The Die Was Cast - My Journey to New Guinea

News items from Bougainville

The Bougainville Aftermath

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16 May 2025

A message from the webmaster:


 

It is perhaps not surprising that this blog and the Bougainville website are dying a slow death. However, as the numbers of ex-Bougainville employees are diminishing, it puts an even greater responsibility on those who are left to keep recording those times which were important to us as well as to the island of Bougainville.

 

 

An old Bougainville friend from those early days, who stayed until the very end of the construction phase, wrote, "I remember clearing up old files after Bechtel left. There were a couple of box files filled with letters from women, solicitors, lawyers etc., all much of the same theme, so-and-so was believed to be working on the project and was wanted for child support payments, etc. The standard reply clipped under the lid was to the effect that there were over fifty companies working on the project with a total of 10,000 workers, and if the writer would please care to contact the respective company. Of course, they knew that if they dobbed in one guy, they would instantly lose a big percentage of the workforce."

 


Camp 6 Loloho
Click on image to enter Bougainville Copper Project website

 

Well, I was still single and too young to have done a runner from home. To me, Bougainville was home and it came in the shape of a 9x9ft donga tastefully decorated with PLAYBOY centrefolds of girls waxed to the point of martyrdom, where one's wordly possessions easily fitted into a 2ft-wide metal locker and one's needs for comfort were satisfied by a red plastic chair on the porch.


Life was so simple then; we were so innocent! Or, at least, some of us were. The old saying that Papua New Guinea attracted three types of men, namely missionaries, moneymakers, and misfits, had to be rewritten for the Bougainville Copper Project to include those running away from their wives, the police, or themselves.

If you have an anecdote to contribute or some old photos, please email me at riverbendnelligen[AT]mail.com.

I look forward to hearing from you.

Peter Goerman
PO Box 233
Batemans Bay NSW 2536
Australia
Email riverbendnelligen[AT]mail.com

14 May 2025

Bob Jackson's Bougainville website

 

Click here

 

A former "inmate" from my Bougainville days, Bob Jackson, emailed, "I'm wondering if you could give my Bougainville website another plug. I have recently updated it quite a bit and would appreciate a few more visitors. It's not doing too bad (2400 visitors) but if you linked and mentioned it I'm sure it would help."

I never met Bob as he was one of the Johnny-come-latelies who arrived after the end of the construction phase of the gigantic Bougainville Copper Mine when things had become more "civlised" than in my time. He had travelled overland from England and arrived in Perth in late-1973. After a few months in Perth he went to Kalgoorlie to work for WMC for six months, before coming to Bougainville in July 1974.

 

Millionaires Row, Camp 6, Loloho, Bougainville Island
Should I print and frame and hang this photo above my bed inside "Melbourne"?

 

The one similarity we shared is that he also lived in Camp 6 where he eventually occupied a donga in the much-coveted "Millionaires' Row" facing the beachfront. After thirty-nine months (were you counting, Bob?) he left to travel the Pacific and South America before ending up in the U.K. again. Then, in 1979, he returned, this time with family, and lived in Section 6/28 in Arawa until they finally left at the end of 1988.

 

 

Bob now lives in the southern suburbs of Brisbane, and as he writes, "Our numbers are thinning out fast. When I went to my first Bougainville reunion, there were hundreds; the last time (last year) there were about ten. There were also three active BCL Bougainville facebook pages I knew about, but the last time I looked at the Panguna one, it hadn't had a post for five weeks."

All the more reason to give your website another plug, Bob! Here it is:

https://bobbox25.wixsite.com/bougainville.