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Australia: State Labor government and media attack Anti-Discrimination
Board
By Richard Phillips and Ruby Rankin
30 May 2003
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A recently published 123-page report into racism and the Australian
media by the Anti-Discrimination Board (ADB) in New South Wales
has become the occasion for the local press and the Carr Labor
government to launch a series of bitter attacks on the state-funded
human rights body.
The ADB report, entitled Race for the headlines: racism
and media discourse and published in March, found that since
September 11, 2001, major newspapers and radio stations in Sydney
have attempted to link immigration with terrorism and scapegoated
minorities for increasing crime, unemployment and other social
problems.
The board examined several examples and called for increased
press accountability, national uniformity in anti-discrimination
laws, and other proposals, including the right of reply in press
opinion pages for minorities that have been denigrated. These
modest propositions, however, produced a flurry of denunciations
against the ADB by the local establishment.
An editorial in the Murdoch-owned Daily Telegraph March
13 was typical. The newspaper focused almost exclusively on the
ADBs examination of how the media, led by the Daily Telegraph,
had sensationalised gang rapes by Lebanese-Australian youth in
the Bankstown area during 2000-2001. The Telegraph editorial
denied it had vilified Muslims and Arab-speaking residents and
claimed that the ADB report was an attack on free speech.
Race against the headlines, it declared, was a
transparent pitch to the squeamish intelligentsia who perversely
display more interest in the civil liberties of gang rapists than
the trampled rights of their young female quarry. On the basis
of this episode, Chris Puplick [then ADB head] should be sacked
forthwith, and his redundant outfit shut down, with all funds
diverted to support services for sexual assault victims.
Telegraph editor Campbell Reid told the same edition
of the paper that the ADB investigation was an objectionable
attempt to sustain a utopian view of society and an
insult to the taxpayers of NSW.
In mid-April Labor Premier Bob Carr took up a similar theme
and accused Puplick of deliberately trying to feed the sense
of grievance in the Islamic community. Carr never explained
what this sense of grievance was or how it had been
created.
In state parliament on May 1, the premier again berated the
ADB, describing its report as pernicious, ignorant,
inflammatory and tendentious, ideological claptrap.
He claimed the investigation was driven by a deep contempt
for Australians and Australian society and an attempt to
generate a climate of guilt and paranoia on issues of race.
A day after Carrs remarks the Australian and Daily
Telegraph published two private emails written by Puplick.
The newspapers used the letters to accuse the ADB president of
conflict of interest in a gay harassment case. While
Carr claimed that his parliamentary diatribe had nothing to do
with the email revelations, the timing was extraordinarily coincidental.
Puplick denied the allegation and said that he would be taking
legal action against the newspapers over the issue. He resigned
as ADB president later that day, however, declaring that the organisation
could not be an effective advocate for human rights
in New South Wales without Carrs personal support.
Notwithstanding the accusations against Puplick, the official
reaction to the ADBs Race for the headlines is another
indication of the rightward trajectory of the Carr government
and other sections of Australias ruling elite.
As Carr was attacking the ADB, its federal counterpart, the
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC), was coming
under fire from the Howard government in Canberra.
Under legislation introduced in parliament on March 27, HREOC
will need the attorney generals permission before it can
intervene in any human rights cases involving the government.
Other measures contained in the planned laws are also designed
to muzzle the federal human rights body and prevent it from challenging
the ongoing attacks on civil liberties by federal and state governments.
The ADB, which was established in 1977 to investigate racial
and sexual intolerance and harassment and organise mediation between
individuals and develop education programs, has limited power
and political clout. Nonetheless the rightward shift in ruling
circles has become so pronounced that these basic functions are
now regarded as a threat.
Just before Puplicks resignation, Carr told the Australian
that he planned to take an interest in how the Anti-Discrimination
Board was able to find the resources and what resources they did
find for that report.
In plain English no section of the NSW bureaucracy, including
those with a statutory brief to oppose racial and sexual discrimination,
can be allowed to expose the media or the government on these
issues. Those that step out of line will be disciplined. In fact,
it took only seven weeks from the beginning of the media attacks
on the ADB investigation for Puplick to resign; nine months prior
to the end of his second five-year term as ADB head.
The ADB report
While the Murdoch media and the Carr government have done their
utmost to denigrate the ADB, they fail to answer any of the evidence
in Race for the headlines.
