Title: Indigenous Affairs in Australia
1Indigenous Affairs in Australia post the
Apology
Tom Calma Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Social Justice Commissioner and Race
Discrimination Commissioner Australian Human
Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
2Until we fully confront that truth, there will
always be a shadow hanging over us and our future
as a fully united and fully reconciled people. It
is time to reconcile. It is time to recognise the
injustices of the past. It is time to say
sorry To the stolen generations, I say the
following as Prime Minister of Australia, I am
sorry. On behalf of the government of Australia,
I am sorry. On behalf of the parliament of
Australia, I am sorry. I offer you this apology
without qualification. We apologise for the
hurt, the pain and suffering that we, the
parliament, have caused you by the laws that
previous parliaments have enacted. We apologise
for the indignity, the degradation and the
humiliation these laws embodied. Our challenge
for the future is to embrace a new partnership
between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
Australians. The core of this partnership for
the future is closing the gap between Indigenous
and non-Indigenous Australians on life
expectancy, educational achievement and
employment opportunities.
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd Apology to Australias
Indigenous Peoples 13 February 2008
3Equality in Indigenous health and life
expectation within 25 years
- Targets
- Health status equality within 25 Years
- Equality of opportunity in 10 years
- Primary health care
- Health infrastructure
- Indigenous health
- workforce
4Close the Gap Campaign
- Achieving Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
health equality within a generation A human
rights based approach
5National Health Equality Summit Statement of
Intent
- The Statement of Intent commits to
- Develop a comprehensive, long-term plan of
action, that is targeted to need, evidence-based
and capable of addressing the existing inequities
in health services, in order to achieve equality
of health status and life expectancy between
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and
non- Indigenous Australians by 2030. - Ensure the full participation of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander peoples and their
representative bodies in all aspects of
addressing their health needs. - Build on the evidence base and supporting what
works. - Respect and promote the rights of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander peoples And - Measure, monitor, and report on our joint
efforts, in accordance with benchmarks and
targets, to ensure that we are progressively
realising our shared ambitions.
6Council of Australian Governments
- COAG agreed to
- A partnership between all levels of government to
work with Indigenous communities to achieve the
target of closing the gap on Indigenous
disadvantage including - closing the life expectancy gap within a
generation - halving the mortality gap for children under five
within a decade -
- halving the gap in reading, writing and numeracy
within a decade. - recognising the pathway to closing the gap is
inextricably linked to economic development and
improved education outcomes. - establishing a Working Group on Indigenous Reform
7Health Equality Targets
-
- Partnership Targets to lock into place a
collaborative approach to Indigenous health - Health Status Targets - Targets that focus on
specific priority areas of child and maternal
health, chronic disease and mental health and
emotional and social wellbeing - Primary Health Care and other Health Services
Targets and - Infrastructure Targets.
8Northern Territory Intervention
- Action 1 Restore all rights to procedural
fairness and external merits review -
- Action 2 Reinstate protections against racial
discrimination - Action 3 Amend or remove the provisions that
declare that the legislation constitutes a
special measure - Action 4 Reinstate protections against
discrimination in the Northern Territory and
Queensland -
- Action 5 Require consent to be obtained in the
management of Indigenous property and confirm the
guarantee of just terms compensation
9Northern Territory Intervention
- Action 6 Reinstate the CDEP Program and review
the operation of the income management scheme so
that it is consistent with human rights - Action 7 Review the operation and effectiveness
of the alcohol management schemes - Action 8 Ensure the effective participation of
Indigenous peoples in all aspects of the
intervention - Action 9 Set a timetable for the transition
from an emergency intervention to a community
development plan - Action 10 Ensure stringent monitoring and review
processes.
10Blue Mud Bay Case
- Traditional Owners have the right to exclude
commercial and recreational fishers from tidal
waters within the Blue Mud Bay, in northeast
Arnhem Land - Fishing licences merely regulate the specific
activity of fishing but do not authorise entry to
any particular area. - Common law notion of a public right to fish has
been abrogated by the Northern Territory's
fisheries legislation - Northern Territory of Australia
- v
- Arnhem Land Aboriginal Land Trust
11New National Indigenous Representative Body
- The Barunga Statement (June 1988)
- We call on the Commonwealth to pass laws
providing A national elected Aboriginal and
Islander organisation to oversee Aboriginal and
Islander affairs - Minister for Indigenous Affairs (May 2008)
- The Government went to the election with a
commitment to set up a national representative
body to provide an Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander voice within government. We will soon
begin formal discussions with Indigenous people
about the role, status and composition of this
body. - HREOC Issues Paper, 2008
- What are the lessons learned from other
Indigenous representative mechanisms that
currently exist, or have previously existed, in
Australia and overseas. - Issues to consider
- - the guiding principles
- - role and functions
- - structure and membership
- relationship with governments and parliaments,
and - funding
12UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples
- Adopted by the General Assembly on 13 September
2007 - Recognises human rights and fundamental freedoms
of indigenous peoples including - right to unrestricted self-determination
- inalienable collective right to the ownership,
use and control of lands, territories and other
natural resources, - prior and informed consultation, participation
and consent - fair and adequate compensation
- guarantees against ethnocide and genocide.
13The importance of hope
From self respect comes dignity and from dignity
comes hope
14HREOC online at
- Speeches
- www.humanrights.gov.au/about/media/speeches/index.
html - Reports
- www.humanrights.gov.au/social_justice/index.html
- Submissions
- www.humanrights.gov.au/legal/submissions/index.htm
l - Media
- www.humanrights.gov.au/about/media/index.html
- Education
- www.humanrights.gov.au/education/index.html
- Contact HREOC
- on 61 2 9284 9600