A documentary about the forced eviction of 3000 squatters from a shanty town in Port Moresby can be shown after a court threw out a legal challenge by one of the film's central figures, Dame Carol Kidu (pictured), the Australia-born former opposition leader of Papua New Guinea. In a damning finding for the revered politician, Supreme Court Justice Nigel Rein questioned Dame Carol's credibility as a witness and dismissed her claim that she thought she was taking part in a school assignment and did not know that novice Australian filmmaker Hollie Fifer was producing a feature documentary to be shown worldwide. The 77-minute documentary, The Opposition, centres on the day in 2012 when an Australian-linked company sent in bulldozers, accompanied by armed PNG police, to raze the historic shanty town on Paga Hill. The development company is transforming the $300 million harbourfront site into a hotel and marina precinct. In 2012, Ms Fifer followed Dame Carol into Paga Hill, located in her electorate, as the politician pleaded unsuccessfully with police to stop people's homes being bulldozed.