Human resources a need in PNG

Letters

DEAR Prime Minister James Marape, I am a teacher, an analytical chemist, a chemical engineer and currently studying project management courses at Curtin University Western Australia.
I am an Opene from Enga.
I have read all your viewpoints about taking back PNG.
I am 100 per cent plus sure we can do it with the resources available, but you need human resources to make your dream a reality.
I wish to highlight some points for your consideration to the already good and wisdom thinking and forward planning you have for PNG;
You are 100 per cent right when you say people especially the public servants who are the mechanisms and catalyst in changing PNG to your dream to be active, but still there are people who say it is impossible?
These are the people who have very little innovative and creativity thinking and doing forward planning, very less educated to a standard where they cannot initiate, think and move forward as an independent country but want to depend entirely on foreign advise and thinking – to make it short please get rid of them, doesn’t fit into the system now according to your thinking now and into the future.
So, how can you judge and select the best qualified professionals to help you to achieve the aims and goals to be the richest black country in the world.
If this is the PNG milestone, please check records of all educated PNGean’s current and past, working currently or on studies, and select the best candidates to implement your policies now within the two years for a start and people will see signs of improvement and give another chance to run the government into 2029.
For your information, the Department of Labour and Employment doesn’t keep a record of well qualified Papua New Guineas, so get to the bottom of this department too
On a personal note, I as a Papua New Guinean designed an ethylene plant in 2011 while attending Curtin University Western Australia in 2011 and proposed to Kumul Petroleum Holdings in 2015, and did a power-point presentation to Public Enterprises department in 2014, and even presented at the conference organised by Institute of Engineers PNG (IEPNG) in April 2017.
The PNG Ethylene (Petrochemical) Plant is shelved by Kumul Petroleum since 2015 for unknown reasons.
I am currently studying Master of Science project management, prior to gaining Master of Chemical Engineering at the same university (Curtin University) and planning for the PNG Ethylene Plant – it is a Petrochemical Plant and it is the starting material or base material for all other petrochemical industries and leading into manufacturing and industrialisation.
You have qualified people to action but stupids still sit up on top to stop it because they want to maintain and keep their job for personal gain.
I as a professional am encouraging you the prime minister, now that you are given a chance, please use and choose right qualified people in line with your thinking and principalities to achieve 2029 milestone – it will work only when you have the right human resources in place.
Finally, prime minister, should you need my advice in the petrochemical industries and down streaming processes, and downstream processing of all agricultural crops, please contact me or Benedict Yaru director Kumul Petroleum Holdings and Langin Andale FAS Rural Development and Planning.
We want to make it happen, so I am referencing names here, those hat you might come to know them.

Yongi Andale