"This is the Pacific Ocean, a few hundred miles north-east of Australia." "Members of the Bougainville Revolutionary Army (BRA) cram their boats with much needed supplies of medicine and fuel, and prepare to set off from the Solomon Islands for home." "But first of all, there is a prayer for safe passage." "Their prayers I know will be needed, because home for these BRA guerillas is the little-known island of Boungainville, with their fighting an even less well-known war of independence with Papua New Guinea." "For seven years, Papua New Guinea has blockaded the island." "Its gun-boats and helicopters patrol these waters with shoot-to-kill orders, which means we have a three-hour gauntlet to run." "I'm here because this is a war for which Britain is also responsible." "It was the huge mine that a British company dug in Bougainville which provoked the fighting and it was Britain's casual redrawing of the border a century ago that turned it into war." "Breaking down on that border, as we enter Papua New Guinea sea space, seems about the worst place to do so." "I scan the horizon for gunboats, knowing we are carrying so much fuel, that just a stray bullet will be enough to fry us." "The horizon however stay serene." "This is a route that has cost many lives." "Yet it is Bougainville's only channel to the outside world." "It is also the only way in to the longest and bloodiest conflict in the Pacific since World War Two." "Just as we near the island, the horizon loses its serenity." "We breathe with relief when it turns out to be another BRA boat." "But at least I've had a tiny taste of what the Bougainvillians go through every day." "This is the story of an unsung people who took on Papua New Guinea, Australia and the biggest mining company in the world, who started by fighting helicopter gunships with bows and arrows and have lost the tenth of their population," "and yet who manage to create what may be the world's first true eco-revolution." "The Coconut Revolution" "The next morning we find ourselves in the hands of Bougainville Revolutionary Army commander" "Ishmael Torohama." "Our main goal is to get to president Francis Ona, the elusive man who started the revolution." "But for the moment, Ishmael's capable hands will certainly do." "I'm amazed to find him driving everywhere, as the fuel the BRA get into their boats can't go far, but that's a trick I won't find out till later." "Ishmael was a mechanic before the war." "Now people call him the Bougainville ninja." "It makes my arms feel good." "So I could handle the M60." "I use two guns." "At the moment, my other arm, the injured one on the left doesn't stop me too much." "It's a year now since I got this injury." "I stood up on the beach and I was shooting at them." "But they threw two or three grenades." "They launched them." "First one missed me, second one missed me, third one missed me." "Number four came and hit my arm." "They didn't have to chop my arm off – it's not useless." "Because I go and fight for my beliefs, God helped me." "We're the first people ever to film Ishmael and his men." "Yet I don't get the feeling he really trusts us." "His way of getting closer is a kind of baptism of fire, if gentler than those he gives both Papua New Guinea soldiers and the men he's training on this patrol." "What my sound man and I think might be a smoke bomb turns out to be tear gas." "It's Ishmael's way of saying welcome, a short sharp dose of Bougainvillian reality." "After a good cough, cried and laughed together, he loosens up and radios for us to meet Francis Ona." "It's all Francis's initiative in starting the war and I just got up behind it." "Every part of the island has got minerals in it and Francis saw that these things would bring change." "Change to spoil the environment and the future generations." "But before we leave," "Ishmael gets second thoughts about us seeing Francis." "A makeshift generator has blown upon our camera batteries while it was charging." "Last night when I slept" "God told me that tomorrow there will be something happen." "And all of a sudden the battery blew up." "I made up my mind to tell you that you will not go to Francis Ona." "Otherwise you will face some problems there, because your battery blew up." "It's another glimpse at the strange grip that govern superstition hold over Bougainville." "Since the boat trip in I'm no longer inclined to laugh at superstition." "But I explain that if TV crews read all the things that go wrong as bad omens then the medium would cease to exist." "Reluctantly Ishmael concedes to our heathen ignorance." "He gives us the two days of torturous uphill clambering that will take us to Francis Ona, and the heart of the war." "When I'm not grasping for air," "I get an idea of why the Bougainvillians have such fierce reverence for the place they call" "Meekamui or "sacred island"" "and why