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Northern Territory intervention: an on-the-spot report
Rudd Labor deepens Howards assault on Aboriginal communities
Part 1
By a WSWS reporting team
21 June 2008
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World Socialist Web Site journalists Susan Allan and Richard
Phillips and freelance photographer John Hulme recently visited
central Australia to report on the social and political impact
of the federal governments Northern Territory Emergency
Response or police/military intervention into Aboriginal communities.
This is the first in a series of articles, interviews, video
clips and slide shows (1
and 2). Parts two, three,
four, five,
six and seven
were posted on June 26, July 2, July 15, July 24, August 6 and
August 25 respectively.
It is now 12 months since the former Howard government launched
its Northern Territory intervention, claiming it was
necessary to protect Aboriginal children from sexual abuse and
other criminal behaviours caused by endemic parental neglect and
alcoholism in Aboriginal communities.
The problem was so severe, according to Prime Minister John
Howard and Minister for Indigenous Affairs Mal Brough, that emergency
measures involving the military, federal police and a raft of
anti-democratic laws, including suspension of racial discrimination
legislation, were required to save the children.
Labor leader Kevin Rudd immediately concurred and a few weeks
later federal Labor MPs unanimously voted for the intervention
legislation.
The Northern Territory intervention, however, had nothing to
do with overcoming child abuse, alcoholism and other social horrors,
nor was it designed to. In fact, the abject poverty and associated
social problems afflicting Aboriginal people in the Northern Territory
had been documented in countless reports from peak health bodies
and various human rights organisations, but studiously ignored
by Australian governmentsLiberal or Labor alike for decades.
The interventions real purpose was to slash welfare,
break up remote communities and townships and take control of
Aboriginal land. Aboriginal people, moreover, were being treated
as guinea pigs to trial welfare-cutting measures that would be
used against other working peopleindigenous and non-indigenous
alike. (See Australian
government imposes military-police regime on Aborigines)
One year on, not only is the Rudd government maintaining all
the interventions essential features, it is expanding income
management into Western Australia and northern Queensland.
[1]
This week Minister for Indigenous Affairs Jenny Macklin told
the media that Labor was seriously committed to the intervention
and pointed out that when Howard left office in November last
year, 1,408 Aborigines in eight NT communities were under income
management. Macklin boasted that the number had now expanded
to 13,309 people in 52 communities, an almost ten-fold increase.
These measures, she hastened to add, would soon be extended to
all 73 prescribed communities.
The real agenda
The World Socialist Web Site and the Socialist Equality
Party opposed the NT intervention from the outset. It was clear
that the breathless and sensationalised reporting of the child
sexual abuse claims by every section of the media, including the
government controlled Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC),
was being utilised to hide the real agenda lying behind it. We
therefore determined to visit the NT, and as many town camps as
possible, in order to provide a truthful account of what exactly
was taking place, as well as a voice for ordinary Aboriginal peoplea
voice that is routinely suppressed in the mainstream media.
We flew into Alice Springs, the NTs second largest city,
in early April 2008 and over the next nine days visited several
of its 20 town camps, interviewing camp residents and holding
discussions with remote community Aborigines from Yuendumu and
Ali-Curung as well as social workers, health care employees and
local journalists. We also visited Tennant Creek.
Tourist brochures present the Northern Territoryan area
larger than Texas or the combined areas of France, Spain and Italyas
a spectacularly beautiful and pristine place, and much of it certainly
is. The deep-red mountain ranges, dry river chasms and vast desert
landscapes attract thousands of tourists each year to places like
Alice Springs and other parts of the Territorys aptly-named
Red Centre. But tourists and millions of ordinary Australians
in the countrys major urban centres have little idea about
the harsh reality endured by over 60,000 Aboriginal people who
live there.
Alice Springs lies just north of the east-west McDonnell Ranges
and its town camps, which have a long and complex history, first
emerged as ration stations for dispossessed Aborigines, and then
as sources of cheap labour, in the late nineteenth century. The
camps are located in and around the city but with the expansion
of Alice Springs, they now lie on increasingly valuable real estate.
Before the intervention, the settlements accommodated approximately
2,000 people in 191 houses and 97 tin sheds. In the past year,
overcrowding has worsened dramatically, with an estimated average
of 15 people per house.
The unemployment rate is catastrophicgenerally over 80
percentand the few jobs that are available are through Community
Development and Employment Projects (CDEP), on rock-bottom wages.
According to recent figures, the average weekly income of residents
is about $165 per week.
While these statistics, and countless numbers of reports by
medical experts and social workers, provide some indication of
the abject poverty that exists, nothing could really prepare us
for how they translated into human terms.
Hidden Valley
The first town camp we visited was Ewyenper-Atwatye or Hidden
Valley, about five kilometres east of Alice Springs, and home
to more than 135 residents. Hidden Valley is in a beautiful setting,
surrounded on two sides by magnificent red rock hills and desert
bush, but the poverty and lack of basic facilities are truly shocking.
