Bougainville is the largest of the Solomon Islands and is a province of Papua New Guinea.
Bougainville and the adjacent island of Buka are sometimes called the North Solomons , and are ecologically and geographically, although not politically, considered part of the Solomon Islands. Buka, Bougainville, and most of the Solomons are part of the Solomon Islands rain forests ecoregion.
History
- Main article: History of Bougainville
The island was named after the French navigator Louis Antoine de Bougainville. During colonial times it came under German administration as part of German New Guinea. Australia, on behalf of the League of Nations administered it from 1918 until independence.
On March 8, 1943 during World War II, American forces were attacked by Japanese troops on Hill 700 on this island in a battle that lasted five days ending on March 13 with a Japanese retreat.
The island is rich in copper and possibly gold. The Bougainville Revolutionary Army (BRA) ostensibly reclaimed the country from corporate mining interests in the 1980s, in the form of Bougainville Copper Limited, (BCL) an Australian controlled company.
A nine-year secessionist revolt ended in 1997, after claiming some 20,000 lives.
For the majority of the revolt the island was also under blockade, which forced the people to supply themselves with everything from power to soap. Biodiesel was refined out of coconut oil to fuel vehicles as well as building a small hydroelectric powerplant out of old vehicle parts.
The region is still striving for autonomy, the main reason being fear of re-established corporate exploitation of the area.
The resourcefulness of these people can be seen in their use of the coconut which besides biodiesel was also used for making soap, lamp oil, baskets, treating wounds and placed in the coals of a fire to act as a mosquito repellent.
See also
Further Reading
- Douglas Oliver "Bougainville"
- Paul Quodling "Bougainville The Mine And The People"
External link
Bougainville is also the name of a commune of the Somme département in France.