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WSWS : News
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An inevitable outcome
Australian court dismisses "Stolen Generations"
test case
By Mike Head
21 August 2000
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An Australian Federal Court judge on August 11 dismissed a
test case on the federal government's liability for the Stolen
Generationsthe estimated 30,000 part-Aboriginal children
who were forcibly separated from their parents in the first seven
decades of the 20th century.
Before a crowded Darwin courtroom, in a nationally-televised
judgment, Justice Maurice O'Loughlin ruled that government officials
had lawfully taken two Aboriginal children from their families
in the 1940s and 1950s. He therefore rejected their claims for
compensation from the federal government.
The verdict, however, flowed inexorably from the manner in
which the applicants' case was conducted. Instead of challenging
the legitimacy of the racist Northern Territory ordinances that
authorised the seizure of part-Aboriginal babies and infants,
supposedly in their best interests, the applicants'
lawyers based themselves entirely on the claim that, while the
ordinances were acceptable, the particular officials involved
failed to exercise their duty of care in applying
them.
By taking this approach, the applicants' legal team adapted
itself to the government's official assimilation policy.
The aim of this policy was to integrate all half-caste
children into white society, by removing them from
their families and placing them in state or church institutions,
while the full-blooded Aboriginal population slowly died out.
In this way, all traces of Aboriginal society would eventually
disappear.
With no challenge mounted to the ordinances themselves, Justice
O'Loughlin was able to state that his ruling was simply based
on the particular facts before him. He declared that Lorna Cubillo,
62, and Peter Gunner, 53, had failed to prove that the Commonwealth
authorities had ignored their best interests by removing them
from their families.
Cubillo and 15 other children were removed from the Phillip
Creek Native Settlement in 1947, when she was seven or eight-years-old,
by the order of the late Amelia Shankleton, superintendent of
the Retta Dixon Home for part-Aboriginal children in Darwin. Gunner,
then aged 9, was taken from Utopia Station in 1956 and placed
in St Mary's Hostel, a similar facility in Alice Springs. Both
wept as they testified about the way they were violently removed
from their people.
After four years of legal proceedings and 106 days of hearings
that involved 60 witnesses and cost some $12 million, the verdict
has provoked considerable public disgust. Thanks to the Howard
government and the lawyers responsible for the test case, Cubillo,
Gunner and other stolen children were subjected to
days of traumatic examination and cross-examination, recounting
painful experiences of separation and physical and sexual abuse
in institutions, only to have the case dismissed on the narrowest
grounds.
For its part, the Howard government initially tried to prevent
the evidence from being heard altogether. Its lawyers moved for
summary dismissal of the case more than two years ago, as soon
as the judge announced that a full hearing would be held. When
that application was finally dismissed, the government's barristers
treated Cubillo and Gunner and their witnesses with contempt,
continually browbeating them in cross-examination, trying to undermine
their credibility and reliability.
In line with the public position of Prime Minister John Howard
and Aboriginal Affairs Minister John Herron, the government's
representatives flatly defended the policy of seizing Aboriginal
children, claiming that those who were removed benefitted from
educational and other advantages.
On the other side, the Northern Australia Aboriginal Legal
Aid Service, representing Cubillo and Gunner, accepted the validity
of the Northern Territory Aboriginal protection ordinances,
which permitted officials to take care and control of a part-Aboriginal
child if in the Director's opinion, it was necessary or
desirable in the interests of the child. The law permitted
the Director of Native Affairs to do so against the express wishes
of the child's family.
The lawyers argued that while the ordinances did provide for
the welfare of Aboriginal children, they were not properly administered.
One of their central claims was that officials had breached the
ordinances by acting with a conscious and contumelious disregard
for or wanton cruel and reckless indifference toward
the welfare and rights of Cubillo and Gunner.
But the applicants' case ignored the genocidal aims of assimilation.
Officially adopted at the federal level in 1937, the assimilation
policy was just one chapter in the extermination of the Aboriginal
people. In the earliest years of British colonisation, outright
massacres were organised. Later, the survivors were herded into
reserves and missions, usually Church-run, where many died from
European-introduced diseases. Assimilation was aimed, in the words
of one of its architects, the Western Australian Protector of
Aborigines A.O. Neville, at merg[ing] them into our white
community and eventually forget[ting] that there were any Aborigines
in Australia.
The lack of evidence
The judge's ruling boiled down to two findings. First, he dismissed
Cubillo's case on the ground that, while the evidence confirmed
that she was forcibly removed, it did not explain the personal
motives of those responsible. The relevant officials were all
dead and no documents could be found recording the reasons for
the removal.
There is a huge void, O'Loughlin concluded. We
know that Mrs. Cubillo was taken away but we do not know why.
The obligation was on Mrs. Cubillo to satisfy the court that the
Director [of Native Affairs] failed to act in accordance with
the provisions of section 6 [of the Northern Territory Aboriginals
Ordinance]. As it is, people are dead and the documents, if they
ever existed, have been lost.
Second, the judge rejected Gunner's claim, apparently for the
opposite reasonthat official documents did exist.
Most importantly, O'Loughlin said, one undated document
recorded the thumbprint of Gunner's mother, Topsy Kundrilba, on
a form of request asking for Gunner to be taken to St Mary's and
given a Western education.
