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Following TJ Hickeys death
Australian parliamentary report rubberstamps police buildup
in Redfern
By Rick Kelly
9 August 2004
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A parliamentary committee report into the issues raised by
death of 17-year-old Aboriginal youth Thomas TJ Hickey
in the inner Sydney suburb of Redfern amounts to a crude political
cover up for the New South Wales Labor government.
The Standing Committee on Social Issues released its interim
report on social and policing issues in Redfern and neighbouring
Waterloo on August 2. The inquiry was called following a violent
confrontation between Aborigines and Redfern police in Redfern
on February 15. The clash was triggered by anger over the role
of the police in Hickeys death but reflected broader frustration,
particularly among young people, over the lack of jobs, services
and recreational facilities and constant police harassment.
The inquiry gathered information for five months, received
evidence from 60 witnesses at public hearings and collected 89
submissions, but addressed none of the critical social issues.
Instead the committee, composed of three Labor politicians, two
opposition Liberals and one Democrat, and chaired by Labor left
Jan Burnswoods, issued a ringing endorsement of the very policies
that have created a disaster in the area.
The interim report, released ahead of the final paper due November
30, demonstrates that the political establishment has no solution
to the social crisis facing working class people, especially Aborigines.
The sole response of the state Labor government to the Redfern
riot has been to boost police numbers and resources, and to launch
a series of attacks on Aboriginal residents.
Of the reports 22 recommendations, 10 related to policing
issues in Redfern and Waterloo. As well as calling for the government
to review various aspects of its policing strategies, the committee
recommended keeping a more accurate record of violent incidents
against police, so as to take into account the level of
violence against police when considering the allocation of resources
to the Redfern Local Area Command in the future.
The parliamentary committee expressed its general support for
Police Minister John Watkins July 16 announcement of a massive
increase of police resources for Redfern. These measures were
introduced by the government in response to Strike Force
Coburn, an internal police inquiry into the Redfern riot.
A new $6 million, seven-storey police station, staffed with
an additional 46 officers, is to be created. The government also
promised to have a full-time, 46-member riot squad, ready to
respond en masse to incidents of civil disorder, public order
management and major incidents as required.
An indication of what these measures will mean for local residents
was provided on July 30, when over 200 police swept through the
predominantly Aboriginal section of Redfern known as The
Block. With the tabloid media in tow, police spent hours
raiding houses and interrogating residents. Superintendent Dennis
Smith described the provocative raid, which resulted in the arrest
of 29 people, as the first operational phase of an
ongoing campaign. There will be other execution phases of
this operation for the remainder of the year, he declared.
The parliamentary committees function is to provide the
rationalisation for such police actions. Greg Pearce, a Liberal
MP, initially proposed the inquiry on February 26. Today
it is time to draw a line in the sand, he declared. It
is time the Carr government demonstrated support for the frontline
police in Redfern... It is time for the government and this parliament
to clearly and unequivocally show absolute support for frontline
police who are literally fighting to keep our community safe.
Labor MPs quickly agreed with this motion. The inquirys
terms of reference were widened to include social issues only
because it was understood that a failure to do so would have undermined
the credibility of the reports conclusions. This manoeuvre,
however, in no way affected the central thrust of the committees
findings.
Aborigines and public housing tenants driven
out
The immediate police response in Redfern and Waterloo is inextricably
connected to the governments drive to remove all Aboriginal
and low-income residents from the area. The interim report endorsed
the governments Redfern-Eveleigh-Darlington (RED) strategy,
which was formulated to coordinate the plan to demolish large
sections of public housing and allow private developers to move
in and accelerate the suburbs gentrification.
Premier Bob Carr has openly boasted of the pro-business nature
of the RED scheme. Speaking just four days after the Redfern riot,
Carr said that no one should worry about Sydneys central
business district bursting at the seams. Redfern would
become an area of major commercial redevelopment, because
of its proximity to the city and excellent transport facilities.
The Block, is regarded by the government as the most serious
impediment to its plans, is the primary target of this agenda.
The Block, bounded by Louis, Vine, Eveleigh and Caroline Streets,
has long been a traditional meeting place for Aborigines throughout
Sydney and New South Wales. Since 1973, the old terraced houses
in the area have been owned and managed by the Aboriginal Housing
Company (AHC).