When one sees how the camps residents are forced to live,
one wonders why child abuse and other expressions of social dysfunction
are not far worse.

Our photographer, John Hulme, has worked and photographed in
some of the most poverty-stricken areas in Asia. When we arrived
in Hidden Valley he was taken aback by the appalling conditions
and remarked that they were some of the worst he had seen. The
sheer magnitude of the problems facing Aboriginal residentsthe
product of decades of deliberate government neglectis heartbreaking.
And we soon discovered that Hidden Valley is not the most deprived.
Nevertheless it has the same general features of all the other
campsabandoned cars that residents cannot afford to repair,
discarded mattresses, empty beer cans and bits and pieces of broken
and cast off household goodsand large numbers of young children
with no real facilities to cater for their needs.
Some of the homes are in reasonable condition, but the housing
is rudimentary at best and catastrophic at worst. By any measure,
the homes here are worlds apart from the glossy images in real
estate and furnishing brochures featured every week in newspapers
in Sydney, Melbourne and other major cities.
The concrete and cinder block homes built in the camps during
the last decade or so are solid and an obvious improvement on
the humpies and other rudimentary shelters most camp dwellers
lived in prior to the early 1980s. However, many of the dwellings
are in serious disrepair, with broken doors or windows. Many have
bare concrete floors and only a few pieces of the most rudimentary
furniture.

A recent report in the Australian and New Zealand Journal
of Public Health pointed out that only 6 percent of housing
for Australian Aboriginals has adequate facilities to prepare
and cook meals, and just 11 percent pass a standard assessment
for electrical safety. In half the houses, it is not possible
to wash a child in a tub or bath, and a functioning shower is
available in only a third.
Walking around Hidden Valley it is obvious that massive amounts
of money and other resources are needed to overcome this social
disaster, resources that will not be forthcoming as long as current
social and economic priorities remain: i.e., as long as private
profit takes precedence over urgent social needs.

The entrance to Hidden Valley is dominated by a huge blue and
white sign announcing that all alcohol and pornographic material
is banned inside the camp and punishable with long jail sentences
and fines. These signs have been erected outside all the so-called
prescribed Aboriginal communities in NT, with the clear implication
that every town camp resident is a serial sex-offender and/or
alcoholic.
Every Aborigine we spoke to denounced these signsangered
both by their denigration of town camp residents as well as the
obvious waste of resources. According to one estimate, the signs
cost more than $8,000 apiece, money that could have been used
to treat alcoholism and a range of other health problems.
The first person we met was Daryl
Allen, a former stockman who had been injured in a motorbike
accident rounding up cattle. Allen, who was confined to a wheelchair,
was shy and somewhat reluctant to speak in detail about his own
circumstances.
He made clear, however, that the intervention had made his
life a misery, because of the difficulties he had travelling into
Alice Springs each fortnight to collect his store cards and to
do his shopping at the government designated retail outlets. This
either involved an expensive five-kilometre taxi ride or complex
transport arrangements with his relatives.
Allen was the first of many Aboriginal people we met who was
confined to a wheel chair. In some cases, this is because they
had no access to health care after an accident; in others it was
a product of kidney disease or other acute health problems. While
many disabled people live in town camps and remote communities,
there is not even the most basic infrastructure such as footpaths,
ramps or even sealed roads, making everyday life extremely difficult.
For those who are elderly, or who dont have immediate family,
it is virtually impossible to get around. We saw several older
people sitting on mattresses on the groundwithout even a
proper chair.
May Abbott,
who is in her 50s and has lived in Hidden Valley for 35 years,
could only get into town with the assistance of her two daughters.
Abbott is on an invalid pension and requires wheel-chair assistance
whenever she leaves home.
She told us that she considered herself fortunate compared
to other sick and elderly Aborigines. One day I saw an old
lady, who looked like she would be going to dialysis and she looked
really sick, and yet she still had to go to Centrelink to get
a store card. I often get a bit sick when Im waiting there,
she explained.
Mark Lockyer,
Mays 21-year-old son, explained that Tangentyere Council,
the Aboriginal organisation that administers the Alice Springs
camps, provides aged-care services to about 60 people but there
are another 40 on a waiting list and the numbers are growing.
Disability services in Alice Springs provide no assistance
to his invalided mother, he said. They say they cant
give us the same services they give to people living in the urban
areas.
Mark is a pre-school worker. In fact, he is the only male indigenous
pre-school play-group worker in Alice Springs and his work is
aimed at teaching health, hygiene and nutrition to both mothers
and their children aged from six months to six years. Mark quietly
but firmly rejected the government and media allegations of child
sex abuse in Aboriginal communities. A lot of people, especially
a lot of those in town, stereotype Aboriginal people and say that
we are all bad ... but child abuse happens in any society and
any race. The perpetrators could be a rich person or a poor person,
he said.
