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WSWS : News
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Northern Territory intervention
Unintended consequences or deliberate destruction?
Part 2
By a WSWS reporting team
26 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 second in a series of articles, interviews, video
clips and slide shows (1
and 2). Parts one, three,
four, five,
six and seven
were posted on June 21, July 2, July 15, July 24, August 6 and
August 25 respectively.
Over the last two months a number of newspaper commentators
have begun describing the exodus of Aboriginal people out of remote
communities and into town camps and urban centres as an unintended
consequence of the federal governments intervention
into the Northern Territory. Their descriptions are entirely cynicalthe
break up of remote communities is not an accident but a key aim
of the government measures.
Former indigenous affairs minister Mal Brough spelt this out
when he told the Australian on August 9 last year: Some
communities are going to be very challenged to remain as they
are and we are going to have to have honest conversations with
people.... If you want to live there thats OK but dont
expect the government to somehow build a clinic and put a school
in for kids or whatever it may be ...
Here it was in black and white. The future of remote settlements
would be measured according to market requirements. Those communities
that failed the test would be left to wither and die, precipitating
population relocations even more socially destructive than those
that followed the mass sackings of Aboriginal stockmen in the
late 1960s.
Broughs comments echoed those of Gary Johns, a minister
in the Keating Labor government of 1992-96, who told the Bennelong
Society in October 2006: Moving will not be easy, nor will
it be possible or sensible for all. But mobility will be a big
part of the structural adjustment story in remote Aboriginal society....
The challenge for government is to stop funding programs that
militate against the migratory solution.
This is the Rudd Labor governments real agenda. It was
confirmed by everything we witnessed during our visit to central
Australia. And, as if on cue, on the first anniversary of the
intervention, the Northern Territory Emergency Response Taskforce
has recommended that the government consider the sustainability
of smaller communities and provide only those deemed economically
viable with basic services such as schools and health clinics.
Desperate overcrowding
Many of the long-term Alice Springs residents to whom we spoke
told us that the number of homeless Aborigines seeking shelter
in the town camps and elsewhere had increased since the intervention.
Police activity around the town centre was intensifying and there
were larger number of numbers of Aboriginal people sleeping rough
under trees and in the dry bed of the Todd River.
While we were there, the local press reported on the desperate
overcrowding in Bagot, a Darwin town camp, whose population has
more than doubled, growing from 500 to 1,200 residents. According
to community officials, one dwelling in the camp had become home
to nine families. Only one in five homes has either a stove or
a refrigerator, creating unbearable living conditions for the
vast majority.
The reason for this population drift became very clear. Increasing
numbers of residents in remote Aboriginal communities were moving
towards the urban centres trying to escape the measures introduced
by the intervention, or to use their Centrelink-issued income
management store-cards. It appears this displacement of
remote Aboriginal communities has resulted in a movement not only
to urban areas in the Northern Territory, but to towns in South
Australia and Queensland as well.

Welfare organisations in the South Australian town of Coober
Pedy, more than 600 kilometres south of Alice Springs, for example,
report many NT Aborigines moving into the town. This is placing
severe burdens on the Umoona Community Council, which provides
local assistance to alcoholics in Coober Pedy, but has recently
been inundated with new arrivals and is now unable to cope.
In Mt Isa, Queensland, the North West Queensland Indigenous
Catholic Social Services told the North West Star newspaper
that the number of homeless people living in the riverbed and
on church grounds had more than doubled in the past year. Local
residents have also reported cases of Aboriginal children who
had not eaten for three days at a time.
Mt Isa mayor and former police officer John Molony responded
to this escalating social disaster by denouncing NT Aborigines
in the town as boozers and losers and demanded that
the state government force them back across the border.
Comments of this general type were being repeated ad nauseam
in the letters page of the Alice Springs News with right-wing
layers demanding that the government breakup and bulldoze the
town camps and disperse their residents. Such is the social constituency
being encouraged by Labors intervention.
Yuendumu
One of the largest remote communities in Central Australia
is Yuendumu, which lies about 290 kilometres northwest of Alice
Springs and has a population of more than 900 people. The main
road to the town is asphalt-sealed only half the way. The remaining
dirt road is subject to flooding during the wet season.
Whilst we were unable to visit
Yuendumu we spoke with several residents, including Valerie
Napaljarri Martin, 53, who was visiting relatives in
Alice Springs. She, like every other Aboriginal person we met,
explained how income quarantining had made life all but impossible.
