Gulf Province has unique tousim products that is suitable to all tourism segments and available throughout all seasons. All we need is to make the tourism products market ready. James Hasu, Deputy PA - Gulf Provincial Administration
Gulf province’s Kerema town is one of the least developed provincial
townships in PNG with all basic infrastructures that been developed during the
colonial era with historical evidences of early missionaries landed at Moru Bay
109 years ago.
Despite the LNG investment and exploration activities are
ongoing in the province; the local villagers’ lifestyles have never
changed. The usual trade of buai (betel
nut) with the people from Port Moresby who commutes to Kerema for buai trade
brings money for local people’s basic needs of the day and life is usual for
the Gulf of Papua dwellers.
Gulf still has an endless prospective to venture into
tourism and agriculture while its shores are used as exit points for the
lucrative oil and gas fields of the Southern Highlands.
The location of Gulf Province is logistically ideal for
trade and business with accessibly via road; sea and air are practically
convenient. Despite the strategic location and ease of accessibility, there are
not major economical activities in the province apart from the ongoing
Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) exploration and investments in the area which is
connected to the upper level beneficiaries. The livelihoods for the Kerema people
revolve around usual activities like fishing, hunting and gardening. Although the
Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) project is happening at the doorstep; the Gulf people
continue to remain passive spectators and with the tourism being introduced to
the province, it will set some light into sustainable tourism investments for
Gulf people. Hence, the Gulf Provincial Tourism Workshop hosted in Kerema town
on November 04th was intended to set the light for Gulf business
owners, community leaders and resource owners to shift their focus into tourism
and was overwhelmingly supported by the participants.
The province being
located on the southern coast of Papua New Guinea is dominated by highland
mountains and terrains with lowland river deltas and wide expanses of seasonally
flooded grass plains. The Turama, the Kikori, the Purari and the Vailala are
just some of the great rivers that flow into the swampy, delta-land of the
Papuan Gulf from the mountains as far as the highlands of PNG.
Generally Kerema has the
complex environmental landscape that accounts for unique flora and fauna
species and marine biodiversity. The vegetation within the gulf differs and not
vastly covered by one particular vegetation. The complex vegetation consists of
savannah to swamp that connects with lowland rainforests to the high mountain
rainforests that connects with nearby Highlands and Momase Provinces. The vastness of the complex vegetation and
landscape for Gulf of Papua is home to the world’s biggest Black Bass and
Catfish as well as Barramundi. This has been confirmed by Gulf Provincial
Tourism Office from the statistics gathered with National Game Fishing
Association. The Game Fishing is currently, the only tourism activity in the
Gulf Province and benefits at the community level are said to be tangible.
The Gulf Provincial
Government though its Commerce and Tourism Division having greater interest to
tap into the tourism potential after not seeing any benefits towards the
communities out of the LNG projects and investments in the province. Hence, the
first Gulf Provincial Tourism Workshop at Hotel Kerema was the opportunity for
the Gulf Provincial Government, stakeholders and resources owners to discuss
the way forward to make the tourism potentials of Gulf a reality. The PNGTPA official
have been invited to the workshop which has more than thirty (30) participants;
especially the community leaders, councillors, resource owners, tourism
business operators and general business operators in the province.
The acting District
Administrator, Mr. James Hasu officially opened the Gulf Provincial Tourism
Conference with the emphasis on tourism being one of the sleeping giant for
Gulf Province which have been hidden by the perception that LNG investment and
developments will generate more spin-off and improve livelihood of the people
but it never eventuates as such economy operates on the upper level economy and
never scales down to the individuals at the village level like tourism
investment can deliver.
Being the TPA officer on
the ground, I visited the selected tourism product sites that were presented at
the Gulf Provincial Tourism Workshop by the Gulf Tourism Officer (Mr. Vincent
Ehari) and without doubt I admitted that Gulf of Kerema has the tourism
products that can be offered to tourists all year round from and water sports
to trekking and relaxation on the nice and peaceful beaches like Pariva and
Iokea which have vast stretch of beach that breaks the waves which sweeps the
beach clear. The beaches in Kerema area ideal for board and kite surfing or
camping and lazing by the beach while quenching the thirst with a young coconut
juice (kulau) and wait for the sun to wade off over the breaking waves to get a
glimpse of the striking sunset off the horizon sending out the rays to the sky,
the sea below that reflects the rays on the surface naturally colouring the
sky, sea and the beach.
The Gulf Province has
already triggered the tourism interest domestically and to some extend
internationally by Iokea villager and self-talented singer/song writer Robert
Oeka with his 90s hit song ‘Kerema Yu No Save.’ The video clip, lyrics and
musical composition have created interests for many people in PNG and overseas
enticing them to visit Kerema by themselves. The song literally mean to listeners to go and
explore Kerema, a place you have not known yet, now it is time to explore
Kerema and tourism will pave the way.
Thanks to Gulf Provincial
Administration for inviting me to visit Kerema, now it makes me realize that
the province truly has its unique allure. Kerema is a place someone has to
visit to know better than the curiosity out of the song from Robert Oeka’s ‘Kerema yu no save’ and it’s truly a gulf
with vastness of beauty and attraction. It is certain the name ‘Gulf of Papua’
derived as the provincial name and gulf has what it envisages of Kerema.
Pariva Conference Room - Hotel Kerema |
Sunset at Pariva Beach - Kerema |
Canoeing at Lake Kamu Basin |
Words and pictures by;Nathan LATI- Product Development Officer (PNGTPA)