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The Papua New Guinea Post-Courier is a newspaper based in Konedobu, Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. [1]It was established on 30 June 1969. Its parent company, The Herald and Weekly Times (later purchased by News Corp Australia), had acquired what had then been the two main newspapers in Papua New Guinea, the three-days-a-week South Pacific Post and the twice-weekly New Guinea Times Courier ...
Anthony Siaguru was born on 4 November 1946 in the East Sepik Province of what is now Papua New Guinea (PNG). After school in Wewak, capital of East Sepik Province, he studied at Marist College Ashgrove, a Roman Catholic day and boarding primary and secondary school for boys, located in the northern Brisbane suburb of Ashgrove, in Queensland ...
Luke Sela. Luke Clement Sela, OBE (died 6 June 2007) was a journalist and newspaper editor from Papua New Guinea. He served as editor of the Papua New Guinea Post-Courier newspaper, one of PNG's largest publications, from 1978 to 1992, and was described by the newspaper as a champion of the free press in the country. [1] [2]
Local newspaper Post Courier reported that supermarkets were ransacked, some patients in some hospitals were evacuated and, outside its newsroom, shots were heard. Reports of looting extended as ...
May 24, 2024 at 6:46 PM. SYDNEY (Reuters) -More than 300 people and over 1,100 houses were buried by a massive landslide that levelled a remote village in northern Papua New Guinea, local media ...
This is a list of newspapers in Papua New Guinea. The National. Papua New Guinea Post-Courier. Wantok Niuspepa. The Independent (defunct)
Papua New Guinea's international country code is 675. [1] Telephone lines: 139,000 fixed lines in use, 140th in the world (2012); [1] 63,000 main lines in use (2005). Mobile lines: 2.7 million lines, 134th in the world (2012); [1] 75,000 lines (2005). Telephone system: services are minimal; facilities provide radiotelephone and telegraph ...
The Independent was a national weekly newspaper published in Papua New Guinea from September 1980 to 5 June 2003. [1] [2] It was an English-language publication. It was published in the Port Moresby suburb of Boroko by Word Publishing, owners of the Tok Pisin -language Wantok Niuspepa. [3] [2]