|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
"Stolen generations" court case
Australian government defends forced removal of Aboriginal
children
By Brett Stone
10 November 1999
Use
this version to print
In a court case now finally underway in Australia, the federal
government has strenuously defended the past policy of forcibly
removing Aboriginal children from their families. The two Aboriginal
applicants began giving their testimony on August 10, after months
of delays and legal obstruction.
Lorna Cubillo and Peter Gunner, two members of the Stolen
Generations, are suing the government in the Federal Court
for compensation for the physical and psychological damage caused
by their forced removal when children and their subsequent institutionalisation
during the 1940s and 1950s under the official policy of assimilation.
From 1911 to the 1970s, children in the Northern Territory
were separated from their families if they were part-Aboriginal.
They were placed in various institutions under the most degrading
conditions so that they could be absorbed into white
society.
Cubillo was taken from Phillip Creek in 1947, when she was
seven or eight years old. She was incarcerated at the Loretta
Dixon Home in Darwin, run by the Aboriginal Inland Mission, an
inter-denominational Christian organisation. Gunner was seized
from Utopia Station in 1956 when he was seven years old. He was
incarcerated at the St. Mary's Home in Alice Springs, run by the
Anglican Church. Some of their testimony is reported in the accompanying
article.
Cubillo was stolen under the provisions of the
Aboriginals Ordinance of 1918, while Gunner's case was covered
by the Welfare Ordinance of 1953. Both regulations gave the government's
Department of Native Affairs sweeping rights to interfere in the
lives of Aborigines.
The Aboriginal Legal Service Litigation Unit is conducting
the legal case on behalf of Cubillo and Gunner, claiming unspecified
monetary compensation and also exemplary damages, on the grounds
that the actions of the Commonwealth were disgraceful and
reprehensible. The case alleges wrongful imprisonment due
to unlawful conduct, breach of duty as guardian, breach of statutory
duty, breach of fiduciary duty and breach of duty of care.
Cubillo and Gunner initially filed their claims some three
years ago. The first defence statement was made on February 21,
1997, after which the applicants filed amended claims in October
1997. On March 12, 1998 the government's barrister, Daniel Meagher
QC announced his intention to apply for summary dismissal, following
the court's announcement that a substantial trial might take place.
Meagher formally applied for dismissal on June 5, 1998 and
at the same time he applied for and obtained the right to have
defence testimony heard on August 3 to 7 last year, dates that
had been set aside for opening statements in the case. Because
of this, the opening statements were not made until March 1, 1999,
when Meagher concluded his remarks by outlining his case for summary
dismissal.
Justice O'Laughlin, presiding over the case, handed down a
judgment two months later, on April 30, 1999, rejecting the government's
bid for dismissal but substantially narrowing the legal grounds
of the case. The hearings, scheduled to last for three months,
finally began on August 10 in Darwin and after a delay in late
August, resumed in Alice Springs on August 30.
The government's lawyers have adamantly defended the policies
under which the removals took place. This is in line with the
publicly-stated position of today's senior government members,
including Prime Minister Howard and Aboriginal Affairs Minister
John Herron. The basis of this defence is that those removed benefited
by gaining access to education and other advantages that they
would otherwise have been denied.
Outlining the government's case, Meagher said documentation
would be shown revealing that the policy was beneficial to the
removed infants. It met a very serious welfare problem
whereby both the part-Aboriginal child and the mother became outcasts
within the tribal clan. Yet Meagher said it would be wrong to
apply the same treatment toward a child in the white community.
Today's defenders of the policy base themselves on the position
of Paul Hasluck, who was Minister for Territories when Peter Gunner
was removed. Hasluck, a veteran conservative politician, was later
elevated to the vice-regal post of Governor-General in 1969. Jack
Rush QC, the lawyer for Cubillo and Gunner, cited the following
passage in which Hasluck personally endorsed the separation of
half-caste children from their mothers:
For many years past under successive governments, the
policy has been that where half-caste children are found living
in camps full of full-blood natives, they should if possible,
be removed to better care so that they have a better opportunity
for education. The theory behind it is that if a half-caste child
remained with a bush tribe, he will grow up to have neither the
full satisfaction in life which the tribal native has, nor the
opportunity to advance to any upper status. This policy is applied
with care and discretion, and a full recognition on the part of
the administration that the mother has the same affections as
every woman. The patrol officers are required from time to time,
to visit various tribes of full-blood natives, and if it's decided
that the advantage of the child would be best served by removal,
the patrol officers endeavour to prepare the Aboriginal mother
for eventual separation, and to impress her with the advantages
which her child will gain. The objective is to have the child
willingly handed over to the custody of the Department of Native
Affairs, and where possible, the mother is permitted to accompany
the child to make the separation more gradual.
Hasluck's account bears no resemblance to reality. One can
only imagine the terrible pressure brought to bear in order to
coerce mothers into giving up their children. Legally, at no stage
was the removal of Aboriginal children dependent upon parental
consent. The 1953 Welfare Ordinance did provide for an effort
to obtain consent, but it was only passed in response to the growth
of considerable opposition among those officers charged with carrying
out the policy.