Asked what he thought was needed for the community, he quickly
replied: Aboriginal people need nutrition programs, health
programs and alcohol rehabilitation programs, but it looks like
the government has got its mind made up and it isnt really
going to listen to what we have to say.
Marks comments were clearly an understatement. The intervention
was not organised on the basis of discussion or consultation with
Aboriginal people themselves, because its intention was never
to meet their social needs.
Self-determination
In 1977, under the banner of self-determination,
Alice Springs town camps began to be administered by local Aborigines
through the Tangentyere Council, absolving the federal and Territory
governments of direct responsibility for the camps residents.
While limited concessions were made during this periodincluding
the right to social welfare and pensionsthe so-called Aboriginal
control of Aboriginal affairs failed to produce any real
or lasting advances. Rather, it simply gave a small layer of Aboriginal
people the right to distribute welfare and other paltry
amounts of government money that could never overcome the poverty
or provide real jobs.
Aboriginal town camps have never had the sort of services taken
for granted in the rest of the country. Sealed roads, regular
garbage collections, public transport, postal deliveries and other
vital requirements of life in the twenty-first century are largely
non-existent.
Services provided by organisations like the Tangentyere Council,
such as limited aged- and child-care services, a childrens
safe house and financial advisory services, are grossly under-resourced
and only exist through CDEP funding, a cheap labour program which
pays workers far less than award rates.
Whitegate and native title
In the early 1990s the Keating Labor government insisted that
land rights and native title claims by
Aboriginal people would provide the framework for overcoming endemic
poverty. These claims, like others before them, were a cruel political
hoax. This became much clearer after we visited the Whitegate
town camp on our last day in Alice Springs.
Whitegate is located about two kilometres east of the Alice
Springs town centre and is home to about 50 residents. Here we
spoke with several town camp residents, past and present, including
60-year-old Myra Hayes who denounced the so-called
intervention and said it would do nothing for the
residents.

Like many of her generation in the town camps, she was born
on a central Australian cattle station where her father worked
for rations. Her surname was taken from the name of the family
that owned and ran the property. In those days, Aboriginal people
were almost regarded as part of the live-stock by the pastoralists,
and treated accordingly.
Myra settled in Whitegate about 20 years ago and in 1994 was
the official applicant for a native title claim by the Arrernte
people for legal recognition of the land where the camp is located.
In May 2000, the claim was eventually successful, but only after
almost a decade of litigation. And what did this victory bring?
Prior to their native title claim Whitegate residents lived
in tin sheds and humpiesrough dwellings thrown together
with whatever material could be found in the area. Eight years
later nothing has changed.
Myra Hayes and other Whitegate residents are still housed in
tin dwellings, where summer temperatures rise to the low 40s.
They are freezing cold in the winter and have none of the most
basic requirements of life that most Australians take for granted.
Whitegate does not have running water. Water must be carried
by hand to the rudimentary homes. Nor does it have electricity,
sewage or telephones and although there is a central ablution
block, the toilets only work intermittently. There are no facilities
for childrennot even a playgroundor any other basic
services required for normal human existence.
These conditionsan everyday reality of life for Whitegate
residentsexist in a community just a few minutes from Alice
Springss town centre, where art galleries and tourist shops
sell Aboriginal paintings and expensive cultural trinkets at prices
Aboriginal people themselves could never dream of affording.
The Alice Springs News and the corporate media, of course,
blame town campers for the run-down state of their communities,
arrogantly suggesting that they are responsible for their own
poverty. But the plight of Aboriginal people is the end-product
of decades of dispossession by mining companies, pastoralists
and other corporate entities, and the refusal of consecutive governments
to provide the basic necessities of lifeabove all good,
well-paid jobs, along with properly resourced and staffed heath-care
and education, and decent housing.
This is apparent to anyone prepared to look beyond the hysterical
media headlines and examine the real economic, social and historical
background to NTs social catastrophe.
To be continued
Note:
[1] Income management compulsorily diverts 50 percent of social
welfare and pensions, due to Aboriginal people who live in government
prescribed Aboriginal communities, into store- or
debit-cards issued by the state-funded welfare agency Centrelink.
The government claims that income management assists
Aboriginal family members to buy food for their children, rather
than the money being spent on alcohol. But prior to the intervention,
Aboriginal people could have their welfare payments quarantined
on a voluntary basis through various Aboriginal community and
welfare organisationsi.e., a set portion was put aside and
provided in the form of food and other coupons.
See Also:
NT intervention extended:
Australian Labor budget punishes society's most disadvantaged
[22 May 2008]
On-the-spot report from central
Australia Conditions of Aboriginal people in Alice Springs and
the town camps
[7 April 2008]
Australia: SBS television's
bogus debate on Northern Territory intervention
[2 April 2008]
An exchange on Australia's
"Sorry Day"
[22 February 2008]
Australian Prime Minister
apologises to "stolen generation": rhetoric versus reality
[13 February 2008]
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