In 1997 the AHC, in close collaboration with the government,
began the systematic demolition of The Block, with residents dispersed
throughout Sydney. Only 21 of the original 41 houses remain, and
many of these are burnt out and near collapse. In an attempt to
force the remaining residents to leave, maintenance and repair
work has been neglected for years.
As the interim report noted, the demolition of most of
the houses on the Block commenced prior to the redevelopment plans
being finalised. The current plan, the Pemulwuy Redevelopment
Project, proposes that only one-third of rebuilt houses
will be reserved for low-income earners. Even this, however, is
entirely hypothetical. The state government has repeatedly refused
to provide any funds for the development, which is expected to
cost $27 million.
While issuing a perfunctory call for federal, state and local
governments to contribute an unspecified sum of money for the
project, the interim report backed the governments insistence
that the development be based on business investment.
Right-wing social agenda endorsed
Nowhere in the parliamentary committees report is there
a call for the government to increase spending in any area relating
to social issues. The committee instead gave its full support
to the governments Redfern/Waterloo Partnership Project
(RWPP).
The RWPP, formed in 2002, is the mechanism through which the
Labor government is effectively privatising and outsourcing the
provision of social services in the area. The project, while claiming
to be concerned with the coordination of social programs, is in
fact designed to make charities and other non-governmental organisations
wholly responsible for welfare programs. The RWPP is based on
the reactionary principle that it is individuals and private organisations,
rather than the government, who should be responsible for meeting
even basic social needs.
The inquiry did not address, let alone propose any solutions
for, the acute social crisis in Redfern and Waterloo. The two
suburbs are among the most impoverished areas of Sydney. Approximately
one-third of all public tenants in Sydneys metropolitan
area live in the two suburbs. The 2001 census found that unemployment
in Redfern and Waterloo was 7.6 and 16.6 percent respectively.
In Redfern, 39 percent of people had a weekly income of less than
$300, while in Waterloo the figure was 66 percent.
Social and economic conditions are even worse for Aboriginal
residents, who make up approximately 4 percent of the local population.
Aborigines who once found employment in local industries, notably
the Eveleigh Railway workshops, have virtually no hope of gainful
employment, with all the industry closed. Most indigenous people
now rely on poverty level welfare payments and live in substandard
public housing.
Racist police practices, including constant surveillance and
harassment, added more fuel to the social tinderbox that finally
exploded on February 15. The events of that night were the inevitable
product of the despair and frustration bred by decades of successive
governments inability to provide any improvement in living
conditions for indigenous people in the area.
While the inquiry received numerous submissions that illustrated
the depth of the social crisis in Redfern and Waterloo, the ongoing
existence of chronic poverty was one of committees unstated
assumptions. There was no suggestion that the government should
work to eliminate, or even reduce, poverty.
A similar outlook was evident in the committees assessment
of the serious drug problem that exists in the area. While a substantial
chapter of the interim report, and three of its recommendations,
dealt with drug use, at no point did it ask why people choose
to take drugs such as heroin. Rather than understanding the problem
as a destructive social product of unemployment, poverty and a
general sense of despair, the inquiry simply accepted as a given
the ongoing use of heroin and other drugs.
Within this framework, the committee focused on matters relating
to how to best contain the social and health problems related
to the heroin crisis. Much time was spent during the public hearings
debating questions concerning the location of the needle exchange
van in Redfern, potential effects of decriminalising drugs, and
the creation of a heroin safe-injecting room in the area. Most
of the media coverage of the interim reports release focused
on the recommendation to relocate the needle exchange van out
of The Block and into a nearby industrial area.
Far from investigating the problems confronting working people,
the parliamentary inquiry is one of the mechanisms for covering
up the social and economic crisis in Australia, a particularly
acute expression of which is evident in Redfern and Waterloo,
and the responsibility of governments, Labor and Liberal, in creating
it.
See Also:
Australia: TJ Hickey inquest
concludes
Police involvement in death of Aboriginal youth exposed
[28 July 2004]
Interview with Bowie Hickey:
There's 67 percent poor people-"we need our own government"
[28 July 2004]
TJ Hickey and the plight of
young Aboriginal Australians
[6 May 2004]
Australia: Riots in Sydney
as police blamed for death of 17-year-old Aboriginal boy
[17 February 2004]
The death of TJ
Hickeythe social and economic circumstances
[17 February 2004]
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