they could no longer sit by and watch its minerals being plundered." "We have seen our valleys, we have seen our forests, we have seen our rivers, beautiful rivers, beautiful trees, beautiful forests literaly thrown into dust." "And we will not allow that to happen." "On route to Francis, we come across his vice-president, Joseph Kabui, who puts the history of the place into perspective for us." "Ever since the French explorer Louis de Bougainville put his name on the map in 1768 the island has gone through an endless game of colonial "pass the parcel"." "Geographically, ethnically and culturally, it was always part of the Solomon Islands, but a hundred years ago, the imperial powers decided to change all that." "The situation we are in is not only unique for Bougainvillians but there are many African countries that the superpowers merely just carved them out put a line right through as" ""OK, this part belongs to you, this part belong to me"." "A deal was struck between Germany and Britain." "Germany saying "OK, I'll give Western Samoa to you, Britain"" "and Britain saying "OK, I'll give Bougainville to you."" "Germany didn't keep Boungainville long, though, as Australia grabbed it during the First World War." "During the second, Japan snatched the island for a few years before Australia grabbed it back." "And in the meantime, it ended up as part of Papua New Guinea which got independence in 1975." "Bougainville declared independence two weeks earlier, not that anyone listened, and it took another thirteen years for war to break out." "At last we find the man who can really explain why things suddenly changed." "Francis Ona is portrayed by many as a humorless hardline revolutionary." "I suspect they never really met him, because it certainly isn't the impression I get." " Hey, Tokapu hasn't come yet." " Call him, then." "I've told him already, but he's taking it easy." "We're going to get more firewood – this time for the widow." "So this is Papua New Guinea's public enemy number one." "When he's not running either the war or the self-declared Republic of Bougainville," "Francis goes gardening." "My fighting on Bougainville is based on these factors." "One, we are fighting for man and his culture and two, land and environment." "And the third one is independence." "Francis used to work for a mining company called Bougainville Copper Limited." "It was a company he would later destroy." "The reason, as it's always been on Bougainville was the land and the bounty it holds." "This is the Panguna mine." "It's a development that has taken place starting back in the 1960s." "My people here were very ignorant and they didn't know that in the future there would be a very big mine here, which is very destructive." "Before reaching the final layers of overburden, they cleared 550 acres of jungle, and sliced away the unconsolidated volcanic rock and ash." "Bougainville Copper Limited, or BCL, is mainly owned by an Australian subsidiary of the world's mining giant, Britain's Rio Tinto Zinc." "In 1967, the company was given the go-ahead to excavate what was then the world's biggest open cast copper mine," "500 meters deep and covering about 7 square kilometers or the size of London's West-End where Rio Tinto's headquarters are based." "It turned out to be a disastrous mistake, especially as they dug the hole right beneath Francis's village." "In Bougainville, you don't come between the people and their land." "We Bougainvillians, we rely on our land." "Land is our lifeline, land is our mother and it's our protection." "This place was a very big jungle which is a hunting ground for the people of this area." "We had big trees." "Also there was a very big hill here." "Right in the middle here there was a very big hill much higher than the top of those mountains up there." "And now it's all disappeared." "So now this land, which belongs to my people, has become a barren land and I don't know how we're going to use this land back again." "When the locals protested about the huge hole the multinational wanted to dig at the fertile heart of their island, the land was taken by force." "Of the 3 billion US dollars the mine made in profits, only a thousandth was given back to the people who owned the land." "Rio Tinto Zinc had started to create the most expensive enemy." "In the meantime, the inhabitants were shunted off into makeshift resettlements on desolate ground." "That's the Dapera village and you can see that's the standard of building they built for people." "It's really like a shanty town." "BCL was not being too much genuine to how you can resettle the people." "This school was built by people themselves." "Even the company and the government did not give any support." "Just imagine, right in the middle of the giant copper mine multi-multi-million worth, and here we are - people building their own schools out of their