News Flash
PORT MORESBY, April 22, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Papua New Guinea's leader has
dismissed Joe Biden's unlikely suggestion that his uncle was eaten by
cannibals as "loose" talk that does not reflect the US president's feelings
for the country.
"Sometimes you have loose moments," James Marape said in an interview after
Biden's contentious remarks, adding that the relationship was stronger than
"one blurry moment".
Biden said last week that his uncle Ambrose Finnegan was shot down over the
Pacific nation during World War II, suggesting his body was never found
because "there were a lot of cannibals" in the area.
US defence records show Finnegan's courier flight was "forced to ditch in the
ocean" off the island's coast "for unknown reasons".
"I've met him on four occasions, until today, and on every occasion he's
always had warm regards for Papua New Guinea," Marape said.
"Never in those moments (has) he spoke of PNG as cannibals," he added.
Papua New Guinea has for decades tried to shed outdated tropes that paint it
as a
wild nation full of savagery and cannibalism.
"There are much, much... deeper values in our relationship than one
statement, one word, one punchline," said Marape.
He urged Biden and the White House to instead focus on clearing up the
unexploded ordnance that still litters Papua New Guinea today.
In a single bomb disposal expedition on the island of Bougainville in 2014,
troops from Australia and the United States destroyed 16 tonnes of wartime
munitions.
The US government's own travel advisory for Papua New Guinea cites unexploded
ordnance as one of the main dangers in remote areas.