The booklet, despite its naïve appeal for better government
legislation to combat racism, provides a useful examination of
how the media and government manipulate public opinion
and seek to blame Arab and Muslim communities, in particular,
for increased crime and other social problems.
Some of the examples investigated include the government and
press response to the rescue of 438 mainly Afghan and Iraqi asylum
seekers in August 2001 by the MV Tampa and the children
overboard affair two months later.
The Howard government, which was facing an election, demonised
the asylum seekers in an attempt to deflect attention from its
attacks on jobs and living standards. Senior government officials
suggested that some refugees had terrorist links, a claim uncritically
repeated by the media.
The Daily Telegraph, for example, ran a front-page story
headlined Terror Australis: Bin Laden groups in our suburbs
claiming that 100 members of international terrorist groups linked
to Al Qaeda were living in Sydney. The newspaper never corrected
this bogus story.
As the federal election approached, the Howard government released
heavily cropped pictures taken by navy photographers to prove
that another group of asylum seekers had thrown their children
into the sea. The refugees were denounced as un-Australian
and, therefore, inhuman and unworthy of entry to Australia or
any sympathy or support. Once again the press enthusiastically
publicised these scurrilous claims.
As the ADB report explained: Border protection
and Australias approach to asylum seekers was central to
the campaign of the major political parties in the leadup to the
Federal Election in October 2001. Law and order policy debates
in NSW state politics in this period were underpinned by the linking
of crime and ethnicity. Rhetoric that drew on fearof otherness,
of difference, of changewas reflected in media commentary,
government policy and public debate.
As previously mentioned Race for the headlines also
investigated the response of talkback radio and Sydney newspapers
to the gang rapes in Bankstown. Instead of examining the social
and economic circumstances that produced these horrendous sexual
assaults, the media claimed the rapes were related to the cultural
and ethnic background of the perpetrators and scapegoated the
Lebanese and Muslim community.
The report cited the response of Janet Albrechtsen, a leading
opinion writer for the Australian. Albrechtsen deliberately
falsified comments from a French sociologist to claim that pack
rape of white girls was an initiation rite of passage
for some young male Muslims. Variations on this sort of inflammatory
reportage were echoed by other newspapers or repeated on talkback
radio.
As the ADB pointed out: Economic and social factors are
rarely explored by the media when examining the causes of crime.
Rather simplistic links are made between race or ethnicity and
the causes of criminal behaviour. Criminal behaviour is attributed
to ethnic gangs, which in turn became characterised as an attack
on civil order and the Australian way of life.
... Increasingly, the political and media portrayal of
the criminal behaviour of certain individuals has become attributed
to cultural factors. The taint of criminality prejudices and in
turn provides justifications for racialised reporting.
Arabs and Australians of Middle Eastern descent (and the ADB)
also came under attack from the media following the establishment
of a womens only gym by a Muslim woman and women only hours
at a suburban swimming pool. This, according to talkback radio,
was discrimination and meant that Muslim women now
had power at the expense of the disempowered majority.
Race for the headlines concluded with a call for measured,
accurate, positive and informed debate on racism.
This week, Piers Akerman, writing for the Daily Telegraph,
stepped up the witchhunt against the ADB. Akerman, a right-wing
demagogue and typical of the commentators employed by the Murdoch
media empire, complained on May 27 that the ADB, despite Puplicks
resignation, was still responding to anti-discrimination complaints
filed by the ignorant.
If the state government was not willing to axe the human rights
body, he declared, the board should be reorganised to erase
every trace of the Puplick victim philosophy.
This should include an investigation into every case heard over
the last nine years.
Anyone involved in these cases, Akerman declared, should be
given the right to scrutinise all correspondence relating
to their matter to ensure they received justice.... The days of
the ADB creating and maintaining a client base through the presentation
of divisive post-modern moral equivalence philosophies must stop
today.
If past practice is anything to go by, it will not be long
before the Carr government begins implementing these demands.
See Also:
Australia: Families
face collective punishment after gang rape sentences
[3 October 2002]
Australia: 20-year-old
jailed for 55 years on gang rape charges
[6 September 2002]
Media lies and war crimes:
the instructive case of Julius Streicher
[25 March 2003]
Opposition to Labors
ethnic scapegoating in Australian byelection
[17 September 2001]
Australian government attacks Human Rights
and Equal Opportunity Commission
[2 May 2003]
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