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Manus Island
Island within Manus Province, Papua New Guinea
Island within Manus Province, Papua New Guinea
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Manus Island |
| image_name | Manus Island.png |
| image_caption | Location of the Manus Island among the Admiralty Islands |
| image_size | 250px |
| map | Papua New Guinea |
| coordinates | |
| archipelago | Admiralty Islands |
| area_km2 | 2100 |
| length_km | 100 |
| width_km | 30 |
| highest_mount | Mt. Dremsel |
| elevation_m | 718 |
| country | Papua New Guinea (PNG) |
| country_admin_divisions_title | Province |
| country_admin_divisions | Manus Province |
| country_largest_city | Lorengau |
| country_largest_city_population | 5,829 |
| population | 50,321 (province) |
| population_as_of | 2011 |
Manus Island is part of Manus Province in northern Papua New Guinea and is the largest of the Admiralty Islands. It is the fifth-largest island in Papua New Guinea, with an area of 2100 km2, measuring around 100 x. Manus Island is covered in rugged jungles which can be broadly described as lowland tropical rain forest. The highest point on Manus Island is Mt. Dremsel, 718 m above sea level at the centre of the south coast. Manus Island is volcanic in origin and probably broke through the ocean's surface in the late Miocene, 8 to 10 million years ago. The substrate of the island is either directly volcanic or from uplifted coral limestone.
Lorengau, the capital of Manus Province, is located on the island. Momote Airport, the terminal for Manus Province, is located on nearby Los Negros Island. A bridge connects Los Negros Island to Manus Island and the provincial capital of Lorengau. In the 2000 census, the whole Manus Province had a population of 50,321. The Austronesian Manus languages are spoken on the island.
Papua New Guinea allowed the government of Australia to run a controversial offshore immigration detention centre, the Manus Regional Processing Centre, which was situated on adjacent Los Negros Island from 2001 to 2017, to house asylum seekers arriving by boat found within Australia's defined territorial borders.
Manus Island is home to the endemic emerald green snail, whose shells were harvested to be sold as jewellery; this continues, albeit at a lesser scale, as due to the snail's status as a threatened species, its sale for this purpose is now illegal in many jurisdictions.
History
The first recorded sighting of Manus Island by Europeans was by Spanish explorer Álvaro de Saavedra on board the carrack Florida on 15 August 1528, while trying to return to New Spain from the Maluku Islands. Saavedra circled Manus Island, and landed possibly on Murai islet to the south west. Murai was found to be inhabited and some natives came out in canoes, attacking with bows and arrows. Three of these men were captured by the Spaniards, and were returned by Saavedra to the same island, on his second attempt to return to North America the following year. Manus Island was charted as Urays la Grande or Big Urays, which is probably a projection of Murai to signify "big Murai".
World War II
In World War II Manus Island was the site of an observation post manned by No. 4 Section, 'B' Platoon, 1st Independent Company, Australian Imperial Force, who also provided medical treatment to the inhabitants. Manus was first bombed by the Japanese on 25 January 1942, the radio mast being the main target.
On 8 April 1942 an Imperial Japanese force consisting of the light cruiser Tatsuta, destroyer Mutsuki and a troop transport ship Mishima Maru entered Lorengau harbour and several hundred Japanese soldiers of the 8th Special Base Force invaded the island. The vastly outnumbered Australians withdrew into the jungle to fight a guerilla campaign. Later in 1942, Japan established a military base on Manus Island, using prisoners of war (notably Sikh prisoners of the 5th/11th Sikh regiment taken in the Fall of Singapore) as slave labor.
The island was attacked by United States forces in the Admiralty Islands campaign of February – March 1944. An Allied naval base was established at Seeadler Harbor, Manus Naval Base, on the island and it later supported the British Pacific Fleet. The ammunition ship exploded in Seeadler Harbor on 10 November 1944 with a heavy loss of life of US Navy personnel.