own pockets." "But the thing that really stuck in the craw of the Bougainvillians was the pollution spilling over their land." "Waste from the mine to the tune of about a billion tons ended up flowing down the Jaba river, contaminating it with copper, mercury, lead and arsenic." "It killed off the wildlife and turned whole forests into moonscape." "The land still bears the garish scars." "This is where all the pollution has been drained from the Panguna mine." "You cannot drink water now down there." "There are no fish, virtually nothing." "And this will be, maybe for the next 200 years." "This whole river sytem has been destroyed." "Even you can't swim in this river." "Things hit boiling point in late 1988 when the young landowners' association led by Francis demanded both the closure of the mine and 10 billion dollars in damages." "The story goes that the BCL management laughed at them, 10 billion being far more than the mine was worth." "Francis did not like being laughed at." "He left the meeting in a hurry, broke into the local mining depot and stole 50 kilos of high explosives." "He and his friends decided to close down the mine themselves with some well targeted sabotage." "Panicked about losing what was nearly half of its export earnings," "Papua New Guinea sent in the riot police." "They burned down homes, beat people up, killed a few and generally created enough backlash to provide Francis's fledgling guerilla force with all the recruits it needed." "Rag-tag bunch though the Bougainville Revolutionary Army were, their very name showed that they were now raising the stakes." "They didn't just want the mine closed down, they wanted independence too." "It was all getting a bit much for the riot squad so in came the army, the Papua New Guinea Defense Force (PNG DF)" "Rio Tinto Zinc abandoned the mine, and a David and Goliath war was on, with BRA's stones and slings versus PNG helicopters." "It was then that Francis realized they weren't fighting just Papua New Guinea, but Australia as well." "Australia's ex-colonial interests meant it was already training and arming the PNG DF." "Now it also suspended a Foreign Crimes Act allowing its pilots to fly the helicopters it suddenly supplied." "Helicopters that were quickly turned into gunships and trained mainly on an unarmed population." "Faced with such brutal and powerful weaponry, the Bougainvillians are forced into the first of a long list of innovations." "This is the first homemade equipment that we made at the start of war." "You've got a sling here and you get this sling hooked on here." "Put the arrow in there." "That goes into that pipe." "And when you trigger this, it goes off and the arrow flies." "We make our own guns using all the material around the place, been left also in Panguna." "Pick them up and then use to build." "Cut down all the machines, cut down all the pieces, and join them together." "Like this one." "All this has been made here and we labelled them" ""Made in Meekamui"" "And it's got a serial number." "So if part of the equipment has been destroyed in the field, they can come back and then build their own guns." "And this is how we build confidence in the force." "So just imagine with one sling weapon winning a Self-Loading Rifle (SLR)." "And from that single SLR we went on to winning now virtually about 200 to 300 very powerful weapons." "This one is resting now, having a holiday or whatever." "Resting for good !" "I saw the PNG DF came just to kill the villagers and civilians." "I went out to Panguna and I saw Francis." "I asked him :" ""Where are the weapons ?"" "And he told me :" ""There is no weapon."" ""We will only start with bows and arrows and stones and sticks."" "I did the training myself." "The tactics, the tricks they're mine." "And we made them, put everything into action and we captured two high-powered rifles." "The boys saw how I fought and they thought that" "I was a good leader, so they started following me." "So that's how I ended up holding the position of the BRA." "There are no clear front lines in the jungle." "Even though they've made it their own," "Ishmael and his boys know the PNG DF may never be far away." "That's the place where I usually train my boys." "I usually use live bullets and sometimes I've wounded some of the boys, soldiers." "So that's how they got their experience." "How many have you wounded ?" "Twelve of them." "Very badly ?" "Yeah, one was very badly injured and the other eleven of them were just a scratch." "Around 15,000 Bougainvillians have been killed during the war out of a population only ten times that." "Yet most haven't been slaugthered by PNG DF's munitions, like these ones mortered during the church service." "The majority have died from the lack of essential supplies created by Papua New Guinea and Australia's most insidious weapon, the seven-year siege of the island." "By