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See the full educational multimedia documentary series at https://www.colonialsyndrome.org/ A sister project to the multi-award winning film Ophir. https://www.ophir-film.com/. The Colonial Syndrome is a multimedia web-series about colonialism and revolution in the South Pacific island of Bougainville. A project by the University of Ulster, developed under the direction of Professor Kristian Lasslett and Dr Ruth Saovanna in association with the Bougainville Peoples Research Center and Arsam International. Project Director: Professor Kristian Lasslett and Dr Ruth Saovanna Texts, Film and Archive Curator: Professor Kristian Lasslett Online Film Series Creator: Olivier Pollet Film Editing: Charlotte Buisson-Tissot Film Directors: Alexandre Berman and Olivier Pollet Cinematography & Sound: Alexandre Berman and Olivier Pollet Music: Xavier Thiry Post-Production: Fourth World Films Researchers: Dr Ruth Saovanna, Professor Kristian Lasslett, Theonila Roka-Matbob, Nathan Matbob, Clive Porabou, Alexandre Berman and Olivier Pollet. With support from the Christensen Fund. Featuring Dominic Itta. Dominic Itta stands. He is member of parliament for Kongara, a region with deep scars from the Panguna mine and the convulsive history it provoked. Itta sits in the Autonomous Government of Bougainville parliament, or ABG for short. It is a semi-autonomous political creation of the Bougainville peace agreement signed in 2001. The ABG manages the legal, policy, and material affairs of Bougainville, while preparations are made for independence. Itta claims this vessel for autonomy and independence, the ABG, is now tethered by the same forces who originally corrupted the island and brought tensions to the point of violent eruption. International mining conglomerates are again prowling, he argues, in search of Bougainville's natural riches. Itta talks of a nascent nation, which has yet to find its feet or cultivate a breadth of leaders able to resist new encroachments upon the island's sovereignty by rich and powerful mining interests. At the centre of this new incision by international mining power is a draft mining bill (which was subsequently passed by parliament). The law was financed by the Australian government and World Bank. Adam Smith International, a British firm widely seen as a corporate vanguard for the new neocolonialism, was selected to write the final mining law for the people of Bougainville. Adam Smith International used mining industry consultants, including an individual who had served as Rio Tinto Senior Lecturer at the University of Dundee, and another who had for years worked as a consultant for Rio Tinto, the same international corporation that engineered mass environmental destruction on Bougainville, and facilitated war crimes through its subsidiary, Bougainville Copper Limited. Itta is furious. "This mining law of Bougainville, we Bougainvilleans did not contribute ... This bill is a foreign law ... When they wrote it, they put their interests in it". Itta argues slick methods were used to pass this law. The 'lawyers lured us', he declares. 'They showed a Powerpoint presentation. They said this section is good, this law is good, these clauses are good. Because they were thinking, these members do not know anything about the bill'. Itta laments, the members of parliament rendered themself open to the siren calls of foreign legal advisers by not reading the law. 'It went into the Members' pigeon holes, and I was one of the last members to receive a copy from the pigeon hole', Itta recalls. 'When I went to pick up mine, I realised that copies of other members were still in the pigeon hole. Which means even the members were not well versed with the law'. The law, Itta complains, is written in the language of the white man. 'This law is not written in my language so that I could understand its hidden meanings'. This new incursion by foreign interests, he fears, will lead to more blood unless resisted.