In 1949 a senior Territory patrol officer, Ted Evans, was given
the job of airlifting five Aboriginal children from Wave Hill
Station. On his return to Darwin he reported the removal
of the children was accompanied by distressing scenes the like
of which I wish never to experience again. This report became
widely known and in 1951, Dr. Charles Duguid, a defender of the
rights of Aborigines, gave a speech in Adelaide describing the
removal of Aboriginal babies as the most hated task of every
patrol officer.
Hasluck's assertion, echoed four decades later by Meagher,
that child removal was carried out for welfare purposes conveniently
seeks to hide from view the real purpose of the assimilation policy,
which was outlined at the first national conference of Aboriginal
administrators in 1937. Among those in attendance was Dr. Cecil
Cook, former Chief Protector of Aborigines in the Northern Territory,
and A. O. Neville, Western Australian Protector of Aborigines.
These two individuals were prominent proponents of policies designed
to bring about the biological disappearance of Aborigines.
The conference adopted a nation-wide policy for the absorption
or biological assimilation of the "half-caste. A. O.
Neville asked his colleagues: Are we to have a population
of 1,000,000 blacks in the Commonwealth or are we going to merge
them into our white community and eventually forget that there
were any Aborigines in Australia?
The first step towards achieving this goal, by breeding out
the colour, and preserving a White Australia, lay in the segregation
of the half-castes from the full-bloods
through the systematic removal of part-Aboriginal babies and children
from the Aboriginal settlements and camps. This is the fate that
befell Lorna Cubillo and Peter Gunner.
The government defends this racist policy today not because
of some misguided conception that it benefited Aborigines, but,
in the first instance, because of the vast potential costs of
compensation. Howard and his ministers also whitewash the policy
because their political heritage is traced back to those like
Hasluck who formulated and directly enforced it. Even more importantly,
assimilation was a distinct chapter in the 200-year
history of massacres, repression and dispossession directed against
the Aboriginal people. Without these policies, the continent's
best land could not have been cleared for profitable development.
Nevertheless, the current legal action does not seek to challenge
the statutes under which the removals were authorised; it merely
claims that those provisions were not properly implemented. This
was why Rush quoted Hasluckto lend credence to the argument
that the removals and detentions were unlawful. The legal argument
is that Cubillo and Gunner were removed without care and discretion,
ignoring the individual circumstances of the children, and that
parental consent had not been obtained, thereby contravening the
legislation. Moreover, the claim is that while the children were
in custody, the care that the Director of Native Affairs was obliged
to provide them under the legislation was not forthcoming. The
plaintiffs allege that the physical and psychological abuse, to
which they were subjected at their respective institutions, represented
a denial of what was owed them.
In their original legal submissions, Cubillo and Gunner referred
to international principles pointing to the criminality of the
Commonwealth's actions. This was an allusion to the UN Genocide
Convention. But Justice O'Laughlin dismissed this argument in
his ruling on April 30. The reference in the particulars
of claim to international principles' concerning the advancement
and protection of human rights is not appropriate, he declared.
International treaties are not part of our domestic law.
In fact, the High Court had already laid down this line of
reasoning. In the Kruger case, nine Aborigines challenged
the constitutionality of a statute under which part-Aboriginal
children were removed, specifically relating to the deprivation
of their rights to practice their tribal religion. This claim
fell within the bounds of the UN Genocide Convention. The High
Court, in rejecting the claim, maintained that the legislation
was enacted in the interests of Aborigines generally.
In his April 30 decision, O'Laughlin also declared, on prompting
from Meagher, that the court could not pass judgment on policies
that were at the time the accepted norm, even if they were now
widely condemned. He said the court could only deal with questions
of law.
These rulings represent a legal straitjacketing of the Stolen
Generations. As Professor Colin Tatz has demonstrated in
his report, Genocide in Australia, produced to substantiate
their cases, genocide is an appropriate way to describe the treatment
of the Aboriginal people.
O'Laughlin also struck out claims based on unlawful delegation
on the part of the administrators and claims for compensation,
which he said lacked particularity and centered on loss of entitlement
arising from the Land Rights Act.
As the case has unfolded, an obvious contradiction has emerged
in the government's case. When Meagher applied to have the case
summarily dismissed, he gave several reasons. First, he argued
that the Commonwealth had nothing to answer for, because in the
case of Cubillo the government played no role in her removal and
detention and, in the case of Gunner, parental consent had been
obtained.
Secondly, Meagher claimed it was difficult to establish the
truth of the events due to the lapse of time. He said Cubillo
should have brought her action 37 years ago and Gunner 26 years
ago. Because witnesses had died and those still living had impaired
memories, it would be manifestly unfair to grant Cubillo and Gunner
the extension of time they need to prepare their cases in full.
Now that the case is finally proceeding, the government is
promising to provide documentary proof of the benefits of the
official policy of removing children. Yet its main arguments have
been directed at denying responsibility for what actually happened
and at discrediting the evidence of Cubillo, Gunner and their
witnesses.
See Also:
"Stolen Generations" court
case Children lived in fear of seizure
[10 November 1999]
Australian parliament "regrets"
injustice to Aboriginal people
Behind the politics of "reconciliation"
[30 August 1999]
"Genocide
in Australia": A report by Colin Tatz
http://www.aiatsis.gov.au/research/dp/8/genocide.htm
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |