Port Moresby Varirata National Park Bush Walk Adventure

 Varirata National Park (Port Moresby) is a fantastic place for bushwalking. The three common bushwalking options are the Main road Walk, 3000 K walk or 1000 K walk.

The main road walk takes you around the track. It is often busy over the weekend and holiday so look out for the vehicles as they go past. This is an easy and pleasant option as you do need a guide. It is also ideal for road runners and families with smaller children.

The second option for Bush Walk at Varirara National Park is the1 K walk from the main reception to the lookout.

If you are serious about Busk Walking, the third option is for you. Take the complete loop around the conservation park. It is about 3K walk, but not for the fainted hearts. It can take 2 to 3 hours, depending on how fast you walk. So, go prepared.


Plenty to see on Varirata Bush Walk

Five out of the thirty-five species of birds of paradise live in the park, and PNG’s National Emblem, the Raggiana, is without any doubt, is the guest of honour.

Between April and October, during peak breeding season, there is an excellent chance of seeing some males in full breeding plumage dancing to attract female attention.
Top tip: If you really what to get the best out of your trip to Varirata National Park, I would recommend enlisting a local guide to take you on walks through the forest. You can ask for guides or assistance at the main entrance.

Beautiful View toward Port Moresby, Jacksons Airport

The Lookout is 833 metres above sea level. Port Moresby Jackson airport is within clear view. On a beautiful day, you can see the planes landing and taking off.


Go prepared with cash, food, water, sunscreen and bug repellent. As for the serious walkers, this could be a recurring visit once you've done it the first time. You've got to visit Varirata National Park if you have been living in Port Moresby, but have not visited the park yet.

World Menstrual Health Day: Shattering the Stigma in Papua New Guinea

Every Thursday, for the past five (5) years a group of dedicated women meet in Lae, Papua New Guinea, to sew high quality washable menstrual pads. So far, they have distributed over 3000 of these hygiene packs to girls in the Morobe province.

Photo supplied: Nakei Siloi (L) &  Munum Primary School Girls (R)

In preparation for Menstrual Hygiene Day (28 May), girls from Christ The King Primary School will receive sets of these hand-sewn items, along with a health talk about the female body, menstruation, pregnancy and the importance of female hygiene. 

“There is a big need. Store-bought pads are expensive. And the disposal of plastic synthetic pads is a problem for our environment.” Nakei Siloi, Marama and spokesperson for the group has been a volunteer with Days for Girls since 2018. “We do not want our daughters to miss school just because she has her sikmun. We want to educate our girls about her monthly cycle. To emphasize to her how natural and normal having a period is.” 

In many parts of Papua New Guinea, haus meri or menstrual huts provide women and girls with the opportunity to support one another during their sikmun. “Because many of us have moved to urban locations, these opportunities for focused learning and rest are not readily available. We may not be talking openly about menstrual hygiene, so our daughters miss out.”

There is a culture of shame and taboo on matters pertaining to sexuality. Girls are teased at school if their clothes are stained. This also discourages our daughters from attending class. 

“Days for Girls have programmes which educate our sons about menstruation. It is called ‘Men who Know.’” Every man and boy is connected to a mother, wife, daughter, sister, friend, coworker or classmate. Men and boys would be crucial partners to shatter the stigma and in the future, influence decision making. “We are looking for men who might want to volunteer to join us in this endeavour” said Ms Siloi. 

Days for Girls was first established in Lae by Wendy Christie, supported by New Zealand, and Australian Days for Girls Teams and Chapters (especially those in Annerley, Boonah and Redlands, Queensland) along with sponsors; The Lioness Club of Lae, Express Freight Management, Chemcare, Papindo Ltd, Theodist and Brian Bell Home Centres.

This initiative on World Menstrual Health Day will reach over 150 young girls

For more information please contact us our Facebook page 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/daysforgirlslaepng


Logging companies must now pay for their crimes against our environment, our country, and our people.

I saw first-hand the damages logging companies are doing to the natural forests (and plants and animals) and the river systems in parts of New Guinea Ireland. It is a case of You never know till you see It. And the distractions caused by the logging companies are much bigger than we imagined.  PNG govt has got stop the logging operations in the country. 

PNG Insight photo | The importance of International Forest Day

Why complete ban on logging is urgent

In 2019 and 2020 I visited the provincial town of Namatanai in the New Ireland Province and Kimbe in the West New Britain Province. I fell in love with the natural wonders of the provinces. It was just stunning. 

You'll know what I mean if you know about the 'Bilas Peles' and 'Oil Palm Country'.

The rivers are crystal-clear blue. You can tell how healthy the forests and habitats are. 