early 1990, the PNG DF was losing control of most of Bougainville." "So it decided to establish a sea blockade around the island, which it hoped would turn the population against the Bougainville Revolutionary Army." "As a quick glance at History could have predicted, quite the opposite happened." "With bodies piling up from the lack of food, shelter and medicine, the BRA and the people rose against the challenge of the blockade together." "Forced to learn the hard way that necessity is the mother of invention, their solutions came from the land." "With the blockade being imposed by Papua New Guinea government we found that every family must be self-sufficient for the foodstuff." "That's why we have to make our own gardens." "We got a shifting cultivation type of gardening here and we have integrated every food crop that we can find." "William was a businessman now a refugee from PNG held territory." "He shows us the green things he's had to develop." "This whole area is full of gardens." "How the people here survive – because the soil is so rich it doesn't matter if you're going to do the farming on one single area we're still going to get food." "Food is still going to go on." "What garden we've got – we've got sweet potato." "We've got bananas, we've got cassava." "We've got a lot of taros we've planted." "Sugar cane, and then we got pawpaws." "We've got a lot of yams round here." "We've got onions." "Corns and tomatoes." "Peanuts" "Potatoes" "People – it's very hard for them to hungry." "People in Bougainville alone they survive." "That's why we say we can't depend on other people." "We got a blessing." "Gardens from here, it's no end." "And you've got bush from the river up to another mountain." "As you see, all the whole green." "It's all over – that's Bougainville." "Yet no plant from Bougainville comes close to the importance of the coconut." "We know we've been fed and sheltered by it, but then Ishmael shows us what a perfectly packaged life-support system it is and how his people have learned to make use of every part of it." "Coconut milk has lots of iron in it, which strengthens you for walking." "You squeeze the skin and put it by the fire and when it's hot you can squeeze it and if you have a sore you can put it on the sore." "Down here is the husk." "You take it off and put it on the fire to burn." "If you have plenty of mosquitoes, as inhabited places get mosquitoes, we use this to get rid of them." "The cook's milking the flesh there." "Coconut milk's used to cook greens in." "Coconut oil for a lamp." "This is a new thing we've learned in the crisis." "And we use coconut leaves for baskets." "We've got soap made from coconut oil." "This is first grade oil." "There are three grades – A, B and C." "This is the A grade we use to clean our guns." "In a war for the environment, it helps to have the environment on your side." "It's for if you have a nose blocked." "We use it for clearing the nose so that you can smell anything on the road just like enemies coming – you can just smell them." "When we found that we didn't have very effective equipment we developed our own booby traps." "And that is made from herbs which we lay on the track where the enemy is moving." "And then when they go by it, they start to develop sickness." "In one of the booby traps your testicles just swollen up and your penis just enlarge." "But it's for healing rather than for hurting, that the Bougainvillians have developped the bush medicine of their ancestors." "With the PNG DF driving much of the population into the jungle, thousands were dying in unsanitized childbirth and from preventable diseases like malaria, pneumonia and dysentery." "Tetanus from a badly handled machete for instance could prove lethal before the island has once again made the land their ally." "That's a piece of asbestos." "Is that from the mine ?" "Yes." "From the power pylons." "We got various herbs put into the hollow pipe of the pawpaw." "And with the steam blown into that area it's going to dry up very soon." "Francis is always on call as local GP and his presidential HQ doubles as the surgery." "We got herbs here, certain medicine which locates the areas that's been damaged and blood is not flowing well." "If there is no sickness it just slides through like this." "But when it finds areas where it is not functioning well it will stick." "It sticks like glue." "The claims of Francis and his fellow healers amaze me." "Being able to cure malaria, leprosy, appendicitis and cancer without operating, developing a herbal contraceptive which doesn't harm women, having seen what else this people can do," "I can no longer just dismiss it, especially so many patients back it up." "And at least Francis isn't so sure about all the cures." "We have given treatment to some person because he had a bad AIDS disease and sent him home." "But we didn't have