Africa | America | Asia | Australasia | Europe | India | Middle East | UK | US

ANALYSIS: Australia despairs of easing Aboriginal suffering

Posted : Wed, 08 Jul 2009 04:29:35 GMT
By : DPA
Category : Australasia (World)
News Alerts by Email ( click here )
Australasia World News | Home
Sydney - Children six times more likely to be the victims of neglect, adults seven times more likely to be murdered, women 34 times more likely to need hospital treatment after being abused at home and men 13 times more likely to serve time in prison. On and on it went - the government's latest lack-of-progress report on the welfare of Australia's 500,000 Aborigines.

"It's unacceptable, and it requires decisive action," Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said when releasing the report showing no improvement in 40 of the 50 indicators of disadvantage that researchers quantified.

It's all been said before. New prime ministers promise to bridge the gap between white and black yet leave office achieving little. The frustration is palpable that spending, which this year is to reach 4.6 billion Australian dollars (3.6 billion US dollars), is not affecting change.

"White Australia, I would say, has just about given up," Melbourne reader David Blackman wrote to The Australian newspaper. "We do care and care a lot, but charity has been shown to make things worse in the long run."

Measure after measure in a report that comes out every two years showed the 2 per cent of the 21 million Australians who are indigenous are slipping backward.

Almost a quarter of male prisoners, a third of female prisoners and half of all detained juveniles are Aborigines. Infant mortality, even suicide, is double the rate for other Australians.

The report released last week showed no advance in reading and writing skills with 60 per cent of indigenous children failing to finish high school.

Ted Wilkes from Perth's Curtin University said he also despairs of government attempts to better the welfare of his fellow Aborigines - particularly programmes to keep them away from alcohol and drugs and keep them out of prison.

"It's not working for Aboriginal Australians," Wilkes said of the criminal justice system. "Aboriginal people don't fit into the mainstream. We live on the margins. And consequently, this system needs major repairs. We don't want these statistics and these incarceration rates around when our grandchildren turn into adults."

Everyone agrees things are dire, that something must be done. But finding a consensus, fixing on a solution, eludes leaders.

For some, politics blunts progress; for others, the stumbling block is white Australia's focus on welfare issues rather than big-picture political ones.

Darwin Aboriginal Rights Coalition spokeswoman Alyssa Vass said she is suspicious of the government's motives in its schemes to address indigenous disadvantage in the far north.

"The federal intervention seems to be part of a broader assimilationist agenda of trying to make Aboriginal people just like white fellas," she said. "Respecting people's connection to land and their different world view doesn't seem to be a factor in the way policy is developed for indigenous people."

She, too, attested to a weariness with failing government programmes. "I have seen enormous frustration, anger and despair amongst community leaders at this happening time and time again," she said.

Aboriginal elder Joy White, speaking in Darwin, said lack of respect for Aborigines held them back.

"All our people are dying, and it's through alcohol and drugs," she said. "And we are struggling, our people, because we don't have the same rights as any individual living in Australia. We have no name whatsoever."

Assimilation is taking place regardless. Most Aborigines live in towns and cities. The traditional Aboriginal lifestyle is a thing of the past.

Adelaide University's Peter Sutton, a specialist on Aboriginal issues, noted that assimilation is not the dirty word it once was.

"It would actually be quite socially acceptable if you referred to it as modernization and development," he said. "I don't see any real difference. What a lot of Aboriginal people want, actually, is modernization and development."

Copyright DPA

Share/Save/Bookmark

Article : ANALYSIS: Australia despairs of easing Aboriginal suffering
Print this article
Email this article

Stay Updated
News gadget on your Google homepage
Subscribe to a news feed in Google Reader


Related News

British climber plunges 155 metres to death in New Zealand
Wellington - A British climber plunged 155 metres to his death when a rope he and a friend were using to descend a cliff face on New Zealand's South Island became entangled, police said Sunday. They identified the dead man as Bryan Allison, 26, who h...

Australia seeks help from Sri Lanka on asylum seeker flow - Summary
Sydney - Releasing Tamils from camps and reintegrating them into Sri Lankan society would help staunch the flow of asylum seekers crossing the Indian Ocean, Australia Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said Sunday. Smith, due in Colombo Monday, said more...

New Zealand minister repays girlfriend's holiday on taxpayer
Wellington - A minister in the New Zealand government who once promoted himself as The Perkbuster in parliament made a public apology Sunday for taking his girlfriend overseas at taxpayer expense and said he would pay back the cost of her trips. Ro...

Australia urged to repatriate Sri Lankan asylum seekers
Sydney - Australia should repatriate the 78 Sri Lankans who for more than two weeks have been refusing to disembark from an Australian Customs vessel moored off Indonesia's Bintan Island, an influential parliamentarian said Sunday. The asylum seekers...

Plain sailing for round-the-world Australian
Sydney - Australian teenager Jessica Watson said Saturday that loneliness was not an issue as she passed the two-week mark in her bid to become the youngest person to sail solo and unaided around the world. Jessica, 16, set sail from Sydney on Octobe...

Austrian shop staff dreaming of a quiet Christmas
Vienna - Austrian retail workers face additional stress from Christmas songs blaring in shops, their union said Friday, and urged employers to keep the music down in the coming weeks. With pressure building up as business becomes hectic in the time l...

New Zealand's novice premier hogs the polls one year on - Feature
Wellington - One year after John Key became the most inexperienced politician to be sworn in as prime minister of New Zealand, he is still soaring in the opinion polls - despite the apparent death wishes of some of h...

Have your Say
Name
Email
Subject
Your Comment

Enter Verification code
 
  

 

 

More Australasia (World) News click here
Follow The Earth Times
Subscribe to RSS Follow Earth Times on TwitterNews by email
Share/Save/Bookmark

 
 



 
Subscribe to free Earthtimes
News Alerts by Email Click here
For RSS Feeds Click here
or Create your own RSS

Add to Google Toolbar
Breaking News
Press Releases

 


The Earth Times
News Category

© 2009 www.earthtimes.org, The Earth Times, All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy
Earth Times accept no responsibility or liability either directly or indirectly for views or opinions expressed in articles or comments.