Executive Summary

Preamble – Wartime Tourism

PNG Wartime Pilgrimage Tourism

  • To establish ‘Kokoda’ as a model for a sustainable wartime tourism industry in PNG; and
  • To ensure villagers along the trail received shared benefits from the emerging Kokoda trekking industry.

Relevant Facts for the Kokoda Tourism Industry

  • During the period 2004 – 2008 trekker numbers increased by 255% from 1584 to 5621.
  • During the period 2009 – 2018 there was an overall decline of 46% in trekker numbers from 5621 to 3033[ii].
  • The average number of trekkers for the past three years (2016-2018) is 2945.
  • According to the KTA website there are 37 licensed trek operators[iii] – 20 of these did not lead any trekkers across the trail in 2018.
  • A lack of integrity in the licensing system resulted in 15 unlicensed trek operators leading treks across the trail in 2018.
  • There is no incentive for licensed trek operators to invest in the industry due to the lack of integrity in the licensing system and the lack of management of peak trekking periods.
  • Peak periods occur during the Anzac and school holiday periods.
  • There is no protection for the welfare of PNG guides and carriers engaged by trek operators.
  • There are no protocols to ensure campsite owners are paid the recommended fees.
  • There is no effective ranger system.
  • There is no trek itinerary management system.
  • There is no campsite booking system.
  • There is no campsite development system.
  • There is no trail maintenance plan.
  • There is no management database.

Military Heritage

  1. 65th anniversary (2007): 37% increase.
  2. 70th anniversary (2012): 23% increase.[iv]
  3. 75th anniversary (2017): 22% increase.

Key Stakeholder Needs

1.  Trekker Needs

2.  Landowner Needs

Key Considerations for a Marketing Strategy

  • ‘Kokoda Trail’ is the name of the Battle Honour awarded to the Papuan Infantry Battalion by the Commonwealth Battles Nomenclature Committee in 1953;
  • ‘Kokoda Trail’ was the name recommended by the PNG Geographical Place Names Committee, adopted, and gazetted by the PNG Government in 1972;
  • The Kokoda Trail is a 138 km trek across the Owen Stanley Ranges between Owers Corner and Kokoda;
  • The Kokoda campaign was a series of battles fought across the trail between Owers Corner and Kokoda during the period 29 July – 3 November 1942;
  • Kokoda is the only wartime pilgrimage in the world where trekkers experience reality in the form of personal deprivations; physical challenges; emotional linkages and group camaraderie.
  • Increases in trekker numbers during significant anniversary periods indicates that the wartime historical significance of the Kokoda campaign is the reason they commit to the pilgrimage – just as they do for Gallipoli and Anzac battlefields in Europe.

Military Heritage Master Plan

Marketing Strategy

1.  Anzac Day

2.  Kokoda Day

Owers Corner

Word-of-Mouth Marketing

Media Interest – Kokoda

Social Media

Kokoda Smartphone Coverage

Conclusion

Recommendations

  • Develop a Military Heritage Master Plan to protect, honour and interpret significant sites along the Kokoda Trail.
  • Develop the Anzac Dawn Service as a joint RSL-PNG service through the inclusion of:-  a PNG commemorative segment and
  • –  a ‘Spirit Haus’ as a cenotaph[x] to provide a spiritual resting place for the wartime carriers whose remains have never been found.
  • Proclaim ‘Kokoda Day’ on 3rd November (the day the Australian flag was raised on the Kokoda plateau) to commemorate the service and sacrifice of the PNG wartime carriers.
  • Develop Owers Corner as a Commemoration Centre.
  • Develop a professional, interactive website for the Kokoda Trekking Industry.
  • Develop a Social Media Strategy to maintain dialogue with trekkers, trek operators, ex-service organizations, educational institutions, local and international media organisations and government bodies.

Bomana War Cemetery

[i] Michael Pender – Accredited Military Heritage Architect who has designed and developed memorials at Isurava, Sandakan and Hellfire Pass.

[ii] The decline has resulted in a loss of K34 million in tourism revenue for PNG; a loss of 70,000 working days for PNG guides and carriers; and a loss of K1 million for campsite owners along the trail.

[iii] Many trek operators licensed by the KTA do not have legitimate companies and do not therefore have registered Public Liability Insurance cover for their trekkers.

[iv] A fatal air-crash in 2009 saw trekker numbers decline by 33% over the following two years from 4364 to 2914 in 2011.The 70th anniversary of the Kokoda campaign in 2012 resulted in a 23% increase from 2914 to 3597.

[v] The $50 million cost of the Australian Government ‘Kokoda Development Program/Kokoda Initiative’ seems to have been spent on salaries and consultant fees in pursuit of an environmental agenda for the Owen Stanley Ranges.

[vi] Not a single historical memorial has been developed at any significant site along the trail despite the expenditure of $50 million on the ‘Kokoda Initiative’ since 2009.

[vii] The Isurava Memorial designed and developed by Hewitt-Pender has a spiritual ambience for trekkers – it is a place that allows for quiet contemplation due to the power of its interpretation.

[viii] The word cenotaph is derived from the Greek kenos taphos, meaning “empty tomb.” A cenotaph is a monument, sometimes in the form of a tomb, to a person or group of persons buried elsewhere.

[ix] A catafalque is a raised structure supporting a stand that usually holds a coffin to allow mourners to file past and pay their last respects. A watch or catafalque party was traditionally mounted around the coffin to ensure the safety of the body while it lay in state.

[x] The word cenotaph is derived from the Greek kenos taphos, meaning “empty tomb.” A cenotaph is a monument, sometimes in the form of a tomb, to a person or group of persons buried elsewhere.