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
Replies from Senators - Re Federal intervention into Aboriginal homelands
Written by Mick Lambe
Aug 21, 2007 at 11:15 PM
Dear Mick
Thank you for your email. The Greens did not support this legislation - in fact they strongly opposed the intervention legislation rushed through Parliament last week. That this legislation bypasses the Anti Discrimination Act is a measure we find abhorrent and totally unjustifiable.
The Greens put a range of amendments to try and improve the legislation, none of which the government supported. The Greens voted against this Bill - Continued ...
Northern Territory Intervention legislation sadly passes Parliament - Continued ...
More Replies - Natasha Stott Despoja - Australian Democrat Senator for South Australia | Senator Rachel Siewert Australian Greens' spokesperson for Indigenous Affairs
...Continues (Greens)
I think you will be interested in a couple of Bob’s speeches to the Senate this week. Here are the links :
The Greens have long been working to promote the urgent need to address Aboriginal health and welfare issues. Bob identified the rights of indigenous Australians as a priority for the Greens in his first speech in 1996 and since that time has been a leading voice in the national parliament about indigenous affairs. Bob has led the way on two milestones on two indigenous affairs in particular – mandatory sentencing of children in the NT and WA, and petrol sniffing in the Central Desert region. By contrast, the Howard government’s recent announcement of a state of emergency after eleven years of inaction is a cynical exercise.
The Greens recognise that there are serious issues in some indigenous communities that require immediate action. What we want to see is an action plan developed in consultation with indigenous communities and relevant support services, and one that is comprehensive, culturally appropriate, and one that will work over the longer term. It is important to note that the Little Children are Sacred report listed consultation with the communities concerned as a primary recommendation. We don’t think Howard and Brough’s military-style approach is a plan that will succeed in these terms.
The Greens support the approach to these issues put forward by the Combined Aboriginal Organisations of the NT, and call on the Coalition and the ALP to support the CAO too. For this report, please click here:
I also include here a brief summary from the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, which helps to give some context to e.g. the level of service provision and educational opportunities within remote communities of the NT:
The Greens remain concerned that the issue of child safety and social breakdown experienced by some aboriginal communities has been linked to an attempt to overturn community land title.
Bob made mention of the missed opportunity of another Budget surplus to bring real reform and adequate funding to Aboriginal health and housing across the nation – by contrast, the Green budget would prioritise reducing the 17 year gap in life expectancy between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians. An extract from Bob’s budget reply ( 15 May 2007) is included here :-
“…Aboriginal health and housing is grossly underfunded and misdirected in this year’s budget. It will not go anywhere near far enough to address the 17-year life expectancy gap between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australians. The focus of the government’s budget measures is on regional and remote communities—and no doubt they deserve much more funding. However, the majority of Aboriginal Australians live in urban communities where their life expectancy is just as bad as those in remote communities.
Health experts agree that $500 million per year is required to lift Aboriginal health standards to those of non-Aboriginal Australians. Taking this figure, Tom Calma, the social justice commissioner, has proposed a plan to address the gap in life expectancy within a generation. The Greens back him. It is appalling that rather than $500 million this budget allocates only about $30 million per annum to this nationally urgent responsibility.
A further $2.3 billion is needed to catch up on housing levels, but the Costello budget actually takes money away from Aboriginal housing in urban areas, focusing on remote and regional areas. Having taken the funding from urban Aboriginal housing, the government has done nothing to ease housing affordability, leaving the majority of Aboriginal Australians worse, not better, off. Despite recent international attention on Australia’s record as the worst in the developed world on Indigenous health and development, the government has yet again failed to deliver on meaningful reform….”
Rachel Siewert is the Greens Senator responsible for Indigenous affairs – please direct future correspondence in relation to indigenous matters directly to Rachel.
Her email is
For further information about The Greens’ response please go to Rachel’s website - www.rachelsiewert.org.au.
I also include the motion passed by the Australian Greens at the party’s most recent National Council (15 July 2007) and a recent acticle she wrote for Crikey.com below for your reference.
Additionally, I have provided links to two articles from The Age and ABC news which outline Labor’s and a group of Indigenous leaders oposing responses to the Intervention.
Thanks again for writing to us on this important matter.
Regards
Emma Belfield
Office of Senator Bob Brown
__________________
Australian Greens National Council, Melbourne, 15 July 2007
Motion on the Federal Government’s intervention in the Northern Territory
That the Australian Greens National Council: Upholds the right of all Australian children to be safe, secure and free from neglect and abuse.
