Kondom Agaundo ( – 28 August 1966) was a Papua New Guinean tribal leader and politician. He served as a member of the
Legislative Council between 1961 and 1964.
Biography
Agaundo was born in
Wandi, a village near
Kundiawa, around 1917.
[Celebrating the life of pioneer leader]
The National, 9 September 2016[Agaundo, Kondom (1917–1966)]
Australian Dictionary of Biography His father was a war leader, but he was orphaned as a child. He subsequently grew up in
Koglai and developed a close relationship with the Australian authorities, carrying milk from the Catholic mission at
Mingende to the government compound at
Kundiawa.
[ In the 1940s he became ''luluai'' of his tribe. Encouraged by Australian officials, he built the first house in the area in 1959,][ as well as building a community hall and overseeing the development of coffee farming.][ Despite being illiterate, when Waiye Rural LLG was formed in 1959, Agaundo became its first president.][
He contested the Highlands seat in the 1961 elections, and was elected to the Legislative Council, where he demanded more development of the Highlands. A documentary, '' Kondom Agaundo, M.L.C.'', was made about him in 1962. In the first elections with universal suffrage in 1964 he contested the Chimbu seat, but finished third, losing to Waiye Siune. However, he continued as a member of the Eastern Highlands District Advisory Council,][ and became chairman of the Kundiawa Coffee Society, the largest co-operative society in the territory.][
Aguando had at least eight wives.][ He was killed in a road accident on the Daulo Pass in the Eastern Highlands in August 1966,][Mr. Kondon Agundo]
''Pacific Islands Monthly'', October 1966, pp154–155 and was buried at Wandi.[ The headquarters of ]Chimbu Province
Chimbu, more frequently spelled Simbu, is a province in the Highlands Region of Papua New Guinea. The province has an area of 6,112 km2 and a population of 376,473 (2011 census). The capital of the province is Kundiawa. Mount Wilhelm, the ta ...
were named after him in 1982, with a high school in Wandi named after him in 2012.[
]
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Aguando, Kondom
People from Chimbu Province
Members of the Legislative Council of Papua and New Guinea
1966 deaths
Year of birth uncertain
Road incident deaths in Papua New Guinea