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Australian government moves to abolish Aboriginal land
rights
By Erika Zimmer
23 May 2006
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Over the past year the Howard government has sent a series
of signals indicating its intention to dismantle Aboriginal land
rights, a policy framework introduced by the Whitlam Labor
government in the 1970s, and continued in one form or another
by successive governments over the past three decades.
Under the new proposals (which have been backed by the Labor
Party) land, which is in theory communally owned by indigenous
people, will be permitted to be sold off to individuals and businesses,
supposedly as a means of boosting indigenous home ownership
and encouraging individual self-reliance among Aboriginal
people.
In February last year, Indigenous Affairs Minister Amanda Vanstone
seized upon a comment made by the current Labor Party national
president, Warren Mundine, an Aborigine, that communal land ownership
was retarding our economic development. She claimed
that the existing land rights policy had left many Aborigines
land rich and dirt poor.
Two months later, Prime Minister Howard told journalists, while
visiting the remote Aboriginal community of Wadeye, 270 km from
Darwin in the Northern Territory: I believe there is a case
for reviewing the whole issue of Aboriginal land title, in the
sense of looking towards more private recognition ... all Australians
should aspire to owning their own home and having their own business.
In October, Vanstone announced a plan, worked out in collaboration
with the Labor government in the Northern Territory (NT), to allow
Aboriginal communities to transfer land to individuals, businesses
or governments.
While the final details have yet to be revealed, Vanstone told
the media that the government would change the Aboriginal Land
Rights Act to allow traditional owners to lease out Aboriginal
land for 99 years, a form of title which effectively cedes ownership.
Under the scheme, new local councils, to be set up by the NT
government, will negotiate leases with traditional owners and
Aboriginal land councils. Entire townships will be able to be
leased to indigenous or non-indigenous people or to commercial
partnerships in exchange for annual rental payments, to be capped
at 5 percent of the lands value.
While the measures will initially affect land in the NTover
which the federal government retains ultimate controlHoward
has indicated he wants the system adopted nationally.
The role of land rights
This shift has broad symbolic and political significance. Over
the past four decades, the political establishment has promoted
land rights as the solution to the terrible injustices
suffered by the Aboriginal people, from the early days of British
colonization in the eighteenth century, to the present.
The perspective of land rights emerged in the 1960s
in response to a powerful movement of Aboriginal workers demanding
equal wages and basic rights. This struggle culminated in a strike
in 1967 by Gurindji stockmen against the British agribusiness,
Vesteys. The workers demands won significant support throughout
the rest of the working class, creating the conditions for a unified
struggle against the employers, and against the profit system
itselfresponsible for the two centuries of oppression of
the Aboriginal people.
Instead, however, the movement was diverted into a demand for
Aboriginal land rights, with a leading role played by author Frank
Hardy and other members of the Stalinist Communist Party of Australia.
Amid growing working class militancy in the late 1960s and early
1970s, this orientation served to separate Aboriginal workers
from other workers and to channel the progressive struggle for
their fundamental class interestsdecent jobs and working
conditions, better living standardsinto an orientation to
the past, stressing their Aboriginality and their
former way of life. The myth was promoted that the ownership of
tracts of land in generally remote areas would somehow resolve
their problems.
The divisive nature of the policy was not its only value to
the Australian ruling class. It also served as a vehicle for the
promotion of an Aboriginal leadership with definite capitalist
aspirations, looking to use land claims as a bargaining chip to
enter into partnerships with mining and pastoral companies or
to set up business enterprises for themselves.
In 1972 the policy of land rights became the official
program of the Whitlam Labor government, which initiated the Northern
Territory Land Rights Act, ultimately passed by the Fraser Liberal
government in 1976. The Act provided for a transfer of ownership
of all Aboriginal reserves and missions in the Northern Territory
to Aboriginal land trusts, while allowing claims to be made to
vacant Crown land already in Aboriginal hands.
A second wave of opposition to the conditions confronting Aboriginal
people emerged around the time of the 1988 bicentenary of British
colonization. The anniversary became the occasion for large demonstrations,
involving Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people, demanding justice
and equality for Australias indigenous population.
Again, sections of the ruling class turned to an initiative
based on land acquisition to buy off Aboriginal leaders and block
the development of a unified class movement. A series of land
claims led to the 1992 High Court decision in the Mabo case, which
invented a new legal category known as native title.
This allowed Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to lodge
claims over vacant Crown land, provided they could prove they
had continuously occupied it. Their native title was
then recognised and regulated by legislation passed under the
Keating Labor government in 1993 and the Howard Coalition government
in 1998.
Whether called land rights or native title,
these concepts of land tenure were completely alien to the way
land was regarded in traditional Aboriginal society, which was
based on communal occupation of the land. Instead, the new legislation
created a capitalist property form, private property, on the basis
of which the owners could carry out commercial negotiations. The
purpose was not to provide the vast majority of Aborigines with
economic security, but to channel wealth into the hands of a layer
of indigenous businessmen, bureaucrats and lawyers.