Recognises that child protection and early childhood development are pressing issues nationally (not just for Aboriginal children in the Northern Territory) that demand greater attention and resources.
After many years of government neglect and funding cutbacks, welcomes the recent focus on the plight of Aboriginal communities as an opportunity to address the entrenched disadvantage and lack of essential and human services these communities continue to experience.
Expresses concern that the current ‘crisis’ intervention in the Northern Territory is inappropriate, is contrary to evidence based child protection intervention, and does not build upon existing knowledge and experience or on successful programs in this area.
Notes that this intervention has taken place without consultation with the communities concerned, despite this being the primary recommendation of the Little Children are Sacred report.
Rejects the punitive and racially-based approach to welfare reform now supported by the Coalition and Labor as lacking in positive solutions that address the underlying causes of disadvantage.
Recognises that overturning land tenure and scrapping the permit system is not an appropriate response to child abuse and will be counter productive.
Calls for a greater investment in early childhood development programs, community centres, adult education programs, safe houses, schools, multifunction community learning centres, teachers, family workers, and community police
Wholeheartedly supports the Emergency response and development plan to protect Aboriginal children put forward by the Combined Aboriginal Organisations of the Northern Territory and indicates our ongoing commitment to work with Aboriginal and Islander communities and organisations to advance the recognition of their rights
Calls on the Coalition and Labor to adopt the Emergency response and development plan to protect Aboriginal children and enter into a partnership with Aboriginal communities to deliver a comprehensive long-term strategy that tackles the underlying causes of Indigenous disadvantage.
Brough's bills: a racist dog-whistle
Greens Senator Rachel Siewert writes in Crikey:
The fact that the Howard Government's new legislation is racist - that is, it breaches the Racial Discrimination Act 1975 (RDA) - is beyond doubt.
If the comments of former federal court judge Murray Wilcox (who described the legislation as "constitutionally valid but extremely discriminatory") are not enough, then the fact that all three Bills take the extraordinary step of explicitly over-riding the RDA should be all the confirmation you need that the Bills are discriminating on the basis of race.
The real question isn't whether the provisions are racist, it's whether they represent an acceptable form of positive discrimination.
The International Convention On The Elimination Of All Forms Of Racial Discrimination recognises that there are situations where governments need to legislate for a racial group to specifically address existing substantive injustices - like the huge disparity in health and living standards faced by our Indigenous population in the NT and across the country in urban, rural and remote areas. This is what is referred to as "special measures" in section 8 of the RDA and represent a kind of affirmative action.
All three Bills have sections which state that their provisions are to be considered "special measures" - however simply declaring that the Bills are "special measures" is not enough, they also need to match up to the criteria for special measures set out in the RDA.
That is, they have to provide a clear benefit to the group, have the sole purpose of securing the advancement of that group, they have to be necessary to achieve this benefit, and they have to stop when they have achieved this goal.
There are a host of questions on all of these points that have already been raised by Crikey over the last few weeks - including whether taking control of land and scrapping the permit system were necessary to tackle child abuse or to address problems with health, education and housing.
Mal Brough has yet to even attempt to present a coherent argument linking the two, and with Pat Anderson (one of the authors of the Little Children are Sacred Report) declaring yesterday that they felt 'used and betrayed' by the government and that the measures had nothing to do with addressing child protection issues, it appears that the government is on very shaky ground.
The same holds for the move to exempt Aboriginal people in the NT from having access to the Social Security Appeals Tribunal if they are not happy with the way that 50 percent of their welfare payments are quarantined or the balance of what Centrelink decides they should be spending it on.
Ultimately, from a legal point of view, the government doesn't actually need to bother with seeking to over-ride the RDA in these Bills. The Commonwealth already has the power to make laws which are inconsistent with the RDA (as clearly demonstrated in the Hindmarsh Bridge affair) and the rules of statutory interpretation means that when there is an inconsistency between laws the newer law automatically over-rides any earlier law. (The RDA does not operate like a bill of rights.)
So the decision to declare these bills as 'special measures' and to explicitly over-ride the RDA is a political one. The real question is whether the government thinks it can win the PR battle and convince the public that its heavy-handed paternalistic approach is really "for their own good".
The Greens are hopeful that the dog-whistle politics that clearly underlie the whole of this election year 'crisis' intervention will fall flat. Certainly there have been clear signs that this whole escapade hasn't produced the desired bounce in the polls and that the racist undercurrent hasn't been enough to turn the heads of the Aussie battlers who continue to desert Howard.
