In search of the South Pacific fugitive who crowned himself king

追寻南太平洋自封为王之逃犯

The Audio Long Read

2025-04-25

47 分钟
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Noah Musingku made a fortune with a Ponzi scheme and then retreated to a remote armed compound in the jungle, where he still commands the loyalty of his Bougainville subjects By Sean Williams. Read by Simon Darwen. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/longreadpod
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  • This is The Guardian.

  • who crowned himself king, by Sean Williams.

  • Read by Simon Darwin.

  • One autumn morning, I boarded a plane from Port Moresby, the capital of Papua New Guinea, to Bucca,

  • the capital of the autonomous region of Bougainville,

  • a collection of islands and atolls the size of Puerto Rico.

  • Bougainville is located 600 miles east of Moresby, across the Solomon Sea.

  • Its southern shore is just three miles from the politically independent Solomon Islands,

  • and its people share a culture, linguistic links, and dark skin tone with their Solomon neighbors.

  • But thanks mostly to European colonizers, who drew the borders,

  • Bougainville is the farthest flung province of Papua New Guinea,

  • whose lighter-toned inhabitants, Bougainvillians, often call Redskins.

  • betraying a sense of otherness in their own country that partly explains why I am writing about them here.

  • I say partly because if not for the islands having fought a bitter,

  • decade-long war against the Australia-backed Papua New Guinea,

  • which remarkably they won, and demanding Papua New Guinea allow Bougainville's independence by 2027,

  • the story I am about to tell would likely never have happened.

  • In October 2023, I booked a trip to Buka to report on these developments,

  • budgeting some days at the end to interview leaders of the Autonomous Bougainville Government,

  • ABG, the formal authority that expects to secure self-rule for its people.