Stop the racism – Converge on Canberra
Converge on Canberra: 1 – 3 February 2009
http://stoptheintervention.org/
Tuesday, 3 February 2009 at 12 pm Canberra: Rally for Opening of Parliament
1st – 2nd February 2009: Join activists from around the country in workshops at the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Canberra
Donations desperately needed!
- Immediately reinstate the Racial Discrimination Act
- Repeal the NT Intervention laws
- Justice Not Jail – Stop Black Deaths in Custody
- Community control and full funding for all Aboriginal services, housing, health and education. Stop the cuts to CDEP
- Recognise the culturally autonomous Torres Strait Islander and Aboriginal Nations of the Australian continent and immediately end the one-size fits all approach to Indigenous affairs. Consult with communities and nation groups independently in order to develop policy in partnership with sovereign cultural law and practice.
- Full welfare rights for all. End the punitive welfare quarantine.
- Immediately adopt the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Tuesday, 3 February 2009 at 12 pm: Rally for Opening of Parliament
Buses will take people to Canberra for the protest on Tuesday Morning and return on Tuesday Afternoon. Busses leave at 8 am sharp (meet at 7.30am) on Tuesday 3 Feb from opposite Redfern Station. $20 negotiable. To book a seat on the bus call Jean 0449 646 593 before Sunday 1st Feb.
1st – 2nd February 2009: Join activists from around the country in workshops at the Aboriginal Tent Embassy
Workshops include discussion of the impacts of the NT Intervention and how we can stop it, attacks on CDEP (Community Development Employment Programs) and the new assimilation, the fight for recognition of Aboriginal Sovereignty, and more.
There will also be a public forum and discussion on the Monday night in Canberra:
The NT Intervention: Living with a Racist Policy
Monday, 2 February 2009 at 7pm: Albert Hall, Commonwealth Ave, Yarralumla, Canberra.
Speakers include: Barbara Shaw – Mt Nancy Town Camp, Mparntwe – Alice Springs, Harry Jakamarra Nelson – Yuendumu community, Elaine Peckham – Iwupataka Land Trust, George Newhouse – Human Rights Lawyer, Jon Altman – Australian National University, and other residents from NT Intervention “Prescribed Communities”.
STICS members are joining people from around the country to converge and camp at the Aboriginal Tent Embassy on the lawns of Old Parliament House. Convergence organisers have arranged porta-loos and marquees, and the “Chai tent” will be providing some food for a donation. But campers are asked to bring some snacks.
Statement for the Canberra Convergence
Aboriginal Australia still waits for human rights. Aboriginal people are 13 times more likely to be in prison than non-Indigenous Australians and horrific deaths in custody continue, as highlighted by recent events on Palm Island. Aboriginal babies die at more than twice the rate of the non-Indigenous population. The Stolen Generations still wait for compensation. Land rights are under increasing threat by mining companies and waste dumps and by the government’s push for leases to remove community control over community land. Labor has not adopted the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
The NT Intervention is based on Racial Discrimination:
In April 2008, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner and Race Discrimination Commissioner, Tom Calma said, “The most revealing indicator that the NT intervention was not consistent with human rights principles was the provision at the centre of the legislative machinery used to support the intervention, namely suspending the operation of Racial Discrimination Act.”
Yet the Rudd government says the Racial Discrimination Act will remain suspended and a blanket welfare quarantine will be maintained for at least the next year.
An Intervention that relies on the suspension of the very Act designed to protect people from racism, makes a mockery of any claim that it is for the benefit of Aboriginal people.
Self-determination – Aboriginal control of Aboriginal affairs:
“For old people the intervention is bringing up bad memories of the past, the old days, the ration days, the dog tag days and the mission days” (Women’s statement from the inaugural Prescribed Area People’s Alliance, 29 September 2008).
Under the Northern Territory Emergency Response (NTER), leases and government business managers have been imposed on prescribed communities.
The only houses built with Intervention funds have been for the business managers, many of which are unoccupied. Only a handful of ‘prescribed’ communities have been offered funding for housing – and only if they lease their land to the government for 40, 60 or even 90 years.
Many communities, deemed “unviable” will be denied funding and basic welfare rights. Successful programs run by local communities dealing with issues of alcohol abuse, domestic violence and education, have been dismantled as the NTER has taken bureaucratic control. The recommendations of the “Little Children are Sacred” report are being ignored.
The women of the Prescribed Area People’s Alliance declared, “we want to strongly maintain and practice our culture. We want to stay in our communities and pass on traditional knowledge to the future generations.”
Yet the NT government has announced a ban on the teaching of Aboriginal languages in schools for all but one hour in the afternoons.
This approach – of open assimilation and “mainstreaming” is being rolled out across Australia. Koori schools in Victoria are being closed by the state government.
Community Development Employment Projects (CDEP), a crucial source of support for Aboriginal communities and employment for thousands of families, are being threatened with closure nationally. People are facing the prospect of having to leave their communities in order to access employment and basic welfare rights.
Welfare rights are non-negotiable:
The Intervention represents a wholesale attack on Australia’s commitment to universal social security rights. “Income management” means Aboriginal people are treated as second-class citizens. Some communities literally rely on the uncertain delivery of food parcels.
Others are left with no money to attend funerals or ceremonies, pay for school excursions, or even buy Christmas presents. Aboriginal communities nationally are bearing the brunt of attempts to extend the punitive “income management” regime.
