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Australian government takeover of Aboriginal communities:
the real content of the Children are Sacred report
By Susan Allan
30 June 2007
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Prime Minister John Howard has claimed that the trigger for
his announcement last week of a federal military takeover of Aboriginal
communities in the Northern Territory was the Northern Territory
Board of Inquirys report into sexual abuse of Aboriginal
children, entitled Little Children are Sacred.
Anyone who has read the 320-page report, and its 97 recommendations,
however, will quickly conclude that it bears no relationship with
Howards martial law crackdown. While the federal
government plans to deal with the social crisis in remote Aboriginal
communities by stigmatising and punishing its victims, the report
proposes a series of long-term measures, based on the allocation
of large-scale funding to education, health, counselling and other
services, in collaboration and consultation with the communities
themselves. Just as in the period prior to the 2001 election,
when Howard ran an anti-immigration campaign based on lies about
refugees throwing their children overboard, so now, in the months
before the 2007 election he is utilising lies and deception to
run a hysterical law and order campaign against the
most vulnerable layers of Australian society.
The NT inquiry into sexual abuse was initiated in August last
year after a series of sensationalised reports on the ABCs
Lateline program. The first, in May 2006, consisted
of a highly-charged interview with NT prosecutor Nanette Rogers,
who provided graphic details of several instances of horrific
sexual abuse in Aboriginal communities. Rogers interview
was quickly followed by another Lateline exposure,
claiming paedophiles were running rampant in the Aboriginal community
of Mutitjula, near the famous Uluru (Ayers Rock), and using children
as sex slaves.
The Little Children are Sacred co-authorsRex
Wild QC, a former NT Director of Public Prosecutions, and Pat
Anderson, an Aboriginal woman with experience in indigenous healthtravelled
throughout the NT for ten months, receiving ongoing advice and
assistance from a group of indigenous affairs experts. They visited
45 communities, held 260 meetings with individuals, agencies and
organisations and received 65 submissions.
The final report, brought down on April 30 this year, declared
that there was nothing new or extraordinary about the child abuse
allegations. There had been myriad reports delivered to the Territory
and federal governments about widespread sexual abuse within remote
Aboriginal communities over many years. What was new was
the sensational publicity now surrounding the issue.
In a summary of their report, the authors noted the following:
* Sexual abuse was widespread in Aboriginal communities. The
phenomenon was not limited to people of Aboriginal descent, however,
but was a national and, indeed, international, problem.
* Most Aboriginal people were committed to solving problems
and helping their children. They were also eager to better educate
themselves.
* Much of the violence and sexual abuse occurring in the Territory
communities was a reflection of past, current and continuing social
problems which had developed over many decades.
* The combined effects of poor health, alcohol and drug abuse,
unemployment, gambling, pornography, poor education and housing,
and a general loss of identity and control had contributed to
violence and sexual abuse in many forms.
* There was a breakdown in services and poor crisis intervention
on the part of government departments and agencies.
* Programs needed to have enough funds and resources and be
backed by long-term commitment.
The inquirys recommendations
Contrary to Howards aggressive police-military plan,
calls for policing comprise a tiny fraction of the 97 recommendations.
Only five recommendations deal specifically with the issue. The
report proposes a coordinated response between police, the child
abuse taskforce and family services, including ongoing consultations
and support for communities own efforts at maintaining a
stable environment. In addition, the report recommends increased
numbers of Aboriginal police, in particular females, including
the recruitment and training of Aboriginal interpreters, all of
whom are properly educated and trained to deal with the issues
surrounding sexual abuse.
On alcohol, the report makes 10 recommendations, calling for
community education and rehabilitation programs to reduce alcohol
consumption, along with a media campaign emphasising the relationship
between excessive drinking and the increased incidence of child
abuse and violence. Unlike Howards plan, there is no recommendation
for the banning of alcohol. Instead, there is a series of proposals
for the Licensing Commission to work with communities, police
and the Department of Health, and to consider the social impact
on children and others in the community before issuing liquor
licences.
