Manus Province

Manus Province is the smallest province in Papua New Guinea in terms of both land area and population, with a land area of 2,100 square kilometres (810 sq mi), but with more than 220,000 square kilometres (85,000 sq mi) of water, and the total population is 60,485 (2011 census). The provincial town of Manus is Lorengau.

Manus Province
Manus Provins (Tok Pisin)
Flag of Manus Province
Manus Province in Papua New Guinea
Manus Province in Papua New Guinea
Coordinates: 2°5′S 147°0′E / 2.083°S 147.000°E / -2.083; 147.000
CountryPapua New Guinea
CapitalLorengau
Districts
Government
 • GovernorCharlie Benjamin
Area
 • Total2,000 km2 (800 sq mi)
Population
 (2011 census)
 • Total60,485
 • Density30/km2 (78/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+10 (AEST)
ISO 3166 codePG-MRL
HDI (2019)0.611[1]
medium · 2nd of 22

The province consists of only one district (Manus District; with identical boundaries to those of the province), 12 Local Level Governments (LLGs) and 127 Wards.[2][3]

The province is made up of the Admiralty Islands (a group of 18 islands in the Bismarck Archipelago), as well as Wuvulu Island and nearby atolls in the west, which collectively are referred to as the Western Islands. The largest island in the group is Manus Island, where Lorengau and a former Australian immigration detention centre are located.[citation needed]

Flag

The Manus friarbird, known locally as the chauka, is represented on the Manus provincial flag. The designer of the Manus Province flag Luke Bulei explained his reasons for its design in 1977: chauka is only found in the Manus province; it heralds dawn and signals sunset. NBC Radio Station had changed its name to Maus Bilong Chauka several years earlier. Bulei explained that the colour brown on the flag represents the inland people and the blue represents the island people. The other important symbol on the flag is the green snail, which is unique to Manus Province.[4]

District and LLGs

Manus Province has a single district, which contains one urban (Lorengau) and eleven rural Local Level Government (LLG) areas. Manus District has the highest number of LLGs of any other district in Papua New Guinea. For census purposes, the LLG areas are subdivided into wards and those into census units.[5]

DistrictDistrict CapitalLLG Name
Manus DistrictLorengauAua-Wuvulu Rural
Balopa Rural
Bisikani-Soparibeu Kabin Rural
Lelemadih-Bupichupeu Rural
Lorengau Urban
Los Negros Rural
Nali Sopat-Penabu Rural
Nigoherm Rural
Pobuma Rural
Pomutu-Kurti-Andra Rural
Rapatona Rural
Tetidu Rural

Provincial leaders

The province was governed by a decentralised provincial administration, headed by a Premier, from 1977 to 1995. Following reforms taking effect that year, notably the introduction of the Organic Law on Provincial Government and Local Level Government 1995, the national government reassumed some powers, and the role of Premier was replaced by a position of Governor, to be held by the winner of the province-wide seat in the National Parliament of Papua New Guinea.[6][7]

Premiers (1977–1995)

PremierTerm
Papi Rasahei1977–1978
Banabas Kombil1979–1982
Joel Maiah1982–1984
Stephen Pokawin1984–1995

Governors (1995–present)

GovernorTerm
Martin Thompson1995–1996
Stephen Pokawin1996–2002
Jacob Jumogot2002–2007
Michael Sapau2007–2012
Charlie Benjamin2012–present

Members of the National Parliament

The province and each district is represented by a Member of the National Parliament. There is one provincial electorate and each district is an open electorate. Job Pomat as Manus District Open Member, elected into office in 2016, made history as the first politician from the province to be elected as the Speaker of the Parliament of Papua New Guinea in 2016.[citation needed]

ElectorateMember
Manus ProvincialCharlie Benjamin
Manus OpenJob Pomat

References

Further reading

External links