But, I also saw the damages logging companies have done. Complete destruction of the forests and natural surroundings. The logging ships parked out in the sea and tugboats doing rounds, unloading logs. Even at night.

Read about illegal logging in Papua New Guinea


The locals call the foreign loggers, pirates. They live onboard the massive logging carriers, load the logs and take off.

Forestry Authority, provincial govt or the national govt care less

Drove past the Pinakin Roadside market along the Buluminskey highway back to Kavieng Town. And two Toyota Lancruisers parked on the roadside, Men in Uniform. The guide told me that they were the mobile squad from the Rabaul Tomaringa Barracks here on Logging Assignment.

It saddens me that some logging companies can do that:

  • running bulldozers up the delicates limestone rocks, clear-fell the trees,
  • destroying the natural habitats, the streams and river systems; and 
  • getting police to watch over the logging operation.
Inadvertently, one seems to care. Not even the provincial govt or the national govt. 

The impacts of logging an area of forest is obvious like day light. 

I saw what the logging companies have done to the pristine waters of New Ireland and West New Britain Provinces. Once, there was no mud in the river systems. You can literally jump in and slash and the water remained crystal-clear. 

The waters are no more clear. The river banks are covered in Mud. It may look clean on the surface. One splash and it turn murky.

The loggers have been doing a lot of damage than imagined

After the visit, I have been tweeting my frustrations about the destruction done to the environment by the logging companies. It is not nice. It is inhumane. And, it should stop. 

Today, it is reassuring that a govt body has put the logging 'pirates' under the spotlight. When we talk about logging companies, it is not just about tax evasion or tax exemption. No. 

It is about the natural beauty of our beautiful country. And, I think Dr Ketan put it nicely. The logging companies must pay for their crimes - crimes committed against the PNG govt and also the crimes they caused against nature.

 - We reproduce Dr Ketan article below, you can also see my tweets at the end of this article - 

Logging companies must now pay for their crimes against our environment, our country, and our people by Dr. Joseph Ketan

IRC Commissioner Sam Koim has a reputation for going after the big crooks in Papua New Guinea. After serving his legal apprenticeship at Justice Department, Mr Koim was handpicked by former prime minister Peter O’Neill to investigate and prosecute corrupt politicians and their foreign cronies. Mr Koim demonstrated diligence in his work by prosecuting crooked public officeholders. He took a step further by investigating his political boss, the prime minister, which ultimately cost him his job as head of Task Force Sweep.

Now, after being appointed IRC Commissioner by the current prime minister James Marape, Mr Koim promises us that he is going after the Malaysian timber cartel, an obnoxious gang of tax evaders, who have been corrupting PNG politicians and public servants over the last 40 years to steal billions of dollars through transfer pricing and false declarations on the value of logs for export.

The IRC must be thorough and ruthless in its approach to weeding out corruption with the forest industry. A 1980s inquiry into the forest industry by Justice Tos Barnett uncovered widespread corruption involving a deputy prime minister, parliamentarians, and departmental heads working in partnership with the Sia brothers and other Malaysians to steal money from the country.

All corrupt PNG politicians and public servants were named in the reports by Tos Barnett. Veteran PNG journalist Harlyne Joku and the Times newspaper editor Anna Solomon published a series of reports on corruption within the forest industry. I have published the names of crooked PNG government officials in a chapter of a book edited by Michael Rynkiewich of the Melanesian Institute.

Papua New Guineans tend to have collective amnesia on corrupt officials, so we need to constantly remind readers of the past sins of our leaders.

Sam Koim knows that state agencies and the officials who work within them have aided and abetted the work of crooked foreign businessmen. The Malaysian loggers were brought into this country by Michael Somare and other politicians. RH is at the forefront of destructive logging in this country. It owns the Vision City Mall as well as the Stanley Hotel, in addition to other companies. It will require the most skilled and imaginative auditors to trace the trail of transfers of funds from one company to another through a series of Holding companies and offshore accounts.

We need to set an example to deter crooks from robbing us in future. Lock up the big foreign crooks, including facilitators within PNG, and nationalize all assets acquired through fraud. The logging companies must now pay for their crimes against our environment, our country, and our people.

//Ends

Illegal logging in PNG
Image: Oakland Institute

PNG Insight Tweets on Logging and Distructions of Forests




 

KUCCPS Portal Login 2023/2024 Application Dates and Information

Kenya Universities and Colleges Central Placement Service (KUCCPS) is a student placement agency. It coordinates the selection of secondary school students and their enrollments in universities and colleges under Kenya's government scholarships. The enrollment and admission information is available through the KUCCPS placement portal. 

