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Packed prison puts crims in containers (update April 08)

The Federal Intervention is manifestly oppressive to Aboriginal people

Berrimah prison is full - (I was in there earlier this year ('07) for an anti-racism protest in '02) - The NT State's preferred option is more black prisons

These prisons are used as POW camps in the ongoing war of invasion against Aboriginal people

Two PARIAH members were also imprisoned in Berrimah in 2001 for their part in a protest to support the people of East Timor in 1999

Mick Lambe- August 07

Nationalism + Militarism + Racism = Fascism*

- Image depicts Australian Federal Parliament flagpole atop Uluru

*(Source: history)

Australian militarism

"Australians were on hand even for the Boer war and the Boxer Rebellion. They were involved in more of the 20th century's major wars than either the British or the Americans"

 

The Federal intervention into Northern Territory Aboriginal homelands - is partly military

Mining (uranium) pastoral and military interests - all benefit from this increased control

 

The arms race in SE Asia and Australia's tacit approval of Indonesian 'terrorism' in West Papua - are indicative of our flawed militarist mindset

 

 

Militarism in the Northern Territory

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Brough's secret meeting with Yunupingu PDF Print E-mail
Written by Lindsay Murdoch   
Aug 20, 2007 at 09:12 AM

Brough's secret meeting with Yunupingu

Lindsay Murdoch
August 15, 2007

GALARRWUY Yunupingu, the Northern Territory's most powerful Aboriginal leader, has secretly met federal Indigenous Affairs Minister Mal Brough and other indigenous leaders to discuss his concerns about the Howard Government's intervention in remote indigenous communities.

Mr Yunupingu, a former Australian of the Year and former head of the Northern Land Council, had earlier described the intervention as "sickening, rotten and worrying".

Mr Brough travelled to Mr Yunupingu's homeland in Arnhem Land last Sunday, where the two men discussed the intervention and other issues, Mr Brough's spokesman Kevin Donnellan confirmed last night.

Other indigenous leaders, including Noel Pearson, director of the Cape York Institute for Policy and Leadership, were at the meeting, which took most of Sunday.

Mr Pearson had earlier urged the government to listen to the criticisms of the intervention by the Territory's leaders, including Mr Yunupingu.

"The difference between disaster and success will depend on whether Brough and (Prime Minister John) Howard will engage with Yunupingu and the traditional leaders of the NT on the way forward," Pearson wrote in a newspaper article published on Saturday.

Mr Brough then travelled to Canberra, where he presented the controversial intervention legislation in Parliament that will allow the government to effectively seize control of 73 Northern Territory communities.

"They had a constructive meeting on a range of issues, including obviously the intervention," Mr Donnellan said.

Mr Yunupingu has been one of the strongest critics of the intervention, telling people at the Garma indigenous festival to fight "the sickness of this government setting out to simply take away what's rightfully ours."

Mr Yunupingu criticised the government for failing to consult with indigenous people before deciding to go ahead with the intervention.

Mr Brough was scheduled to attend Garma, one of Australia's biggest indigenous festivals, but cancelled.

Source - The Age

____________________________________________________________

 

 


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1. 30-10-2007 10:10
 
Brough endorses Yunupingu
Yunupingu's speech shows change of attitude: Brough 
 
Monday, 29 October 2007 9:52:16 AM 
 
By Tara Ravens 
 
DARWIN, October 29, 2007: Federal Minister for Indigenous Affairs Mal Brough says a speech by one of Australia's most prominent Aboriginal leaders reflects the changing attitude towards the government's intervention in Aboriginal communities. 
 
Galarrwuy Yunupingu, the former head of the Northern Land Council, on Saturday night threw his support behind Liberal plans to recognise Aboriginal people in the constitution. 
 
He said it was an opportunity to correct past wrongs and "recognise the special place of Aboriginal people in the Australian nation". 
 
"Without doubt, we now have a new opportunity," the veteran land rights campaigner said in a speech to the University of Melbourne Law School. 
 
"We now face the start of a process that has the potential to set this generation apart, as a generation of unifiers and peacemakers." 
 
Mr Yunupingu again voiced his support for the federal government's intervention in the Northern Territory to combat child sex abuse, despite having some problems with its implementation. 
 
But he warned reconciliation could not take place while Indigenous Australians remained the nation's most disadvantaged people. 
 
Visiting an Aboriginal community in the heart of Darwin yesterday, Mr Brough said the Aboriginal leader's opinions were symptomatic of a broader shift in opinion. 
 
"Galarrwuy's speech was a very powerful speech because it actually reflected the changing attitude of so many indigenous leaders," he told reporters. 
 
Mr Brough said what leaders now wanted was "to move forward". 
 
"I support what Galarrwuy Yunupingu is doing," he said. 
 
"I support his right to be able to do exploration on his own land and to get the wealth from his own land and his own people's and to benefit his community." 
 
Last month, Mr Yunupingu agreed to begin negotiations for a 99-year lease over his Arnhem Land community of Ski Beach. 
 