August 17 2007
Help make sure Senator Bartlett is re-elected to the Senate -
The legislation accompanying the NT Intervention consisted of 5 Bills with over 500 pages covering a wide range of complex and far-reaching changes which will have major impacts on the lives of Aboriginal people. The Bills were introduced into the House of Representatives on Tuesday 7th of August and were passed through that chamber that night.
The government's original intention was to force it through the Senate in the following two days. The Democrats efforts to enable a month for a Senate Committee to consider the legislation and hear from people in the Northern Territory were not successful, but thanks to significant public concern and pressure, a Senate Committee was able to hold a one day Senate inquiry in Canberra on Friday 10th August. This was still a ridiculously short time frame, particularly given the complex legislation had only just been tabled. It was outrageous that witnesses and submitters were given less than 2 days to prepare a submission and make arrangements to attend the hearings in Canberra . This not only meant people had little opportunity to get across the fine detail of a wide range of issues, but also that Senators had only a very limited opportunity to ask questions. As an example, I was only able to get 8 minutes to question the government departments about the entire package of legislation.
There were some really good points made in the hearings by numerous submitters about how people in the NT were genuinely wanting something to be done to address the issues, but nonetheless had a range of concerns about the way it was being done and some of the specific actions that were being proposed. The simple fact was that many people felt they were not being listened to. The answers from the main departments where this suite of legislation was hatched told the committee very little and reinforced many peoples' view that the Bills had very little to do with the Little Children are Sacred report, despite it being used by the Minister and the PM as a platform to announce these sweeping "emergency” measures. You can access a transcript of the hearings here.
A clear sign of the government's unwillingness to listen to differing views was the appalling decision by the government-controlled Senate Committee to refuse requests for the authors of the Little Children are Sacred report, Pat Anderson and Rex Wild, to give evidence to the inquiry. Oxfam initiated an alternative hearing during the lunch break, which I assisted in putting together, where we gave them both an opportunity to speak to interested Senators and media. Not surprisingly, none of the government Senators chose to attend this session.
You can read the Committee report, which was tabled in the Senate on Monday the 13th of August here, I was disappointed with the very weak recommendations contained in the main committee report, and included my own dissenting report, which you can read here. There was insufficient time to consider every aspect of the legislation, but I detailed some recommendations and changes that I felt should be implemented if real improvements were to happen.
The completely inadequate Senate Committee process meant that we had to use the debate in the Senate itself to try to raise questions and explore some of the many concerns and problems with the legislation. There are facets of the Bills that I was prepared to support, and the Democrats sought to maintain as much common ground as possible around the widely shared goal of improving the situation for Aboriginal children and families in the Territory.
The Democrats voted for the Bills at the second reading stage as an indication of our strong willingness to support the stated intent of the legislation – to improve the protection of children - and a desire to try to work constructively to make the legislation workable through amendment. We also opposed moves to delay debate on the Bills until October, staying with the views expressed by the Combined Aboriginal Organisations of the Northern Territory which recognised the urgency of the situation and called for the consideration of the Bills to occur in September, but both major parties insisted on the Bills being debated straight away.
The government displayed complete intransigence to every single amendment put forward, refusing to consider any improvements and displaying a consistent attitude that they believed they had everything completely right already and had no need to take any alternative views into account.
This attitude meant that no improvements to the Bills were able to be made, and serious flaws remained. Of particular concern to the Democrats were the exemptions form the Racial Discrimination Act, the takeover of Aboriginal land and weakening of the permit system, the lack of oversight and review of how the wide-ranging powers are to be used, and a massive overall increase in government power accompanied by a huge loss of control of Aboriginal people over their communities and many aspects of their day to day lives.
This left the Democrats with no alternative but to vote against the three main Bills at the final vote (known as the Third Reading stage). We voted in favour of the 2 Appropriation Bills which provided funding for some of the extra services to communities in the Territory, although it should be noted that much of the new money is going to provide new Centrelink workers, temporary accommodation for new workers and the like. The Bills were passed around noon on Friday 17th of August, after a midnight sitting of the Senate the night before.
The legislation is now passed, but it is important that attention remains focused on the needs of Indigenous people in the Territory and elsewhere. The Democrats will continue pushing for the needs of Indigenous Australians to be given greater priority in the lead up to the election. We will also try to ensure that the voices and views of Indigenous people are given much greater opportunity to have input and be heard than has been allowed to date by the federal government.
