KIAPS OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA - The Postwar Era
by Nancy Johnston - published in December 2003 Una Voce, page 9.
A tribute to those who followed in the tradition and footsteps of
the pre-war ‘outside’ men in penetrating and establishing law and
order in the primitive areas of Papua and New Guinea.
Dame Rachel Cleland wrote: After all, when you saw a twenty year old
boy with perhaps five policemen keeping 30,000 warring tribesmen in
happy harmony, you were just astounded at the thought, ‘how does he
do it!’
After World War II, when peace came to Papua New Guinea, many of the
towns and other signs of development had been destroyed, native
villages and gardens were devastated and plantations damaged or
neglected. The job of reconstruction lay ahead, as well as the task
of establishing good relations with the native people. There were
primitive areas to be manned, and blank spots on the map that had to
be brought under government control - places where cannibal warriors
still practised all sorts of evil deeds.
Young Australian men, some not yet twenty years old, were selected
and trained to serve in the Australian Administration as patrol
officers (kiaps) with the Department of District Services and Native
Affairs. DDS & NA was a trail-blazer department, its kiaps manned
the primitive areas or explored and opened up others, and when an
area came under control, members from other departments and
agencies, missionaries and commercial people moved in. Health was
usually the next department into an area, then Agriculture and
Education followed and when outstations became towns, the Police
Department sent in its European officers to handle police duties.
Until this happened, the kiap was the representative of all arms of
government in his area. His main responsibility was law and order,
he was given police powers as a member of the Native Constabulary
and made a Magistrate of the Court of Native Affairs. He worked long
hours and was on twenty-four hour call, seven days a week. As well
as district administration, familiarising himself with the people
and the country, patrolling, court work and suchlike, the kiap
needed a range of knowledge to be a ‘Jack of all trades’. He had to
plan and supervise the building of roads, bridges, houses,
airstrips, wharves and hospitals and as records had to be kept and
reports written, he needed to be a competent clerical person. His
ultimate aim was to build an orderly, prosperous and unified people
living in peace and harmony, with independence from Australia the
long-term goal. In the main the kiaps did not abuse the powers they
held; pride gave them the integrity to handle their role and earn
respect.
Not all kiaps had the same experiences; they went where they were
sent - some places were extremely dangerous, some not so dangerous
and others were considered ‘safe’. Patrols took them through a
diversity of country and experiences - some young kiaps faced
dreadful situations in the ultra-primitive areas where they lived
and patrolled. Some ‘outside’ kiaps put their lives on the line
several times during their long patrols - they faced the potential
danger of being killed with poison-tipped arrows, spears, or axed to
death, as well as the threat of accidents and sickness, including
malaria and scrub typhus. They experienced food shortages and faced
the continual torrential rain, the blazing hot sun, and the freezing
temperatures in the swirling mists in the mountain areas; they faced
the peril of crocodiles, deadly snakes, massive bush pigs and the
discomfort of millions of mosquitoes as well as wasps, spiders,
scrub mites and leeches. There was nothing glamorous about
patrolling, it was simply hard, dirty and uncomfortable work.
In some areas the kiaps undertook dangerous climbing, with their
police and carriers (burdened with patrol equipment), going through
precipitous limestone gorges, climbing cliffs and picking their way
along narrow ledges in ‘broken glass’ country. They spent weeks,
sometimes months, living in clothes wet from sweat, rain, and
crossing and re-crossing flooded rivers. Some raging rivers formed
ferocious whirlpools sucking down anything near them. And there were
traps, serving as a sign they were not welcome in the area, and
needed to ‘watch their back’. Some faced warriors fighting one
another with bows and arrows, and the kiaps stationed on the
PNG/West Irian border at the time of illegal incursions by political
refugees from Irian Jaya faced the weapons of the Indonesian para-military.
In the 60s/early 70s, their work was ‘classified’ and this could be
the reason so little is known about the dangers these young men
faced.
Peter Ryan, the editor of ‘The Encyclopedia of PNG’ wrote: The
enterprise, dedication, honesty and sheer bravery of the district
staff, the ‘kiaps’,...were remarkable. ... the exploration and the
pacification of millions were achieved at the cost of a few
skirmishes. The law came, without which any general softening of
life is impossible. In any event, I make no apology for this candid
tribute to the kiaps, who wrote one of the most honourable pages in
this country’s history. [from ‘Some Unfinished Business from the
Second World War’ printed in the Sept 1995 issue of ‘Quadrant’]
It is my belief the kiaps who penetrated and patrolled the hostile
primitive areas, and the young ones who were posted to isolated and
dangerous outposts in the early postwar years, and those who later
worked on the PNG/West Irian border, did not get the acknowledgment
they deserved from the Australian Administration. Some gave their
lives (Gerald Szarka and 21 year-old Geoff Harris, to name a couple,
were brutally murdered near Telefomin), many gave their youth and
some their health, physical and otherwise, and some have injuries
and scars that will last a lifetime.
Many kiaps spent decades working for the Administration to make PNG
a better place for having been there and they left without fanfare
or thanks or official recognition. During peacetime young
Australians are recruited into the armed forces, some see overseas
service for maybe six months, with the advantage of modern benefits,
communications and extra pay. When they return they are feted
whether or not they saw or heard a shot fired in anger, and the
Australian government gives commendations and medals. You may recall
‘Bravery Not Recognised’, the postscript to an item by Tony Try,
‘Life on the Border’, in Una Voce No. 3, September 2003.
And let us not forget the indigenous police of the Royal Papua and
New Guinea Constabulary. They made it possible for a handful of men
to do so much in controlling large areas of the country for the
benefit of its people; it would not have been possible for the kiaps
to accomplish what they did without their help. Adrian Geyle wrote:
There would not be an ex-patrol officer who served in Papua New
Guinea who had less than the highest regard for the men of the Royal
Papua & New Guinea Constabulary who came under their command; and
after an exploratory patrol, Bill Johnston wrote: The Royal Papua &
New Guinea Constabulary (as it was called from 1952) was an
essential part of the system of Government. The patrolling officer
may have played the role of leader, the force keeping the group
together and working as one, but he would have got nowhere without
the effort and strength of these men; a few could ever equal them in
the world. It was a unique partnership, in that the patrolling
officer relied on them for so much and they relied on him for just
as much in a different way. They were, on the whole, magnificent
loyal men. Sergeant Gonene said he knew the kiaps were young, but he
tried to brief them or give them advice about things. He tried to be
confident in himself so the young officers would have confidence in
him and get that strength.
And as we do with the wartime Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels, we should not
forget the contribution made by the carriers and interpreters who
accompanied the patrolling officers. Bill Johnston recorded in one
report: They gave their best and they were tough men who never
complained they were being pushed beyond their limit. I tried to
make them part of the team and did not regard them as beasts of
burden.
Only a few people know of the contribution the kiaps and their
native police and carriers made, and it seems that there never will
be any other recognition of their work except from this few. I
wonder if the people who went to live and work in Papua New Guinea
appreciate the fact that the pre-war ‘outside men’ and the postwar
kiaps made it possible for them to be there.
It is more than fifty years since those early postwar days and the
kiaps from that era are passing. In Una Voce No. 2, June 2003, the
deaths of six ex-kiaps were recorded - Mert Brightwell, Doug
Parrish, Peter Broman, Campbell Fleay, Bill Kelly and Phil Hardy;
and many have gone before them.
(The Dept. of District Services and Native Affairs had several name
changes as the country developed.)