Archive for June, 2009

"Will COAG deliver on Indigenous health?" (well, it won't delivery on indigenous sovereignty!)

June 30, 2009

Australian Human Rights Commission Wednesday 1 July 2009

The Close the Gap campaign will be watching tomorrow’s Council of Australian Governments (COAG) meeting in Darwin to see if governments commit to genuine partnership with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

For the first time, COAG is holding a meeting with a focus on Indigenous issues.

Chair of the Close the Gap Steering Committee and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma, whose 2005 Social Justice Report laid the groundwork for the community-led Close the Gap campaign, praised the Australian government for the COAG initiative.

“This meeting is important because it not only includes a focus on Indigenous health but also addresses the social and cultural determinants that contribute to good health and wellbeing,” Commissioner Calma said.

However, Mr Calma said money alone was not enough and that closing the unacceptable life expectancy gap would not happen unless COAG supports four critical measures:

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Support for Iranian peoples movement to use internet – message from AVAAZ

June 29, 2009

“Dear friends,

The crackdown and blackout on Iran’s streets and internet is silencing the voices of protesters. Iranians urgently need internet access to communicate with each other and world – let’s fund simple, cheap tools to help them freely access the internet:

The brutal crackdown on Iran’s streets is succeeding. Lethal shooting, beatings and mass arrests have driven millions off the streets, and a communications blackout is preventing them from communicating with each other and the world.

Ruling clerics are in crisis talks — many are criticising the crackdown and calling for reform.

We urgently need to help Iranians get back on the internet to have their voices heard in Iran and the world. Secure and anonymous “proxy services” are helping people to bypass regime controls and get online — but they’re overloaded and running out of funds.3 A small donation of just $10 can provide bandwidth for hundreds of secure emails – if 10,000 of us donate in the next 72 hours, we can help break the blackout:

Proxy services provide people with a single link at which they can freely access the internet. The link is changed every time the regime blocks access to it. With 10,000 donors, we can scale up the proxy services massively — providing more servers, bandwidth and advanced technical support.

The next two weeks are crucial. As Iran’s secret policemen cast their net far and wide, secure channels of communication are also critical to avoiding the crackdown. Scores have been killed and hundreds of human rights advocates, journalists, bloggers and peaceful protesters imprisoned. Although many more remain free, without safe ways to communicate they will face terrible risks.

After the crackdowns in Tibet and Burma, Avaaz members donated in our thousands to preserve the people’s basic human right to free communication and information. Overcoming censorship to make contact with each other and the world is crucial at these moments. Sharing information about the protests still flaring up around the provinces of Iran from Kurdish areas to the holy city of Qom, or uploading YouTube videos and first-hand reports of bravery and brutality to Iran’s million-plus weblogs and networks like Twitter, could make a huge difference.4 If the regime believe they can silence such reports, the crackdown will only worsen.

Legitimacy matters in Iran. From inspirational videos of million-strong marches to shocking evidence of militia violence, the truth will come out only if Iranians can communicate freely with each other.5 The clerical councils engaged in closed-door crisis talks are paying great attention to the voices being raised in their society. Let’s make sure Iran’s voices are not silenced – help break the blackout before it’s too late:

https://secure.avaaz.org/en/iran_break_the_blackout

With hope and determination,

Paul, Ricken, Milena, Graziela, Paula, Luis, Brett, Iain, Rajeev and the whole Avaaz team Sources”

New website – indigenous sisters on "What's working"

June 29, 2009

Check out:

http://www.whatsworking.com.au/

Call for Papers: Indigenous young people, crime and justice conference

June 25, 2009

Call for Papers: Indigenous young people, crime and justice conference

Abstracts of papers due 10 July 2009.

The Australian Institute of Criminology is Australia’s national research and knowledge centre on crime and justice. The Institute seeks to promote justice and reduce crime by undertaking and communicating evidence-based research to inform policy and practice.

From Monday 31 August – Tuesday 1 September 2009 the AIC in partnership with the NSW Commission for Children and Young People, the NSW Attorney-General’s Department and the Australian Human Rights Commission, will host a national conference on Indigenous young people, crime and justice at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, Parramatta.

The conference website is at: http://www.aic.gov.au/conferences/2009-indigenousyouth/

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Report – 84 percent of NT prisoners are indigenous!

June 25, 2009

“The proportion of prisoners who are Indigenous varies across States and Territories. The Indigenous prisoner population in the Northern Territory comprises 84 per cent of the total prisoner population, while Victoria had the lowest proportion of Indigenous prisoners (6%). Notably in Western Australia in 2007, Indigenous Australians were 21 times more likely to be in prison than non-Indigenous Australians (see Figure 2) (Australian Bureau of Statistics 2007b).”

One in four prisoners are Indigenous: report
Thursday, 25 June 2009 National Indigenous Times
By Julian Drape

NATIONAL, June 25, 2009: One in four prisoners in Australia is Indigenous and their over-representation in the jail system is only getting worse, a new report states.

Aboriginal people are 13 times more likely to be locked up than other Australians, while the proportion of Indigenous women being incarcerated has tripled in the past 20-odd years.

Half of the 10- to 17-year-olds in corrective institutions are Indigenous.

“The fact is, every year it gets worse,” Australian National Council on Drugs (ANCD) executive director Gino Vumbaca said.