How are we supposed to survive if our money is quarantined?
How do we pay our bills? How are we supposed to pay for Austar
[television services], car repairs or fuel or get to Alice Springs
and back to Yuendumu with all the prices so high? she asked.
Martin said Yuendumu residents were determined to resist the
intervention, but pointed out that their voices were being ignored
by the government, the media and the local business manager.
Aboriginal people thought that if Labor got in they would
stop the interventionthat theyd get rid of itbut
it hasnt happened and instead theyre fully supporting
it. We are the first Australians and the government should be
looking after us. We were supposed to have equal rights in 1967.
Were not perfectwe struggle with our problemsbut
no one listens to us. How are we going to be treated in the future?
I am worried about my grandchildren and Im fighting for
the future of my grandkids.
Yuendumu was officially established in 1946 by the federal
Labor governments Native Affairs branch to provide rations
to local Aborigines. It was run by a government-appointed superintendent
who allocated rations on a policy of no work, no rations.
The population remained largely static at around 400 until the
late-1960s, when it doubled to about 800, following the mass sackings
of Aboriginal stockmen in the wake of the equal pay decision.
The first-Aboriginal elected Yuendumu Council, which assumed
responsibility for the administration of the community, was established
in 1978. But the council is entirely dependent on government funding
to provide housing, power and water. Opportunities for work are
limited, with the jobs and services provided via government-funded
CDEP programs.

According to Yuendumu resident Colin Wilson,
there are more than 30 families in the community waiting for housing
and a longer waiting list for basic home maintenance. The community
has no qualified plumber or electrician, which means that contractors
have to travel from Alice Springsa 600-kilometre round tripto
make repairs. Nor are there any facilities for training tradesmen
in the community.
Colonial-style arrogance
Yuendumu was among the first prescribed NT Aboriginal
communities to be allocated an intervention business manager.
Mr Noel Mason moved into the community last August.
Mason and other business managers are paid up to $200,000 a
year and have wide-ranging, almost dictatorial powers, not unlike
the Native Affairs superintendents of yesteryear. They treat Aboriginal
people with the same sort of contempt.
While Aboriginal residents battle to deal with seriously overcrowded
and substandard homes, no government expense is spared for the
business managers, who are provided with brand new housing as
part of their assignment. Masons residence is surrounded
by a six-foot wire fence, topped with barbed-wire.
Much of the government spin about the intervention has centred
on official claims that consultation with local communities
would take place. What a cruel hoax! Just how cruel was exposed
in an incident in Yuendumu in February this year, when construction
workers dumped cement waste on an Aboriginal ceremonial site.
Angry local residents protested this violation of their history
and culture, but were arrogantly brushed aside. Intervention employees
simply told them: Oh well, dont worry about it.
Such ignorant and provocative behaviour by government representatives
towards remote Aboriginal communities is no aberration. But one
can only imagine their response if Aboriginal people were to dump
cement waste on a Darwin or Alice Springs church graveyard!
Soon after his appointment, business manager Mason circulated
a document entitled YuendumuSchool Attendance Proposal.
In it, he suggested that police should round up children
who wagged school and conscript them into work gangs. He further
proposed that the names of children staying up late at night
will be collected and those children will be used to assist with
the cleanup of the town site the next day.... The aim is to make
children who want to avoid school, have a busy, tiring day.
Under the so-called emergency legislation, business managers,
many of whom are ex-police or military officers, have the power
to terminate or vary all federal government funding agreements
in the community and place local organisations under administration
for failures relating to the provision of services.
Yuendumu people are therefore confronted with an obvious Catch-22:
how can the Aboriginal-controlled council maintain services when
it has no real independent income? When it remains dependent on
the utterly inadequate government handouts and grants?
This highlights the most fundamental issue facing Aboriginal
communities: namely, that any genuine and lasting solution to
such inhuman conditions will never be found within the framework
of the current social and economic setup. As long as the profit
motive drives social priorities, none of the problems of education,
health or housing will be resolved. This requires the interventionnot
of the military, police and government-sponsored business managers,
but of a new, independent and unified, political movement of the
working class guided by a socialist perspective, which aims at
nothing less than the complete reorganisation of social life to
meet human need, not private wealth and corporate profit.
To be continued
See Also:
Australia: Protestors denounce Labor's
Northern Territory intervention
[25 June 2008]
NT intervention extended:
Australian Labor budget punishes society's most disadvantaged
[22 May 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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