proof, any medical reports by doctors so that's why we THINK we have treated someone with AIDS." "So Francis invites anyone with AIDS to come to test the Bougainvillian cure." "Let's go gardening now." "Besides what they get from the land, the islanders have found uses for absolutely anything that Bougainville Copper Limited and its employees left behind." "Though in a place where the infrastructure's gone to pot things constantly require improvised repairs." "That's my car over there." "It's not actually mine but when I fought, everything just got into my hands." "The PNG DF they came, they shot at me." "And here are some of the bullet holes." "I don't know how it happened but I was in the hands of the Lord so I was safe." "Along with his truck, his generator, his exercise gyms," "Ishmael brings anything else he can carry back from successful operations." "On a blockaded island, it's the only way to go shopping." "Well, that's Asou." "He likes playing with the ball." "I took the ball from one operation in Buka." "That's part of the victory, I think." "I go and give it to my kids." "Well, that's where we play – that's the music shop, the music station." "We teach ourselves how to play." "Oh, this is the place." "It's really not good, but we like it being here, I like being here." "It just reminds me of the simple life." "My hand is not really good, but this is the rhythm." "And the lead is over there and that's the keyboards over there." "The scavengers mecca on Bougainville is the Panguna mine itself and the town built to house its workers." "After devastating it to make sure the mine is never returned," "Francis and his fellow villagers ended up having to go back to salvage anything not rooted in concrete." "Because along with getting the Bougainvillians to start from scratch with food and medicine, the PNG DF forced open many of the houses, and gave them THAT problem to solve." "We have to make our own locks so what we do is we go down to Panguna mine and get all the locks and strip them out and make our own keys." "Using all the rubbish from the Panguna mine we can build good houses." "As you can see, bits and pieces of light, lighting up our houses." "Switchboxes." "I know this people can make something out of nothing, but I still can't work out how they can light whole villages." "William laughs and takes us to his local workshop." "As you see, all the parts and all the machines, like water pump, barbed wire, we've got something to do with it." "Some people, they might throw it away." "We don't, we collect parts." "We can make things out of it." "The islanders have dragged the mine's debris, sometimes for weeks across the mountains, to create that sort of setup." "And it's in places like this that they've cobbled together their own ecological power supply :" "hydroelectricity." "These are the intake pipes for the hydro and from there it goes right down to the generator itself." "After Papua New Guinea government has blockaded us and we couldn't have any petrol or diesel we have to develop something to get a power supply." "Here we've got this mini hydro." "Using all the rubbish, all the pipes and spare parts from old cars we managed to develop our own hydro which we use for ligting up the villages." "We've got about fifty to sixty now running this type of small hydro." "Down there with the PNG DF establishment there is virtually not much lighting up, no electricity." "Maybe it's money or something to run those generators but here in the bush we can have hydro going for 24 hours a day." "I think with the blockade still on that would be very nice." "Because then we will be learning more and more and advance into near future." "So that new things will come new ideas grow." "New ideas have been growing wherever I look, but the high point of this eco revolution has to be the way they're still driving around without any proper fuel supply after seven years of blockade." "The secret, as I should have guessed, is growing all around me." "We get together." "Get the power of the BRA." "This power now runs our island." "Francis once stated that the war against Papua New Guinea could be won in a week." "The war against Australia had to take a little bit longer." "And by 1996 the Bougainvillian Revolutionary Army was winning." "PNG's last big offensive turned into its biggest row and when we get to the island, the BRA hold about eighty percent of the territory." "You can see that that's the Toya valley." "Further down where you can see the last mountain." "That's where the last PNG DF camp is." "That's Bolavi and that's where they end." "They don't come any further." "The PNG DF don't come any further, not just because they're beaten, but also because they hardly care anymore." "In the war for hearts and minds, the BRA were always winning." "And when no other country came to Bougainvillians aid, the people found