After thirty years of land rights, with approximately
20 percent of land in Australia now owned or controlled by indigenous
people, at least half still live below the poverty line, with
a life expectancy almost 20 years lower than that of the non-indigenous
population. If the number of Aborigines employed in low-wage work-for-the-dole
schemes is subtracted, the unemployment rate in the indigenous
population stands at around 40 percent.
While most Aborigines live in towns or cities, approximately
a third, or about 100,000, reside in remote townships, on pastoral
stations or at outstations with either inadequate or non-existent
housing, education and health facilities. With a jobless rate
as high as 85 percent, most are reliant on work-for-the-dole schemes
or welfare payments. Since income of around $10,000 per year per
individual does not cover even essential items such as food, many
households are obliged to rely on sharing their resources and
to engage in subsistence activities such as hunting and gathering.
A political dead end
The Howard government has hypocritically seized upon the appalling
situation its own policies have exacerbated to push ahead with
plans to scrap land rights. The communal ownership
of land, once touted as the key to improving Aboriginal socio-economic
conditions, is now being held responsible, together with welfare
payments, for indigenous poverty and social problems.
The shift in Aboriginal policy dovetails with a broader agenda
of scrapping welfare and cutting social spending in order to lower
high-income tax rates, push the poor into low-wage jobs and hand
over lucrative assets and services to profit-making corporations.
Spearheading this line, along with right-wing thinktanks such
as the Centre for Independent Studies (CIS), is a new grasping
layer of Aboriginal leaders. Labors Warren Mundine, who
until recently served on the Howard governments indigenous
advisory council is one. Another is Noel Pearson, the director
of the Cape York Institute for Policy and Leadership, who has
condemned passive welfare as the underlying cause
of Aboriginal impoverishment.
In a recent speech to a CIS audience, Pearson declared that
Aboriginal failure to take responsibility in the area
of home ownership seriously undermines legitimate expressions
of concern about over-crowding and insufficient housing funds.
In other words, Aborigines themselves are to be held accountable
for the crisis in housingand every other social indicatorand
expected to resolve it as individuals. This provides the government
with the justification it needs to repudiate any responsibility
for addressing the underlying social and economic problems facing
Aboriginal people.
Sharing common ground with this outlook is the Northern Territory
Labor government. In 2004, John Ah Kit, its community development
minister, pointed to the public housing crisis in the territory.
He estimated a backlog of unmet housing need of up to $1.5 billion.
According to Ah Kit, even if population levels remained the samethey
are in fact expandingit would take something like
22 years to meet that need at current levels of spending.
Ah Kit called for a serious rethinking of land tenure
arrangements on Aboriginal land in the Northern Territory.
After making a ritual reference to decades of federal government
under-funding of housing, he proposed rapid and substantial
injections of private capital, public-private partnerships
and the establishment of a private residential market with
concomitant private investment by Indigenous and non-Indigenous
interests.
Backing away from earlier calls to force Aborigines to surrender
their land under a compulsory acquisition plan, the Howard government
is now making much of the voluntary nature of its
proposals. It is cynically counting on severe economic deprivation
to push people into the scheme. This perspective was spelt out
in an article in the Australian, which hailed the plan
as a philosophical leap and a black revolution.
The article dismissed claims that the take-up rate would be
zero, chillingly pointing out, [T]his seems unlikely in
an environment where communities are so poor that seven years
ago the Jawoyn people, who own Katherine Gorge, traded native
title rights for two renal dialysis machines and land for a commonwealth
funded alcohol rehabilitation centre.
In a move designed to increase pressure on remote Aboriginal
communities, Vanstone recently issued a thinly veiled threat to
cut off services to rural outstations, saying they were economically
unviable. According to Australians for Native Title and Reconciliation
national director David Cooper, removing infrastructure funding
from communities with populations of less than 100 people, would
force around 30,000 Aborigines off the land.
The last three decades of land rights has taken
the Aboriginal people into a political and social dead end. The
new agenda of more directly exposing Aborigines to the capitalist
free market will only accelerate their oppression. What is required
is a mass political movement of the working class, uniting Aboriginal
and non-Aboriginal people, which challenges the very foundations
of the profit system, and advances a socialist program committed
to providing the resources for decent jobs, living standards and
social facilitiesincluding education, health, recreational
and housingfor all, regardless of ethnic or national origin.
See Also:
Official response to Aboriginal child
sexual abuse in Australia: more law and order
[22 May 2006]
Jenissa Ryan: the violent
death of an Australian aboriginal teenager
[27 April 2006]
Australian Aborigines
become first target for "welfare reform"
[16 November 2004]
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