In a chilling escalation of violence between local warring tribes, Papua New Guinea’s remote highlands witnessed a horrifying event as police revealed the discovery of sixty-four bloodied bodies along a road.
The victims, believed to be tribal fighters, fell victim to an ambush by a rival group in the early hours of Sunday.
The incident unfolded near the town of Wabag, approximately 600 kilometers (370 miles) northwest of the capital Port Moresby, in an area notorious for tit-for-tat mass killings involving rival tribes such as Sikin, Ambulin, Kaekin, and others.
Graphic images released by the police depicted stripped and bloodied bodies scattered along the roadside and piled onto the back of a flatbed truck. Some of the deceased bore hacked limbs and were left naked by the road, with beer bottles or cans placed on their chests.
Assistant Commissioner of Police Samson Kua confirmed on Monday that ongoing gunfights were observed in nearby valleys, with authorities continuing to recover bodies from the bushland adjacent to the road.
Acting police commander Patrick Peka of the province revealed that many of the deceased were suspected mercenaries, individuals who travel the countryside offering assistance to tribes in settling scores with their adversaries.
Peka pointed to the involvement of leaders and educated elites who supply arms and engage the services of gunmen from other parts of the province, complicating efforts by the police and government to quell the violence.
Despite various strategies deployed by Papua New Guinea’s government, including suppression efforts, mediation, gun amnesties, and others, the violence persists with minimal success. Despite the deployment of approximately 100 troops to the region, the military’s influence remains limited, leaving security forces outnumbered and outgunned in their efforts to restore peace to the troubled highlands.