In 1950–51 the Australian government conducted the last trials against Japanese war criminals on the island. One case heard was that of Takuma Nishimura, who faced an Australian military court. He had already been tried by a British military court in relation to the Sook Ching massacre in Singapore and sentenced to life imprisonment. While on a stopover in Hong Kong he was intercepted by Australian military police. Evidence was presented stating that Nishimura had ordered the shootings of wounded Australian and Indian soldiers at Parit Sulong and the disposal of bodies to cover up the killings. In this trial he was found guilty and was hanged on 11 June 1951.
American anthropologist Margaret Mead lived on Manus Island before and after the war, and gave detailed accounts in Growing up in New Guinea and New Lives for Old.
Detention centre
Main article: Manus Regional Processing Centre
In addition to its resident population, asylum seekers have been located on Los Negros between 2001 and 2004 and since 2012.
Australia set up the Manus Regional Processing Centre on Manus Island in 2001 as part of its Pacific Solution immigration policy. In August 2012, the Australian Government controversially announced it would resume offshore processing; in November 2012 the relocation of asylum-seekers to Manus Island resumed.
On 26 April 2016, the Supreme Court of Papua New Guinea ruled that the detention of asylum seekers on Manus Island was illegal, and Prime Minister Peter O'Neill announced that the centre would be closed. After a stand-off involving PNG military and police, all remaining men were removed to new accommodation at the East Lorengau Refugee Transit Centre, Hillside Haus and West Lorengau Haus by 23 November 2017.
In late 2019, the remaining asylum seekers were moved to Port Moresby, and upon request by the PNG government, the Australian Government terminated the contracts of the service providers for the detention centre and other facilities as of 30 November 2019.
Interstellar meteor
In April 2022, the 2014 meteor called CNEOS 2014-01-08 was confirmed to have been the first known object from beyond the Solar System to have struck Earth. Some debris had reached the surface off the coast of Manus Island and may be recoverable.
Notes
References
References
- "Papua New Guinea". citypopulation.de.
- (1960). "The discovery of the Pacific Islands". Clarendon Press.
- Klemen, L. (1999–2000). "Manus Island, experience of No. 4 Section, 'B' Platoon, First Independent Company, Australian Imperial Force". Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941-1942.
- Klemen, L. (1999–2000). "Medical Patrol on Manus Island, 1941". Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941-1942.
- (15 February 2011). "The story of Malayan Prisoners ~ The rescue of 462 Sikh prisoners from the Japanese".
- (1944). "Video: Americans Win New Airbases In South Pacific Etc. (1944)". [[Universal Newsreel]].
- Piccigallo, Philip; ''The Japanese on Trial''; Austin 1979; {{ISBN. 0-292-78033-8, ch.: "Australia".
- link. (15 June 2017 , in ''The New York Times'', 19 July 2013)
- link. (11 December 2016 Roger Cohen, ''The New York Times'', 9 December 2016)
- "United Nations rejects Australia's off-shore processing plans - Asia Pacific". radioaustralia.net.au.
- "Subscribe - theaustralian".
- "Papua New Guinea's Supreme Court rules detention of asylum seekers on Manus Island is illegal". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- Stephanie Anderson. (27 April 2016). "Manus Island detention centre to be shut, Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Peter O'Neill says". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- (1 November 2017). "PNG army prepares to enter Manus Island centre, 600 men still inside". ABC News.
- "Manus Island: last of asylum seekers removed from detention centre". News Limited.
- (31 October 2017). "Power shut off to final Manus compounds as 600 men refuse to leave". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- Australian Government. Senate. Legal And Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee. (21 October 2019). "Estimates".
- Dziedzic, Stephen. (17 November 2018). "US to partner with Australia and PNG on Manus Island naval base".
- (1977). "Jane's Fighting Ships 1977–78". Jane's Yearbooks.
- (12 April 2022). "Spy Satellites Confirmed Our Discovery of the First Meteor from beyond the Solar System". Scientific American.
- (20 September 2018). "Move to head off China with Australian base in PNG". [[The Australian]].
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