It
is conservatively estimated that at
least 750,000 Indigenous people lived on the continent when
the first fleet arrived from Britain to begin colonisation. After
invasion on 26 January 1788, Indigenous people were almost decimated
by massacres and widespread poisoning, imprisonment, the forced
removal of children and programs of assimilation and racial
“dilution”. By federation in 1901, the Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander population had diminished
to about 117,000.
Sol
Bellear,
a former rugby league player for South
Sydney Rabbitohs and
Aboriginal rights activist, talks about the recent damning
interim report by the UN special rapporteur Victoria Tauli-Corpuz,
and another
by Oxfam,
both scathing assessments of – among many other things – rates of
Indigenous child removal, incarceration, the lack of government
commitment to self-determination, health, education and employment.
“All
these reports just sit there and gather dust. Now and then, someone
will pick one up and say: ‘Maybe we should implement such and such’
– or maybe not, because it’s all too hard,” Bellear says. “It’s
partly racism, it’s partly history. To really address what’s
wrong today, we need to drill into that colonial history and admit
all the terrible things that were done to us.”
By
the measure that successive governments have (since 2008) used to
determine Indigenous outcomes – the annual Closing
the Gap report to
the Australian federal parliament –
the Commonwealth has dismally failed its First People. It has been
long established that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
people die
earlier than other Australians and have far worse health,
educational, economic and employment outcomes. Closing the Gap was
formulated to end the disparity, but the
last report showed Australia
had failed to improve or gone backwards on six of seven critical
measures.
Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islanders constitute some 3% of the country’s
overall population – yet in 1991, they comprised 14% of Australia’s
prisoners. A quarter of a century later, that figure was up to 27% –
while more than 150 Indigenous people had died in custody in the
intervening 25 years. In
some parts of Australia, many more young Indigenous men complete
prison terms than high school. The Indigenous rate of imprisonment is
15 times the age-standardised non-Indigenous rate. As Thalia Anthony
pointed out in her
2015 book Indigenous People, Crime and Punishment,
rates of Indigenous incarceration in Australia today match those of
black imprisonment in apartheid South Africa.
Historian, Donald Horne in
1964 wrote a withering critique that cultural assimilation ultimately
meant “absorption, and that means extinction ... As a ‘nation’
with its own way of life, and even as a race, the aborigines are
still destined to disappear.”
Jon
Altman, a Deakin University academic specialising in Indigenous
economy says
Horne’s view shows “how little the dominant settler colonial way
of thinking about the Indigenous economy has changed”, because
central policy goals of many governments since have still been “to
integrate Indigenous people into the conventional Australian economy
and society”.
He
says, “The current articulation of this goal is the Closing the Gap
policy framework, pursuing targets unilaterally set by the state and
measured by official statistics.” According to Altman: “Policy is
increasingly influenced by a neoliberal trope emphasising
individualism, entrepreneurship, material accumulation and the free
market – anathema to many Indigenous people, whose norms and values
remain focused on kin, community and country. It sounds little
different from the assimilation discourse of the early 1960s.”
Australia’s
governments have consistently demonstrated an inability to make
policies that improve Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander lives.
Henrietta Fourmile Marrie, a member of the National Museum of
Australia’s Indigenous Reference Group, explains, “Our people,
like so many people, were removed from their land and taken away from
their culture and put on missions and reserves. And then their
culture was taken and put in museums all over the world, and
reinterpreted, so that we are now told what it means.”
“The
’67 referendum gave us the right to be counted on the census, but
it didn’t give us anything much else. It was just words on paper
that had really no meaning. Everything we got after that, we had to
fight hard to get – and nothing has changed.” Marrie
says the federal government was empowered to make Indigenous lives
better, yet laws – state and federal – continue to oppress them.
She cites the 2007
Northern Territory Intervention,
during which government troops were sent into communities amid
allegations of child abuse. Convictions for child abuse in relevant
communities did not increase significantly during the intervention. She
also discusses the 2013 Protection
of Cultural Objects on Loan Act:
a law passed largely at the behest of the British Museum, to provide
a legal barrier to claims from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
owners of items on loan to Australia from the museum’s Indigenous
collection. She sees this as an act of cultural imperialism and
oppression – part of a continuum consistent with the theft of
traditional lands, the policy of assimilation with all its
malevolence, and the disconnection from her people’s culture.
“But
we are still not free,” Tarneen Callope insists.“We
cannot pretend we belong to a free and democratic nation, and not
advocate against the human rights violations directed specifically at
Aboriginal people in this country. We have to expose the truth, tell
all of our stories and teach our children real Australian history
https://www.theguardian.com/inequality/2017/may/18/50-years-since-indigenous-australians-first-counted-why-has-so-little-changed-1967-referendum
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