What, however, did that thumbprint, labelled Topsy,
actually signify? In the first place it showed that Gunners' mother,
denied access to education, was unable to read or write. Did she
understand the document? Was she told that it meant she would
never see her son again? Did an official or officials pressure
her into placing her mark on the sheet of paper?
Living on a remote cattle station, it is likely that she was
coerced or misled. Gunner testified that he was grabbed by two
white men and driven off in a truck. Both he and Cubillo recounted
many occasions prior to their eventual seizure when relatives
had painted them with charcoal to avoid official detection as
half-castes. These accounts hardly fit the picture
of mothers willingly handing over their children for life.
According to the judge, other documents indicated that the
Director of Native Affairs, through his officers, had given
close consideration to the welfare of the young Peter. This
finding also flies in the face of the reality. Any official documents
would, as in Gunner's case, invariably record that children were
seized in their own best interests, in accordance with the wording
of the ordinances.
The judge did not dispute Cubillo's and Gunner's claims that
they had suffered terrible sexual, physical and psychological
abuse. He accepted Cubillo's evidence that she had been viciously
assaulted and was very unhappy and starved for affection in the
Retta Dixon Home. Likewise he believed Gunner's evidence that
he had a most unhappy childhood and was sexually assaulted
by a missionary in the St Mary's Hostel. The judge estimated that,
had they succeeded in their action against the Commonwealth, Cubillo
would have been entitled to $126,800 in damages and Gunner $144,000.
Nor did Justice O'Loughlin deny the existence of the Stolen
Generations in general. Numerous writings tell tragically
of a distressing past, he said at the beginning of his judgment.
But, on the basis of the legal arguments presented by the applicants'
lawyers, he had no difficulty in supporting the Howard government's
assertion that the assimilation policy flowed from a genuine,
if misguided, belief that it was in the best interests of
part Aboriginal children to assimilate them into the European
mainstream and that the best way to do that was through a western
style education.
While expressing sympathy for Cubillo, Gunner and other victims
of the policy, the judge concluded that the politicians, bureaucrats
and church people of the 1940s and 1950s thought that they
were acting in the best interests of the child and that
therefore the applicants have not proved that they acted
beyond their powers.
A political agenda
Cubillo and Gunner were dragged through a four-year legal nightmare,
while their lawyers argued a case that was bound to fail on factual
and legal grounds. The question needs to be asked: why didn't
they challenge the ordinances themselves, thereby exposing the
character of the government's assimilation policy?
The answer is bound up with a definite political agenda. One
of the advisers to the case, Northern Territory Associate Dean
of Law Matthew Storey, told the Sydney Morning Herald that
the strategy behind the case had always been to force the federal
government to establish a compensation tribunal.
Many in ruling circlesincluding politicians, business
leaders, media owners, clergymen and retired judgeshave
condemned the Howard government for not establishing a Reparations
Tribunal, as recommended three years ago by the federal government's
Bringing Them Home report into the Stolen Generations.
Commenting on the outcome of the test case, an August 15 editorial
in the Australian, Rupert Murdoch's national daily, urged
the federal government to follow the lead of countries such as
South Africa, Canada and New Zealand by setting up a compensation
and reconciliation tribunal that would settle the claims of the
stolen children and their families, making gestures of regret,
restitution and rehabilitation.
To a certain extent this position is based on crude financial
calculations. If the government capped the compensation payouts
that such a tribunal could award, the editorial estimated, the
total outlay would come to some $2 billion, spread out over several
years. One prominent supporter of the tribunal scheme, Aboriginal
MP and Australian Democrats Senator Aden Ridgeway, has warned
that another 1,000 court cases are already in the pipeline, producing
a potential legal bill of $3 billion.
Beyond that, however, sections of the political and business
establishment are demanding a solution that will put an end to
the Stolen Generations issue once and for all, while
projecting a suitably humanitarian image. Their concern is that
the issue raises ugly questions about the history of Australian
capitalism and damages its reputation overseas, particularly in
key Asian markets. Moreover, the racist treatment and continuing
poor conditions of Aboriginal people cuts across the claims of
the Australian government to be intervening in Timor, Fiji and
elsewhere in the Asia-Pacific region in order to uphold human
rights.
A Reparations Tribunal could dole out limited compensation
to survivors of the Stolen Generation while, at the
same time, fully exonerating those who bear responsibility, both
now and in the past, for the plight of Australia's indigenous
populationthe Australian capitalist class and its various
political representatives. This is what happened in the South
African Reparations and Rehabilitation Commission (recommended
by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission), the Canadian Healing
Foundation (recommended by a Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples)
and the New Zealand Waitangi Tribunal.
Despite coming under considerable pressure to establish a tribunal,
the Howard government has refused point-blank to do so. In the
first place, it wants to avoid making any compensation payments
at all. Secondly, Howard and his ministers trace their political
lineage back to previous Liberal Party leaders such as former
Governor-General Paul Hasluck, one of the main advocates and administrators
of the assimilation program. Thirdly, and most importantly, the
government rests increasingly upon a narrow, right-wing racist
constituency in rural and regional areas that is clamouring for
even harsher social policies towards the Aboriginal population.
See Also:
A quarter of a million march
in support of Australia's Aborigines
But who are the beneficiaries of "reconciliation"?
[1 June 2000]
"Stolen generations"
court case
Australian government defends forced removal of Aboriginal
children
[10 November 1999]
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