On pornography, the report calls for a ban on X-rated material.
On the problems of gambling, it recommends further research, counselling,
and an education campaign.
Nowhere does the report mention the need for military intervention,
the cutting of welfare, or the lifting of long-standing Aboriginal
land tenure arrangements.
The vast majority of the recommendations, well over 50, stress
the urgency of improving health, education, housing, job opportunities
and social services. Education, the report insists, is the key
to solving (or at least ameliorating) the incidence of child abuse.
By education we mean not only that which occurs in schools but
that which occurs in the wider context.
References to education and rehabilitation programs abound.
These apply not only to those suffering in Aboriginal communities,
but to government officials, police and health workers as well.
In relation to schools, the report recommends parenting education,
pre-school education for all three-year-olds, smaller class sizes,
remedial education, cross-cultural education, local language development,
employment of additional school counsellors, a universal meals
program with parents contributing to the cost, and the utilisation
of school facilities after hours for adult education. While the
report stresses the importance of school attendance for all children,
it opposes any punitive measures, such as cutting parents off
welfare paymentsone of the central planks of Howards
plan.
Some 27 recommendations deal with family services, health and
infrastructure. They include programs for maternal and child health
home visits in urban and remote communities, pre-natal and maternity
support, including support for vulnerable and maltreated Aboriginal
children. In particular, the report calls for services that address
the underlying effects of both recent and intergenerational
trauma and that enhance the emotional and mental well being
of all members of the community. Multi-purpose family centres,
safe houses, youth programs, an increase in health facilities,
child protection workers and the recruitment of Aboriginal staff
are all deemed essential.
There are no proposals for compulsory medical checks for under-16
year-oldsanother feature of the Howard governments
plan.
Given the extent of overcrowding in community houses, the inquirys
report strongly recommends a program of mass construction of housing,
including the maintenance and repair of current stock. It calls
for flexible accommodation to be built for single women, single
men and the elderly. It recommends that Aboriginal people be employed
and trained in building skills to assist in the process.
Long-term strategy needed
The report emphasised that no short-term or band-aid fix was
viable. Such measures, it said, had not worked in the past. What
was required was a massive reform effort by the NT government
and the federal government, coupled with a long-term injection
of funds, to provide communities with the resources, infrastructure
and skills to transform the present situation. So severe was the
crisis, it would take at least 15 years to make definite inroads.
And to further assist in the implementation of the reports
recommendations, the authors proposed it should be published and
translated into the nine main Aboriginal languages and distributed
throughout the NT.
In response to Howards announcement, co-author of Little
Children are Sacred, Rex Wild QC, told the ABCs Lateline
Business program that the government had ignored the 97
recommendations, and was resorting, instead, to sending
in the gunships.
Wild attacked Howards plan as short-sighted
and the opposite of what his inquiry had proposed. Referring to
the lack of funding for social programs to address the underlying
problems in remote Aboriginal communities, he pointed out that
the Howard government received $6 billion in alcohol taxes every
year. Yet it spent, he said, a miserly portion of that on
education and alcohol programs. Why not give that $6 billion to
this problem we are now addressing?
Wild went on to declare that he had seen no figures on what
the government intended to spend on Aboriginal housing, which
is a major problem, which I havent heard addressed, and
unemployment and all the other issues we raise in the report.
Neither the Howard government, nor any incoming Labor government
will carry out the type of social reforms which this report has
indicated are necessary. Rather, both parties are dedicated to
a free market agenda, requiring the winding back and
destruction of social reforms and concessions made in the past.
That is why there has been such bipartisan agreement on Howards
measures, and such bipartisan opposition to the real contents
of the Little Children are Sacred report.
See Also:
Australian journalist Glenn Milne's
"twisted logic" on Northern Territory deployment
[29 June 2007]
Australian neo-colonialism comes home:
The Northern Territory and the Solomon Islands
[28 June 2007]
Australia: Growing opposition to police-military
takeover of Aboriginal communities
[27 June 2007]
Australian government imposes military-police
regime on Aborigines
[23 June 2007]
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