Never Again
In February 2008, Prime Minister Rudd apologized to the Stolen Generations committing the government to, “A future where this Parliament resolves that the injustices of the past must never, never happen again”.
But injustices are being perpetuated under the NT Intervention. The paternalism that created “the gap” between the lives of Aboriginal people and the rest of Australia is being fostered by the Intervention and the renewed push for assimilation.
The solution to the poverty and disadvantage of Aboriginal communities begins with self-determination – allowing affected communities to decide what programs are needed and how they will be implemented.
The Labor government’s own NTER Review (13 October 2008) stated, “…addressing specific concerns in Aboriginal communities does not require the exclusion of fundamental human rights such as the Racial Discrimination Act.”
The following individuals and organisations support a convergence in Canberra on the opening day of parliament, 3 February 2009, to say no to racism and demand justice for Aboriginal Australia:
- Central Land Council – Full Council
- Prescribed Area People’s Alliance (NT)
- QLD Aboriginal Council Mayors roundtable
- Intervention Rollback Action Group (Mparntwe – Alice Springs)
- Stop the Intervention Collective (Sydney)
- Aboriginal Rights Coalition (Brisbane)
- Working Group for Aboriginal Rights (Canberra)
- Top End Aboriginal Conservation Alliance
- Sunrise Health Service (Katherine)
- Black GST
- Camp Sovereignty
- Gordon & Elaine Syron, The Keeping Place/Black Fella’s Dreaming Museum
- Aboriginal Tent Embassy (ACT)
- Nuclear Disarmament Party
- Women for Wik
- WA Aboriginal Rights Coalition
- Socialist Alliance
- Harry Nelson (Yuendumu)
- Phillip Wilyuka (Titjikala)
- Barbara Shaw (Mt Nancy Town Camp)
- Dootch Kennedy
- Michael Mansell
- Sam Watson
- Robbie Thorpe
- Les Malezer
- Nicole Watson
- Monique Wiseman
- Pastor Ray Minniecon
- Millie Ingram
- Donna Jackson
- Tiga Bailes
- Irene Fisher
- Dianne Stokes
- Mark Lane
- Jeff McMullen
- Professor Larissa Behrendt (Director of Research at the Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning UTS)
- Leonie Chester
- Elaine Peckham (Iwupataka)
- Eva Cox
- George Newhouse (B.Com, LL.B, Human Rights Lawyer representing the Prescribed Area People’s Alliance in the United Nations)
- Jon Altman
- Shane Phillips
- Valerie Martin (Yuendumu)
- Lee Rhiannon (Greens NSW MP)
- John Kaye (Greens NSW MP)
- Nala Mansell-McKenna, State Secretary, Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre
- Gracelyn Smallwood
- Rosalie Kunoth-Monks
- Robin Granites (Yuendumu)
- Bertha Nakamarra Spencer (Hidden Valley Town Camp)
- Michael Thompson (President, NTEU USYD Branch)
- Rex Granites Japanangka (Yuendumu)
- Caril Conners aka C Saville (Mindaribba Local Aboriginal Land Council member)
- Kerree Parter (Regional Network Programs Officer, DEWHA, Rockhampton ICC)
- Rebecca Saville (Mindaribba Local Aboriginal Land Council member)
- Deborah Ruiz Wall
- Daniel John Peterson
- Matthew Maurer (LLB)
- Irene Doutney (Greens Councillor, City of Sydney)
- Genevieve Kelly (Secretary NSW NTEU)
- Terry Mason (Senior Lecturer, Indigenous Education, University of
- Western Sydney)
- Fiona McAllan (Macquarie University)
- Dr. Stephen Meredith, Psychologist
To support the Canberra protest, please E-mail stoptheintervention at gmail dot com
People coming for the workshops and camping at the embassy need to be as close to self-sufficient as possible in the following things:
– Tent
– sleeping bag
– sleeping mat
– hat
– suncream
– large water bottle
– bowl and cutlery
– mug
– snacks
– torch
– wet weather gear
– Money towards food
STICS is organising transport to Canberra for the workshops. Leaving 6am Sunday 1st Feb, returning in the evening of the 3rd or the afternoon of the 4th. To book transport call Jasmine Ali: 0401 955 405. Before Friday 30th Jan. $20 negotiable.
Donations desperately needed!
Buses of people from prescribed areas in the NT are costing $20,000. On top of that, hire of a cool-room to allow food at the Tent Embassy, and port-a-loos, sound systems and marquees are costing at least another $8,000. Additionally the campaign groups need funds for other transport to the convergence, publicity materials etc…
Please support this effort to take the struggles of Aboriginal people directly to those making the policies that are unwinding Aboriginal self-determination. Below you can find the Canberra Convergence Statement. Please approach supportive organisations to donate and support the convergence by emailing: [email protected]
Donate money to:
Stop the Intervention Collective Sydney
BSB: 06 2212
Account: 10452725
Include your name or organisation in the deposit description if you wish to be identified.
Posted in
Aboriginal affairs,
activism,
call for action,
colonisation,
community,
dispossession,
erasure,
Indigenous peoples,
Indigenous sovereignty,
land rights,
military,
mobility politics,
NT intervention,
policing,
race and racism,
social movements,
state repression,
the state,
white supremacy |