Stolen Generation compensation bill
Don't forget that I will be hoping to formally table my Stolen Generation Bill in the September sittings so I encourage all of you who haven't sent in submissions with your comments and feedback to do so by the 29th of August at the latest to Karen Lee. You can find more information at my Stolen Generations campaign page.
As always if you would like to raise an issue with me please contact my senior adviser, Karen Lee on 07 3252 7101 to discuss a possible meeting or if you should require any further information or clarification on issues.
First - my apologies for sending you a 'form' letter.
The response to the campaign to overturn the NT Bills has been so overwhelming that I can no longer answer the thousands of emails individually.
Thank you for your email regarding the Government's Northern Territory Emergency Response bills.
The Greens will be voting against these Bills.
I believe the bills are racist and discriminatory and will not deliver what is actually required to effectively tackle child abuse in the Northern Territory.
The government's top-down approach is fundamentally flawed. We are critical of the Howard-Brough crisis plan, which comes after 11 years of inaction and numerous reports, and attempts to superficially tackle complex issues in an election environment.
To succeed in the long term it is absolutely essential to have genuine community engagement and ownership of programs and initiatives addressing child abuse and the causes of child abuse. Community consultation is the first recommendation of the "Little Children are Sacred" report.
One of the key criticisms of the approach taken by the federal government is that they have failed to consult and failed to learn from the past. We want to see a more considered and comprehensive response and an evidence based policy that builds on existing knowledge of successful programs to deliver long-term solutions that strengthen and empower communities.
For further information on the Greens' response to this issue please refer to my website.
I appreciate you contacting me, please keep speaking up for what you believe.
Yours sincerely
Senator Rachel Siewert Australian Greens' spokesperson for Indigenous Affairs
NT intervention
"Stott Despoja, Natasha (Senator)"
Democrats
Dear Mr Lambe,
Thank you for your recent email regarding the Federal Government's intervention in the Northern Territory Indigenous communities to address child sexual abuse.
Abuse of children in any society is intolerable. Their protection is a priority, particularly where children live in communities lacking basic health, education and support services.
The Democrats have continuously campaigned for the Federal Government to take the initiative in addressing this problem and implement initiatives that help develop safe Indigenous communities. Immediate attention to the problem of child sexual abuse of Indigenous children is long overdue.
However, we are concerned about the inadequate consultation with Indigenous leaders and communities over these extreme measures and the lack of a sustainable long-term solution to this prolonged and complex problem. Consultation should have taken place before this heavy handed intervention took place. The response should not be a 'quick-fix' intrusion with little sensitivity to the communities directly affected.
The Australian Democrats tried to gain a month for the Senate Committee to properly consider the legislation and enable the people from the NT to be heard. We were unsuccessful. Instead, a one day Senate enquiry was held on August 10, giving submitters and witnesses two days to prepare submissions for the 500 page legislation.
The Northern Territory National Emergency Response Bill 2007, which was recently rushed through Parliament, is not only discriminatory but will be a major step backwards for hard fought land rights for Indigenous communities.
The Prime Minister's announcement and deployment of the military has inevitably instilled anxiety and uncertainty in many Indigenous communities. I want to make certain that every possible precaution is adopted so that women and children are not further traumatised. This issue requires an approach based on extreme personal and cultural sensitivity.
The Government rejected every amendment put forward. Of particular concern to the Australian Democrats were the exemptions from the Racial Discrimination Act, the takeover of Aboriginal land, the weakening of the permit system and the massive increase of Government power at the expense of Aboriginal people’s control over their communities.
Now that the legislation is passed it is important that we remain focussed on the needs of Aboriginal people. We will do everything we can to ensure that the voices and views of Indigenous Australians are given much greater opportunity to be heard and to have input.
I am very keen to continue to consult with Indigenous groups, particularly in South Australia, on the impacts of the new legislation and its implementation.
Yours sincerely,
Natasha Stott Despoja Australian Democrat Senator for South Australia
The Northern Territory Government is ramming through legislation to override a court decision preventing a controversial mine expansion from going ahead
Our refusal to accept the land's status as belonging
to the "Crown" and use of the courts
in exposing local racism was never appreciated
by the invasive interests protected and supported
by the former Country Liberal Party. The
family that won the right to the Kenbi claim
adopted
me as family, due to the State's attempts
to remove me from my (then) home of seven years
Many of the Belyuen people are related to the
people at One
Mile Dam Aboriginal Community where I spent
10 months living with the people and publicising
their concerns in 2005 (Mick Lambe)