Ugi Biritu

Ugi Biritu (c. 1937 – 15 March 1967) was a Papua New Guinean politician. He served as a member of the House of Assembly between 1964 and his death in 1967.

Ugi Biritu
Member of the House of Assembly
In office
1964–1967
Succeeded byBono Azanifa
ConstituencyHenganofi
Personal details
Bornc. 1937
Mobei, Territory of New Guinea
Died15 March 1967
Goroka, Papua and New Guinea

Biography

Biritu was born around 1937 in Mobei.[1] He was baptised into the Lutheran Church between 1956 and 1958. He initially trained to be a teacher, before spending a year at the Medical Training School in Goroka, qualifying as an aid post orderly.[1] He worked for the Public Works Department as a labourer and plumber, before becoming a peanut farmer in 1959.[1] Two years later he moved to Lufa to work as an interpreter for the Department of Native Affairs.[2]

Biritu contested the Henganofi constituency in the 1964 elections. Although he was illiterate, he was the only candidate to speak almost every language and dialect spoken in the constituency.[1] Bono Azanifa received over 4,000 more first preference votes than Biritu, but Biritu received almost all the second preference votes from the other three candidates' voters, overtaking Azanifa on the fourth count.[3][1] After being elected, he expanded his agricultural activities to start farming coffee, potatoes, cattle and goats.[1]

Biritu died of an epileptic fit in Goroka in March 1967.[1] His funeral was attended by more than 2,000 people.[1]

gollark: They spent *extra effort* on adding complex templating features.
gollark: It's not that either.
gollark: ↑ the optimal way to write all code
gollark: https://aphyr.com/posts/341-hexing-the-technical-interview
gollark: So you can write raw JVM code from memory on demand, of course.

References

  1. Edward P. Wolfers (1967) Death of a Politician Institute of Current World Affairs
  2. Another New Guinea by-election—but only just! Pacific Islands Monthly, April 1967, p12
  3. Edward P. Wolfers (1967) Politics in a Primitive Area Institute of Current World Affairs
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.