support in a different realm." "Because the colonial legacy they most embraced was that of the missionnaries." "I think without Jesus, I wouldn't have come this far." "Just because without that, the superpowers, the Australian government, or whoever has been helping the Papua New Guinea government migh have beaten me a long time ago." "Why do all sorts of problems try to spoil this place ?" "Why do you get into angry fights for a bit of ground or something ?" "When you fail to commit to Jesus you will fall down with all kinds of temptation." "We will thank Father God for the operation we've just completed where not one man found an enemy, not one man lost his life." "My uncle, he sees things." "He normally comes with us and when we are in the enemy territory, he can feel, he can see." "His is vision from God that the enemies are going to attack or if they are in the ambush we can change our plans and operation the same minute when there's a vision from God." "Follow my prayer." "Father, I thank you" "For everything we've done you only get the fame that is due to you." "Thank you, Lord Father." "We have not lost the life of any of our brothers in this operation." "Therefore we thank you, Father God." "You will get praise, you will bless each of us and bless us again to go on another operation." "Amen." "Okay." "Go to your homes clean your guns for their next use." "Once we've broken enough bread and sweat together," "Ishmael trusts us enough to reveal the secret charm he uses in combat." "We use it for poisoning the gun." "And we put it on the tip of the gun so that when we shoot an enemy automatically when the bullet goes inside there are snakes small snakes that usually come out of the man's body." "So it's just like we are poisoning them." "But God's power is unlimited." "It's just like when you charge a battery when you put it into a charging device and it charges more power then" "That is what I've learned and I've given up using this." "Now that Ishmael sees our camera batteries in a more positive way, he lets us in further." "I'm not proud to be a fighter." "I'm proud because my name's written in the book of life." "And I'm saved, and that is what I'm proud of." "It's just like a miracle that God helped me while I was injured here." "When I lay down the Lord spoke to me and said :" "You are only half an inch away from death." "So I said :" "Yes, I'll choose you and I'm going to follow you." "That's why I really want to be some kind of man preaching the gospel." "It's just a miracle that God has saved Bougainville." "The islanders' devotion seemed to pay off in early 1997 when God moved in one of his most mysterious ways." "Papua New Guinea basically admitted defeat by hiring mercenaries to do what the PNG DF couldn't." "It forked out 36 million dollars to the London-based company Sandline International, and presented the BRA with the biggest armed threat that it ever faced." "And then, lo and behold, the PNG DF itself came to Bougainville's aid." "Humiliated by the very idea of needing foreign troops, and even more angry at the price, the underfunded PNG soldiers rallied huge popular support, arrested the mercenaries, and threw them out." "If they had come and used rockets everywhere, I think they would win." "However, this equipment they have – it's only men that uses it." "The God of Bougainville has spoken to me like this." "So we believe that we will get all the modern weapons of theirs." "Because every time the way is blocked as if a brick wall – then a way out appears." "Finding a way out is something the Bougainvillians tend to do with startling regularity." "And none amazes me more than the way they fuel the transport so crucial to fighting a war." "With hundreds of abandoned mine vehicles littering the island, how were the BRA going to run them without diesel?" "Finally William shows us." "This is the complete thing of scraping the coconut" " from scraping to squeeze to ferment." "And then the last thing is to cook the oil." "For one litre oil – maybe about 15 dry coconuts for a litre." "That's first grade this oil." "It's beautiful." "Not only is coconut oil far less polluting than diesel, you also get double the mileage." "Ishmael laughs that after the war, they're really going to scare Esso and Shell." "The coconut is helping to create a separate state for our island." "If the coconut wasn't part of the revolution" "I can't think how we could create this state." "And everyone here is convinced that what they've achieved despite having everything against them proves beyond doubt that they can run their own state especially with all the ecological innovations they've sworn to developing further when they become independent." "With the closure of the mine, we have been blessed, we have been blessed." "We have been blessed to see abundance of food, we've been blessed with breathing fresh air." "If