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Australian parliament "regrets" injustice to Aboriginal
people
Behind the politics of "reconciliation"
By Nick Beams
30 August 1999
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To the casual observer, the passage last Thursday of a resolution
by the Australian federal parliament expressing deep and
sincere regret for past injustices against the Aboriginal
people might appear as a step towards the achievement of genuine
social equality.
At least that is how the Howard Liberal government is hoping
it will be interpreted, especially in the Asian region where Australia's
treatment of its indigenous population has been something of a
political embarrassment.
Closer examination of the circumstances surrounding the resolution,
however, reveals otherwise. The resolution has nothing to do with
a commitment to address the mounting social problems confronting
Aboriginal people. Rather, it is the outcome of a series of manoeuvres
involving members of the government, representatives of big businessespecially
mining companiesand a thin layer of so-called Aboriginal
leaders.
The immediate origins of last Thursday's historic vote
lie in the Reconciliation Conference held in May 1997. This gathering
was no small affair. Staged at a cost of nearly $1 million by
the government-backed Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, and
sponsored to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars by some
of the biggest corporate names in the country, the conference
was supposed to set up a mechanism for the resolution of conflicts
between claimants for native title rights over land
and the operations of mining companies.
As the Australian Financial Review put it at the time:
As Australia's mining industry now recognises the task of
reconciliation is not a bleeding heart obsession of the white
chattering classes, but instead is a matter of practical business.
But the conference was thrown into disarray by the actions
of Howard. Anxious not to lose further rural support to the right
wing One Nation Party, the prime minister shouted at the audience,
launching into a vitriolic defence of his government's 10-point
plan to partially extinguish native title property
rights. These rights had been established by the High Court's
decision upholding the claims of the Wik people.
Howard's display, coupled with the refusal of his government
to offer an apology to the stolen generation
of Aboriginal children, forcibly removed by government authorities
from their parents as part of the official policy of assimilation,
led to a worsening of relations with the leaders of the various
Aboriginal bodies.
For two years the situation remained at an impasse, until the
entry of Aboriginal Aden Ridgeway. Ridgeway was elected to the
Senate, on the ticket of the Australian Democrats in New South
Wales, at the October 1998 elections, and entered the federal
parliament on July 1.
Earlier this year, Howard had successfully negotiated the passage
of the government's Goods and Services Tax legislation with the
Democrats. He was therefore eager to seek further collaboration
with themand Ridgeway in particularto try and recover
the opportunities he had lost at the Reconciliation Conference.
Ridgeway provided the crucial link in the negotiations. A former
president of the NSW Aboriginal Land Council, he was well known
to former NSW Liberal Party president Bill Heffernan, who was
made Cabinet secretary after the October 1998 elections.
Heffernan is described as a man with extensive networks and
close to some of the biggest names in business. He
worked to ensure passage of a resolution through the Liberal Party
and its coalition partner, the National Party. Ridgeway's task
was to lock in the support of key Aboriginal leaders, including
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission chairman Gatjil
Djerrjura, the chairwoman of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation,
Evelyn Scott and former ASTIC chairwoman Lowitja O'Donoghue among
others.
Negotiations over a preamble to the Constitution, to be voted
on in the November 6 referendum on the republic, provided a test
for the new relationship. After discussions with Ridgeway and
the Democrats, Howard agreed to drop the proposed reference to
mateship in the preamble and insert a phrase pointing
to Aboriginal kinship with the land, carefully avoiding
any mention of custodianship (preferred by many Aboriginal
leaders) lest this provide the basis for future property or compensation
claims.
With the passage of the preamble through both houses of parliament,
the stage was set for the expression of regret. In
his carefully crafted maiden speech to the Senate, Ridgeway, eschewing
any use of the terms sorry or apology,
provided the form of words that was then incorporated in the government's
declaration.
While the resolution easily passed through both houses of parliament,
it did not win unanimous support. The Labor Party opposed it,
after amendments incorporating an unreserved apology and compensation,
moved by ALP leader Kim Beazley, were defeated. Beazley's actions
were not motivated by concern to right the wrongs of the past
any more than Howard's were. Rather, his anxiety was that the
resolution, while winning support from the leaders of government-backed
bodies, would be regarded as a betrayal in the wider Aboriginal
community.
The problem with the government resolution, he declared, was
that it did not go far enough to put the issue behind us.
These considerations were also behind the decision of ten Aboriginal
spokesmen, including the co-author of the stolen generation
report Mick Dodson, to oppose the resolution. Branding it as a
hasty and disgraceful pretence, they feared losing
credibility if they were seen to be backing the government.
Editorial comment in the press, while making the obligatory
references to the need to address the social and economic disadvantages
of indigenous Australians, threw some light on the real motivations
behind the resolution. In an editorial entitled Time to
end a sorry affair the Sydney Morning Herald commented:
The motion of apology to Aborigines passed by the Parliament
... is not perfect, nor as strong as it might have been. But it
should put an end to the months of futile wrangling over words
which has stood in the way of more constructive action.
Two years ago, the Herald, along with other sections
of the press, condemned Howard's actions at the Reconciliation
Conference. But times have changed and the Ridgeway initiative
provided new political opportunities.
As the editorial noted, Howard was lucky to get a second
chance to resolve this long-running controversy, which threatened
to become an even greater headache for the Government, with international
implications, next year before and during the Olympics.
A lengthy editorial in the Murdoch-owned newspaper the Australian
contained fulsome praise for Howard, declaring that his parliamentary
statement went much further than any previous prime minister
has been prepared to in acknowledging that Australia, to be a
whole country, not only must recognise the disasters of past public
policy but must work together with Aboriginal communities for
a future that is beneficial to all.
What that future will bring was set out in a previous Australian
editorial comment praising a recent speech by corporate lawyer
and Aboriginal leader Noel Pearson, denouncing government
welfare as being responsible for Aboriginal ill-health and unemployment
and calling for the imposition of a market economy.
The Australian editorial noted that while the report
on the forced removal of the stolen generation was
a necessary step towards official and community recognition
that a horrible wrong has been done to tens of thousands of Aboriginal
people, its use of the term genocide had harmed
the cause of reconciliation by describing official
policies in terms appropriate to military dictatorship.
For the Aboriginal people, however, the capitalist state was,
in essence, nothing other than a dictatorship carrying out a form
of genocide. After their forbears had been shot or poisoned, the
children of the stolen generation were forcibly removed
from their parents, as part of a policy aimed at the elimination
of the Aboriginal race.
As the Australian editorial demonstrates, the ideological
spokesmen of the ruling class are always extremely sensitive to
any exposure of this history. After all, it lays bare one of the
darkest secrets of Australian capitalism, puncturing the carefully
cultivated myth of a society founded on egalitarianism.
There is a saying that when the ruling classes decide to apologise
for the crimes of the past, it is only to better carry on those
of the present. The ever-worsening position of the Aboriginal
populationa life expectancy 20 years less than the average,
increasing rates of imprisonment, rising drug abuse, overcrowded
housing, lack of basic facilities, to name but a few of the current
social illstestifies to its truth.
The program of reconciliation has got nothing to do with overcoming
past or present injustices. It has a different purpose: to reconcile
a thin layer of Aboriginal politicians, bureaucrats, community
leaders and aspiring businessmen to the capitalist state and the
free market agenda, while the more than 200-year oppression
of the overwhelming majority of the indigenous population continues.
See Also:
A damning report on Australian Aboriginal
health and welfare
[14 August 1999]
The politics
of Australia's 'National Sorry Day'
[2 June 1998]
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