Mr Brough was yesterday heckled by angry residents of the Bagot community, who told the minister he was not welcome and to stop telling them how to live. - AAP 
 
http://nit.com.au/breakingNews/story.aspx?id=13141
 
National Indigenous Time
2. 03-11-2007 10:30
 
Yunupingu does U-turn...
Yunupingu does U-turn on NT intervention 
 
 
Peter Robson 
5 October 2007 
 
 
In a surprise move, former Northern Land Council chairperson Galarrwuy Yunupingu has reversed his opposition to the Howard government’s intervention into NT Aboriginal communities and, on September 20, announced that he had made a deal with federal Indigenous affairs minister Mal Brough to enter into 99-year leases to Canberra of parts of his traditional land in north-east Arnhem Land.  
 
 
In exchange for the leases, the federal government has promised to upgrade services and to help future economic development at the Arnhem Land town of Ski Beach, which is on Yunupingu’s traditional land.  
 
Yunupingu was previously a harsh critic of the NT intervention. But he now says that after a six-hour secret meeting with Brough on August 21, which was brokered by Cape York Institute director Noel Pearson, his fears of the NT intervention being an attack on Native Title rights have been allayed.  
 
The 99-year lease system, which the Howard government is offering to all Aboriginal townships in the NT, converts freehold native title into government land in exchange for funding for the infrastructure necessary for services such as health care and education.  
 
These 99-year leases are an extended version of the five-year leases that the Howard government is imposing on more than 70 Aboriginal towns in the NT under its “emergency” intervention plan that places the lives of their inhabitants under the management of federal government bureaucrats.  
 
The deal Yunupingu has managed to make with Brough places Ski Beach under a proposed “Mala Elders’ Group”, which will therefore mean that there will remain some Indigenous control over the township. This is similar to the pilot program run on the Cape York Peninsula by Pearson, under which an “elders’ group”, rather than government bureaucrats, oversees management of the assets of the local Aboriginal community.  
 
By contrast, a 99-year lease signed with the government by the Tiwi Islanders on September 6, lacks any such provisions for Indigenous input into decision-making and was signed in exchange for $5 million in funding and 25 new houses. Such public housing would exist already in any white community of a similar size.  
 
The Ski Beach deal also only leases certain parts of the land to the government, rather than the whole area, as is the case with all other Indigenous freehold land now that the NT intervention legislation has passed both houses of the federal parliament.  
 
The disparity has led some to question whether the public support that Pearson and Yunupingu have given to the NT intervention — as well as their reputations as Indigenous leaders — has enabled to them to secure better deals from the government than they otherwise would have gotten.  
 
Olga Havnen, of the newly formed National Aboriginal Alliance (NAA), told the September 20 Sydney Morning Herald that the Ski Beach deal placed Yunupingu’s previous statements of opposition to the policy in question.  
 
“You might go so far as to suggest it’s rather opportunistic”, she said. “You’d have to ask how genuine is that support, or is it about self-interest?”  
 
The SMH also reported that some Ski Beach residents were also deeply worried about what Yunupingu had done on their behalf.  
 
ABC News reported on September 21 that an “Arnhem Land elder says other clan groups do not support” the deal, and on September 25 that leaders from Yirrkala and Laynhapuy, in east Arnhem Land “say it is unacceptable for the Commonwealth to strike deals with individuals. Yananymul Mununggurr from the Djapu Clan at Yirrkala says under the Land Rights Act other affected traditional owners in the region must be consulted before any agreement is approved.”  
 
Mununggurr said: “The government is not consulting with all of the leaders. Each clan has our own leader and what the government is doing is they are cherry picking the leaders and they think they know who our leaders are but they don’t.”  
 
The NAA has maintained its opposition to the NT intervention, earning it the ire of Brough, who told the September 20 SMH: “I have no willingness to work with a group that actually puts out a flier that says ‘come and talk about the invasion of the NT’.”  
 
NAA leaders Havnen and Pat Turner defended their position at a October 5 public forum in Redfern. “Of 700 pages of legislation that we received to review in one day before the legislation was set to pass the Senate”, said Turner, “the word ‘child’, or ‘children’ or ‘child protection’ did not appear once in those 700 pages.  
 
“This [child protection] is the Trojan Horse used to attack Native Title… there have been rooms full of reports to do with the poor conditions of Indigenous people in this country, and it’s only this one — in an election year — that the government has decided to act upon.”  
 
Havnen said that there was some hope when the intervention was first talked about that there would be more money for services. Half the money has been slated however to fund the bureaucracy needed to implement the intervention and $88 million is being used to administer the “quarantining” of welfare payments, where all Indigenous people in the NT who were on welfare payments on June 22 now have 50% of their payments converted into “essentials only” expenses. They cannot spend this on alcohol, pornography or cigarettes and must line up each fortnight with photo ID to receive store vouchers instead.  
 
Havnen also attacked the ending of the Community Development Employment Program, which she said was closed down because, as CDEP payments are actually wages, the government had no power to quarantine them like welfare payments.  
 
The forum endorsed nationwide actions on October 15 to oppose the NT intervention.
 
Green Left Weekly

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