Noah Musingku (born 1964), also known as King David Peii II, is a Bougainvillean conman.
In the late 1990s, he created a highly successful Ponzi scheme called U-Vistract. Facing prosecution from Papua New Guinean authorities, Musingku fled to the Solomon Islands in 2002. He returned to Bougainville and holed up with Francis Ona, the secessionist leader. While Bougainville is administered by the Autonomous Bougainville Government (ABG), Ona claimed that Bougainville, which he called Me'ekamui, was already an independent state.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Musingku stayed in the small Me'ekamui-controlled "no go zone" before returning to Tonu, his home village, in 2004. Declaring Tonu the Kingdom of Papaala, he rechristened himself King David Peii II. Musingku continued his scams, which took the form of banks. He allied with Me'ekamui, which he had convinced Ona to restructure as a kingdom. After Ona died in 2005, Musingku proclaimed himself the king of Papaala and Me'ekamui. His unrecognized micronation, a small compound, remains. The ABG has yet to prosecute him due to the potential for further political instability and because they lack armed forces, while Musingku has a small bodyguard of Fijian mercenaries. Other Me'ekamui factions do not recognize his kingdoms. After the 2019 Bougainville independence referendum, Musingku's is one of two Me'ekamui factions who still challenge the ABG's authority.[7]
Background

Noah Musingku was born in 1964,[8] in Tonu, a small village in Siwai, South Bougainville.[9] In the late 1970s, Musingku went to Buin High School.[10] His schoolmates included James Tanis, who later became president of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville,[8] and Timothy Masiu, the member of parliament for South Bougainville.[10] Tanis remembers Musingku as a "mysterious kind of student" who was enthralled by rags-to-riches stories and bragged that his father was a Japanese spy during World War II who taught him how to read palms. After Tanis and his friends got caught stealing lab equipment to make an "invisibility potion" they drank, Musingku complained that they had messed up his recipe.[8] Musingku later attended Kerevat National High School on New Britain.[9] After he graduated, he briefly served in the Papua New Guinea Defence Force.[8]
Musingku took didiman and architectural courses at Unitech, but he never completed them.[9][11] Tanis recalled that, in 1988, when he saw Musingku again, he was going to classes in full military uniform and ran distance races holding a wooden stick as if it were a rifle.[8] He studied political science at the University of Papua New Guinea, where he served as president of the National Union of Students.[9][11]
In 1988 a civil war began with workers and landowners from Panguna mine. This mine, owned by the PNG government and Bougainville Copper, a subsidiary of Rio Tinto Group, was established under Australian aegis.[12]
A Unilateral Declaration of Independence was made on 17 May 1990, but Australian and New Zealand-brokered peace talks tended to ignore this fact. Francis Ona controlled over half of the island, and proclaimed himself king of Me’ekamui ("holy land") in May 2004. Musingku assumed the throne of Paapala Kingdom, as well as his 500-man "Me'ekamui Defense Force"[13] in the same year, and upon Ona's death from malaria in July 2005, Musingku consolidated control of the "Twin Kingdoms" on Bougainville Island.
U-Vistract
In 1997, seven years after the unilateral declaration of independence, the Bougainville Revolutionary Army was in control of the island, but its leadership split into factions. Ona was in control of the army, and sought full independence.[14]
Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) found U-Vistract to be an unlicensed securities and investment program.
- Within a few years, some 70,000 Papua New Guineans had deposited K350 million into U-Vistract alone. U-Vistract also attracted followers in Australia, Solomon Islands and Fiji. In Australia, a small number of Queensland investors contributed some AUD500,000 between July and October 1999.[15]
From Australia, he went to Port Moresby,. While in Port Moresby, he tried to set up a bank in the old Hawaiian Bank building, but he was shut down by the PNG government and forced to leave to the Solomon Islands. He began again to set up his system, but the Australian police in the Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands (RAMSI) forced him out. In 2003 he travelled to Ona's headquarters in Guava, Panguna, Bougainville, and established a bank there. Two years later he was able to travel to his ancestral village of Tonu, where he established his bank headquarters in an old cattle farm owned by the paramount chief.[16]
References
- ^ "Mercenaries return to PNG", The World Today/ABC Radio, 15 November 2005
- ^ "Musingku urged to surrender", Post-Courier, 30 November 2006
- ^ "Fijians look forward to re-uniting with families" Fiji Times Online, 12 February 2008
- ^ "SI border raids prompt talks", Papua New Guinea Post-Courier, 13 September 2006
- ^ "Bougainville's conman 'king' still on the run as island edges closer to independence", ABC News, 15 November 2020
- ^ Wyeth, Grant (27 January 2021). "Musingku: Bougainville's 'Royal' Pyramid Scheme Problem". The Diplomat. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ "Bougainville extends inclusiveness to Musingku and Koike". Radio New Zealand. 2 August 2019. Retrieved 28 August 2024.
- ^ a b c d e Williams, Sean (November 2024). "The Island King". Harper's Magazine. Illustrated by Daniel Liévano. Retrieved 1 April 2025.
- ^ a b c d Cox 2018, p. 27.
- ^ a b Nalu, Malum (26 September 2016). "Masiu holds talk with Musingku". The National. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
- ^ a b Cox 2011, p. 187.
- ^ The Times, 4 September 1975
- ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Bougainville - Papua New Guinea. YouTube.
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 18 January 2011.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Papala Chronicles Issue 7 p 10 - ^ [1] Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine http://www.csrm.uq.edu.au/docs/SSGM_09_05_bainton_cox.pdf
- ^ Ilya Gridneff, "U-Vistract conman offers 'Jesus money'", Sydney Morning Herald, 8 July 2009
Bibliography
- Cox, John (2018). Fast Money Schemes: Hope and Deception in Papua New Guinea. Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253025609.
- Cox, John (2011). Deception and Disillusionment: Fast Money Schemes in Papua New Guinea (PDF) (PhD thesis). University of Melbourne. Retrieved 1 April 2025.
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