we win this certainly is going to become quite an important precedent." "In fact, Bougainville has already become a precedent, inspiring many other Pacific communities having holes dug in their backyards." "Across the region, resistance to and compensation from ecological devastation has upped considerably." "And when, thanks to the mercenary debacle, the news broke of this obscure bunch of islanders beating Papua New Guinea, and Australia, and Rio Tinto Zinc, suddenly the international community got interested in beginning peace talks, in mid-1997." "Francis, who has fears of winning the war but losing the peace, stays clear if the compromise is involved in the proposed deal." "He is labelled a hardliner for this, but maybe that's because he's not the kind of leader we're used to, and knows how easily Bougainville could lose its way in the jungle of international politics." "During my high school days," "I was appointed to sweep the principal's house." "But on one occasion I found him, he was doing my job." "He was cleaning up the toilet." "And I asked him :" ""How could you, the principal, do such a thing ?"" "And what he told me was that the leader must come down and clean the dirt for his people." "And that tought me a very very big lesson which I'm looking forward to teach other leaders in all parts of the world " "the leader must clean the boots of his people." "The peace process though is creating a rift between Francis and one of the prime movers behind him, his vice-president Joseph Kabui." "This is it." "We will either make it or break it." "And because it is now, as I see it, it's now a game of survival, political survival." "And there is a clear hard political tension right now." "Change is imminent from the way things are now looking." "What do you mean by change ?" "Change of political leadership, that is." "Our president will be changed, he will be changed some time soon." "And who would be the new president ?" "Well, it's up to the people to decide and up to BRA to decide." "I will wait and see how this will go about." "But it will probably be you, will be ?" "Well, if it comes to me, I'm ready and willing." "Joseph also has Ishmael's support, but despite their different methods, they and Francis definitely have the same end in mind :" "independence with a capital "I"." "Without independence we are looking at more bloodshed." "We are looking at more destruction on Bougainville through the means of the Papua New Guinea government and Australian government, because they've got the mining interests." "They'll bring back all the multinational companies that destruct all the land." "And is that freedom ?" "Is that peace ?" "This mining won't do." "Because it gives problems to all future generations on Bougainville." "And we don't want this to happen." "We don't want our descendants to say :" "Our forefathers didn't give us a good future, they've spoilt things for us, thrown us away, and we've ended up like this." "Man on this earth, on planet earth, depend on land, depend on environment, and I wish to ask everyone, every leader of any nation, to take care of the land so that people on this planet earth can be saved." "The future, rather than tales of passed woes, is what all the Bougainvillians I've met focus upon, despite the destruction of their land, eight years of isolation, untold atrocities and up to 15,000 deaths." "The impression I take home is of a people who don't seem to know the meaning of self-pity, let alone pessimism." "Before we leave to run the blockade on our way out," "Francis sends us off with one of the song he writes for his regular communal sing-sings." "BRA is fighting for Meekamui." "The people are crying for it, and will get independence and their own government." "All of us local people think now and our mother cries for us," "BRA is fighting PNG," "So we can have true happiness all over Bougainville." "Since we left Bougainville, the peace talks have led to a permanent cease-fire," "the blockade has been lifted, and reconciliation and restoration are taking place." "Yet Papua New Guinea is still dodging the central demand of the BRA, a referendum on independence." "Things aren't over yet, but whatever happens, when it comes to self-help and ecology, the Bougainvillians have already given the world many lessons they can learn, if it ever chooses to." "I wish to thank PNG government for imposing blockade because if blockade wasn't imposed on Bougainville we wouldn't develop this far." "Nobody has been trained - it's all natural talent that we are developing." "I think with the blockade the Bougainville war is like an educational centre or furthermore I could say it's a university for all of us who are on Bougainville." "Since the completion of this film," "Joseph Kabui was elected President of the new Bougainville People's Congress." "Francis Ona decided not to stand."