“The investment in prison cells is clearly flawed. It’s not working.

“If you build more prison cells, invariably you’ll fill them with more Indigenous people.”

The statistics are collated in the ANCD’s National Indigenous Drug and Alcohol Committee (NIDAC) report Bridges and Barriers – Addressing Indigenous Incarceration and Health.

full story
http://www.nit.com.au/BreakingNews/story.aspx?id=18053

Story and audio at
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/06/25/2607792.htm?site=news

Download 420kb report at:
http://www.nidac.org.au/publications/pdf/nidac_bridges_and_barriers.pdf

Ethnocide in 21st Century – NT style

June 23, 2009

From WGAR news:

“ATTEMPTS TO PHASE OUT BILINGUAL EDUCATION IN THE NT:

- Media Release

WGAR: Bilingual education under threat

http://sydney.indymedia.org.au/story/bilingual-education-under-threat-aiatsis-symposium-26-6

22 Jun 09: “The Northern Territory Government has taken steps to limit and phase out bilingual education in their jurisdiction. There is no evidence that this move will help any students to achieve better results at school. Ellie Gilbert, a spokesperson for WGAR said today that these moves are counter to the Australian Government’s decision to adopt the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.”

- Event

Bilingual Education in the Northern Territory:
Principles, policy and practice
AIATSIS Research Symposium 9am – 5pm, 26th June 2009
Venue: Visions Theatre, National Museum of Australia, Canberra

http://www.aiatsis.gov.au/research_program/events2/bilingual_education_symposium_2009

“At the start of the 2010 school year, the number of hours of bilingual teaching in Northern Territory Two-Way schools is set to decrease by more than half. The public debate that followed the announcement of this policy change revealed a need for further research on the models, achievements and challenges of bilingual education in Indigenous communities. Acknowledging this research gap and
recognising that the new policy represents a significant shift in educational practice, AIATSIS will hold a one day symposium to debate and discuss the policy change and its implications.”

- Background

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Prescribed Area Peoples’ Alliance Statement

June 22, 2009

Posted in WGAR NEWSLETTER on 22/06/2009 – see www.wgar.info

Prescribed Area Peoples’ Alliance Statement

20 Jun 09: “We members of the Prescribed Area Peoples’ Alliance have made the following statement from our June 18-19 meeting in Darwin. Everybody else has their rights. Aboriginal people aren’t recognised. They don’t want to listen to us because they want our land. We are our own leaders, passed down through our families. We don’t need leaders in parliament to speak. We can use our own voice.

Stop the Intervention: Self Determination not Assimilation
* No takeover of Aboriginal town camps
* Full funding, housing and services for all communities
* No blanket welfare quarantines
* Reinstate the Racial Discrimination Act
* Aboriginal control of Aboriginal affairs

The government says they support the declaration of the rights of indigenous peoples but they haven’t made it legal. The government has to make it legal. All Aboriginal people are being treated as second class citizens. …

[Newsletter Ed. note: Northern Territory Aboriginal communities targeted by the Australian Federal Territory Intervention have united as PAPA, the Prescribed Area Peoples’ Alliance.]

Australian Aborigines publish a long catalogue of complaints about their treatment.
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Two years after the start of the NT intervention. Time to get it right.

June 22, 2009

Australian Human Rights Commission

Let’s not wait another two years to get it right
******************************************

Sunday, 21 June 2009

Open and genuine consultation driven by a desire for trusting, long-term relationships with Aboriginal people must be central to federal government consultations in the 73 prescribed communities affected by the Northern Territory Emergency Response (NTER), Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma said today, two years after the intervention was announced.

Commissioner Calma repeated his praise for the government’s moves to introduce legislation later this year to reinstate the Racial Discrimination Act (RDA) in the affected communities but cautioned that any attempts to make compulsory income or alcohol management strategies special measures must be completely understood by the affected communities and must be demonstrably supported by them.

“We know that a consultation process was entirely absent in the introduction of NTER measures and that community views were not considered in the design or delivery of these measures,” Commissioner Calma said.

“Let’s not wait another two years to get it right.

(more…)

National Human Rights Consultation – Public Hearing Canberra 1-3 July

June 15, 2009

Public Hearings will be held in the Great Hall at Parliament House in Canberra 1 to 3 July 2009.

Please continue to visit http://www.humanrightsconsultation.gov.au/ for more information on how you can register to attend the Public Hearings.

Commission makes recommendation for an Australian Human Rights Act

June 15, 2009

Australian Human Rights Commission

Tuesday, 16 June 2009

The Australian Human Rights Commission has lodged its submission to the National Human Rights Consultation, formalising its key recommendation that the Australian Parliament should enact a national Human Rights Act.

Commission President, Catherine Branson QC said, “Australia needs a system of government which makes sure that all people, no matter who they are, what they do, or where they live, have a safety net to protect their fundamental human rights, and a Human Rights Act would assist achievement of this aim”.

President Branson said a Human Rights Act would work to prevent human rights problems before they occur because:

* Parliament would be asked to consider human rights when making new laws;
* the Australian Government would be required to respect human rights when developing policy, making decisions and delivering services;
* federal courts and tribunals would have to take human rights into account when interpreting laws;
* if a federal court found that a law was inconsistent with human rights, Parliament would be notified and required to respond; and
* individuals whose human rights were breached would be able to seek remedies.

(more…)


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