This article will help you to nagivate the KUCCPS portal. Read on to find out!


KUCCPS Portal Login 2023/2024 applicants info

2023 kuccps portal open now for 2024 intake


KUCCPS Portal 2023 Portal Login

The important details you need to login to the portal are:

  • KCSE Index Number, 
  • Year of KCSE and 
  • your password (KCPE Index or Birth Certificate Number) as provided by your teacher in secondary school.

Placement for Universities and College

Kenya has a good number of universities, colleges and technical and vocational centres for students to apply to. And, understandably, where the students are placed. According to KUCCPS, the students' placement opportunities are as follows: 
  • 546 Degree Programmes,
  • 218 Diploma Programmes,
  • 114 Certificate Programmes,
  • 145 Artisan Programmes,
  • 69 Universities, and 
  • 179 Colleges.

Applicant Eligibility: For a candidate to be eligible to apply for a placement, the following conditions will apply:

  • A Kenyan Citizen governed by Chapter Three of the Constitution of Kenya and the Kenya Citizenship Act Cap 170.
  • Sponsorship will be eligible to all applicants provided that the KCSE Candidates of the year preceding the selection and those who have never benefited before are given priority.
  • The minimum admission requirement to apply for degree programmes will be C+.
  • The minimum admission requirement to apply for a diploma will be C-.
  • The minimum admission requirement to apply for a craft certificate will be D.
  • The minimum admission requirement to apply for an Artisan certificate will be E.
  • Applications shall be subjected to minimum subjects requirements from regulators and training institutions where applicable

Is KCCPS Portal Open?

KUCCPS Student Portal is now active for 2023/2024 course applications.

Kenya University and College Central placement service (KUCCPS) is responsible for admission of students to universities and colleges in Kenya. 

The body has enabled the KCCPS online student portal where students can conveniently perform the following:

  • Application for admission to an institution
  • Checking admission status
  • Checking courses offered at the institutions and so much more.

KUCCPS Application Guidelines 2023/2024

To apply, login to the Student’s Portal using your KCSE Index Number and KCSE Year. Use your Birth Certificate Number/KCPE Index Number as the Password.

All programmes have minimum subject requirements. You will only be able to apply for a course whose minimum requirements you meet, but the selection will be determined by the overall performance and the available capacity.

You may view the available programmes and their requirements by clicking the Programmes tab in the portal. You can also search for courses by institution, using the Institutions tab.

As you select the programmes, you may move the ones that interest you into the Course Basket. This will enable you to work with a shorter list when preparing your final list of courses to apply for.

Once you have settled on your preferred courses, you will only be required to enter the Programme Codes.
To apply, use the Application/Revision tab to enter the Programme Codes.

After confirming that the Programme Codes entered are for the courses you would like to apply for, please submit and follow the application fee payment instructions.

An application processing fee is charged as follows:

  • Students applying for the first time – Ksh 1,500
  • Students revising their choices submitted in school – Ksh1,000
The placement processing fee should be paid after you have selected courses.

You are advised to keep your transaction code safely. It will be required before you make any subsequent changes to your application.

How to check Universities and College/TVET Admission Letter

The students who have applied to a university, college or TVET training centre will have to check their status through the KUCCPS portal login. 

So login using the students such as your KCSE Index Number, Year of KCSE and Password. 

If you have forgotten your password, call your school or seek help using the contact details provided below

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Here are some Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) as answered by Kenya Universities and Colleges Central Placement Service.

What are the main functions of KUCCP?

The main functions of the Kenya Universities and Colleges Central Placement Service (KUCCPS) are to coordinate the selection of secondary school graduates for enrolment to universities and colleges under Government sponsorship. It is also mandated to develop career guidance programmes for the benefit of students, collect and retain data relating to student placement to universities and colleges and advise the Government on matters relating to student placement.

 What is the difference between KUCCPS and HELB?

KUCCPS is a student placement agency while the Higher Education Loans Board (HELB) is a student-funding agency. While the agency selects applicants for admission to universities and colleges for Government sponsorship, HELB provides Government loans and bursaries to the students once enrolled.

 How can I contact KUCCPS?

KUCCPS offices are located at ACK Garden House on 1st Ngong Avenue in Community Area, Nairobi. You may also contact us through the telephone lines 020 5137400, 0734879662 and 0723954927, or by email to info@kuccps.ac.ke. Our official social media channels are @KUCCPS_Official (Twitter) and The.Placement.Service (Facebook).


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About this blog
We are an education and development blog. We provide this info for our visitors from Kenya who are visited us. We make this information available to help you login into the KUCCPS portal & check your admission letter and know your placements. 

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