua New Guinea's foreign policy reflects close ties with Australia
and
other traditional allies. Papua New
Guinea is by far the largest Pacific
Island
nation and has traditionally viewed itself as part of the
Pacific.
However, in recent years it has also been
cultivating relations with Asian
nations. Its views on
international political and economic issues
are
generally moderate.
Papua New Guinea has diplomatic relations with
56
countries.
U.S.-PAPUA NEW GUINEA
RELATIONS
The United States and Papua New Guinea established diplomatic
relations upon
the latter's independence on September 16, 1975. The
two nations belong to a
variety of regional organizations, including
the Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation (APEC) forum; the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF); the Secretariat of
the Pacific Community (SPC); and the South Pacific Regional
Environmental
Program
(SPREP).
One of the most successful cooperative multilateral efforts linking
the U.S.
and Papua New Guinea is the U.S.-Pacific Islands
Multilateral Tuna Fisheries
Treaty, under which the U.S. grants $18
million per year to Pacific Island
parties and the latter
provide access for U.S. fishing vessels. The United
States has provided significant humanitarian assistance to Papua New
Guinea
and contributed to the rehabilitation of Bougainville.
USAID funds a $1.5
million-per-year HIV/AIDS
project in Papua New
Guinea.
The U.S. also supports Papua New Guinea's efforts to protect
biodiversity.
The U.S. Government supports the
International Coral Reef Initiative aimed at
protecting reefs in
tropical nations such as Papua New Guinea. U.S. military
forces,
through Pacific Command (PACOM) in Honolulu, Hawaii, provide training
to the Papua New Guinea Defense Force (PNGDF) and have held small-scale
joint
training exercises. The U.S. provides police and other education
and training
courses to national security officials. The U.S. also
annually sponsors a
handful of PNG officials and
private citizens to meet and confer with their
professional
counterparts and to experience the U.S. first-hand through the
International Visitor Leadership Program
(IVLP).
The U.S. Peace Corps ceased operations in Papua New Guinea in 2001
due to
security concerns. About 2,000 U.S. citizens
live in Papua New Guinea, with
major concentrations at the
headquarters of New Tribes Mission and the Summer
Institute of
Linguistics, both located in the Eastern Highlands Province.
Principal U.S. Embassy
Officials
Ambassador--Leslie
Rowe
Deputy Chief of Mission--Thomas
Weinz
Consular Officer--Leslie
Livingood
The U.S. Embassy in Papua New Guinea is located on Douglas Street,
Port
Moresby (tel. 675-321-1455; fax
675-321-3423). The mailing address is 4240
Port Moresby
Pl., U.S. Department of State, Washington, DC
20521-4240.
TRAVEL AND BUSINESS
INFORMATION
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traveling and residing abroad through Consular Information
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Announcements, and Travel Warnings.
Consular Information Sheets exist for all
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disturbances, and
the addresses of the U.S. embassies and consulates abroad.
Public
Announcements are issued to disseminate information quickly
about
terrorist threats and other relatively
short-term conditions overseas that
pose significant
risks to the security of American travelers. Travel Warnings
are
issued when the State Department recommends that Americans avoid travel
to a certain country because the situation is dangerous or
unstable.
For the latest security information, Americans living and traveling
abroad
should regularly monitor the Department's Bureau
of Consular Affairs Internet
web site at
http://www.travel.state.gov, where the
current Worldwide Caution,
Public Announcements, and Travel Warnings
can be found. Consular Affairs
Publications,
which contain information on obtaining passports and planning a
safe
trip abroad, are also available at
http://www.travel.state.gov.
For
additional information on international
travel, see
http://www.usa.gov/
Citizen/Topics/Travel/International.shtml.
The Department of State encourages all U.S citizenstraveling or
residing
abroad to register via the State
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embassy or consulate abroad. Registration will make your
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whereabouts known in case it is necessary to contact you in an
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Emergency information concerning Americans traveling abroad may be
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The National Passport Information Center (NPIC) is the U.S.
Department of
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contact center for U.S.
passport
information. Telephone: 1-877-4USA-PPT (1-877-487-2778). Customer
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representatives and operators for TDD/TTY
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Travelers can check the latest health information with the U.S.
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Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia.
A hotline at 877-FYI-TRIP
(877-394-8747) and a web site at
http://www.cdc.gov/travel/index.htm
give the
most recent health advisories, immunization recommendations
or requirements,
and advice on food and drinking water safety for
regions and countries. A
booklet entitled "Health
Information for International Travel"
(HHS
publication number CDC-95-8280) is available from the U.S.
Government
Printing Office,
Washington, DC 20402, tel. (202)
512-1800.
Further Electronic
Information
Department of State Web Site. Available on the Internet at
http://
www.state.gov, the Department of State web
site provides timely, global
access to
official U.S. foreign policy information, including
Background
Notes and daily press briefings
along with the directory of key officers of
Foreign Service
posts and more. The Overseas Security Advisory Council (OSAC)
provides
security information and regional news that impact U.S. companies
working abroad through its website
http://www.osac.gov
Export.gov provides a portal to all export-related assistance and
market
information offered by the federal
government and provides trade leads, free
export counseling, help
with the export process, and
more.
STAT-USA/Internet, a service of the U.S. Department of Commerce,
provides
authoritative economic, business, and
international trade information from
the Federal
government. The site includes current and
historical
trade-related releases, international market research, trade
opportunities,
and country analysis and provides access to the
National Trade Data Bank.
***********************************************************
See http://www.state.gov/r/pa/bgn/ for all
Background
notes
************************************************************
To
change your subscription, go to
http://www.state.gov/misc/echannels/66822.htm
Papua New Guinea Country Facts
Papua New Guinea Country Facts - Tips