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Papuan leader dismisses Biden ‘cannibalism’ remark

April 22, 2024
Papua New Guinean Prime Minister James Marape, Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown, US President Joe Biden, and Kiribati President Taneti Maamau. — courtesy Getty Images
Papua New Guinean Prime Minister James Marape, Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown, US President Joe Biden, and Kiribati President Taneti Maamau. — courtesy Getty Images

PORT MORESBY — Papua New Guinea’s leader has dismissed US President Joe Biden’s suggestion that his uncle may have fallen prey to cannibals in the Pacific nation during World War Two.

Biden said last week his relative had been shot down over the country, and his body never found as “there were a lot of cannibals”.

US media pointed out that his comments were not backed up by official records. Papuan Prime Minister James Marape put it down to “loose” talk.

He said his American counterpart had had a “blurry moment” and insisted the US-Papuan relationship was strong, and characterized by “deeper values”.

Marape said the pair had met several times, and “never in those moments (has) he spoke(n) of PNG as cannibals”.

While the nation does have some history of cannibalism in remote areas, it has tried for years to shed the trope, which it views as outdated.

The White House did not provide further comment about Biden’s remarks, made in Scranton, Pennsylvania, last week.

But a spokesperson highlighted that the US leader was “proud of his uncle’s service in uniform”.

Official records show that Ambrose J Finnegan was indeed on board a plane which went down for reasons unknown in the Pacific on May 14, 1944.

It ditched in the ocean off the north coast of New Guinea, the record states — referring to the island which, in its eastern half, comprises part of Papua New Guinea.

Three men were lost in the wreckage and another was rescued. Finnegan’s remains have not been found and he is still described as unaccounted for.

Questions have been asked about whether at 81 Biden should be running for re-election. He has denied having any issues with his memory or mental acuity.

In February, he rejected suggestions — presented as part of an investigation into his handling of top-secret files — that he had struggled to recall key life events.

Biden’s rival for president, Donald Trump, is four years his junior, and has faced accusations of his own that he lacks the sharpness to run for president again.

He caught headlines with his own rendition of a chapter of US military history last week, when he appeared vague on the facts of the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg in the American Civil War. — BBC


April 22, 2024
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