Coalition leader Tony Abbott wrote to PM Julia Gillard in March calling for a bipartisan approach to Aboriginal issues and a in the Northern Territory. He flew to Alice Springs in late April to further these calls.
June will mark four years since former PM John Howard launched the Northern Territory Emergency Response ā or NT intervention.
Allegedly a response to child abuse in Aboriginal communities, the intervention stole Aboriginal land; dismantled Aboriginal employment schemes and Aboriginal-run community services; and quarantined a proportion of Centrelink payments for Aboriginal people onto a āBasics Cardā, restricting purchases to certain stores and goods.
After its election in late 2007, Labor expanded the policy. On April 15, Indigenous affairs minister the federal government may extend the intervention beyond the legislationās expiry in August next year.
Laborās May 11 budget announced the expansion of welfare quarantining to five regions outside the NT.
Barbara Shaw, a town camp leader from Alice Springs and member of the Intervention Rollback Action Group, spoke to Ā鶹“«Ć½ Weekly on May 9. She said the current intervention hasnāt worked, so āwhy have another one?ā
āAbbott didnāt help the first time when he was in power with John Howard and [former Indigenous affairs minister] Mal Brough, so how can he help now?ā
Shaw says through her own experience as a mother of two, hearing stories and observations from people who travel out to the communities, and seeing the influx of people into the town camps, she ācanāt see how itās gotten any better for women and childrenā under the intervention.
Shaw, who travelled to New York on May 12 to attend the 10th UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, said the intervention has been a āwaste of time and waste of moneyā. Those resources should have been used āto allow Aboriginal people to get on with their lives and solve their problems themselvesā.
A pretext for the intervention was the Little Children are Sacred report, commissioned by the NT government in 2006 to investigate child abuse.
In to the Coalition for Research to Improve Aboriginal Health conference in Sydney on May 4, co-author of the report and Lowitja Institute chairperson Pat Anderson concluded that āthe future of Aboriginal children in the Northern Territory is not being protected by the intervention: it is being further underminedā.
Anderson explained how the intervention took the opposite approach to the recommendations in the Little Children are Sacred report: āWhere we emphasised the need for resources and for flexible processes of engagement with Aboriginal families and communities, the intervention emphasised external control and āblanketā provisions affecting all Aboriginal people.ā
Abbottās proposal for a second intervention in Alice Springs and other major centres in the NT would deepen this approach, with more draconian measures that will further punish Aboriginal people.
A second intervention should be led by a military figure, Abbott told The Age on April 30, because, āThereās something about the military.ā This presumably refers to its ability to intimidate people into submission.
His include extending compulsory work for the dole for Aboriginal people, with payments cut for non-compliance; fines for parents whose children fail to attend school; more police, who would round up kids in the mornings to force them to attend school; and rigid enforcement of alcohol restrictions. Abbott has also flagged .
Shaw said previous increases in police numbers havenāt helped, because police are generally āvery ignorant of social issues that affect Aboriginal people hereā.
The role of police in prescribed areas under the intervention is to enforce apartheid policies.
Shaw told GLW that if she wants to buy wine or a six-pack of beer to enjoy with friends (as countless people across Australia do every day), sheās not allowed to bring it back to her own home to drink. āOr there could be police outside the bottle shop ready to take it from me.ā
She contrasted the imposition of such restrictions to measures supported by Aboriginal people that take a ācommunity approach and get people involvedā.
Shaw, herself subjected to the Basics Card, said forcing Aboriginal people to work for the dole has made them feel āworthlessā.
She explained that under the Community Development Employment Program (CDEP) before the intervention: āThere was a lot of work, people were paid money, all the people worked. Now, you go to a community and no-one works because they donāt want to work for the dole. And they have to work for Centrelink payments with half going on the Basics Card.ā
A petition sponsored by Unions NT and the Construction Forestry Mining Energy Union is demanding justice for Aboriginal workers who were paid the dole (half of which was quarantined on the Basics Card) for working on the $672 million Strategic Indigenous Housing and Infrastructure Program (SIHIP).
, which will be presented to parliament by Greens Senator Rachel Siewert, calls for full back pay of award wages plus interest.
Marilyn Dixon, who worked on a SIHIP project in Amoonguna renovating houses and an old community clinic, said on May 5: āI was working with a team of ladies from 8am-3pm each day. We were cleaning, stripping paint, painting floors, moving furniture, removing old kitchens. I thought we would be getting good pay, but they kept me on the Basics Card.ā
Abbott criticised welfare quarantining, but not because itās unjust. He just thinks itās .
According to the April 29 Australian, : āMy suspicion is that the bureaucracy required to get peopleās payments quarantined on the basis of truancy would be such that it would be much simpler just to fine them.ā
Abbott has said the intervention has been too ātop heavyā and that more āconsultationā with Aboriginal leaders is required. But like the government, Abbottās consultation only involves the few Aboriginal figures who support the intervention.
āThe people he talks about donāt live in prescribed areas, theyāre not affected by the intervention,ā Shaw said.
In her speech, Anderson attacked the governmentās approach of blaming Aboriginal people for poor living conditions. She said policies should be based on āempowerment and inclusion rather than imposed solutions and paternalismā.
This attitude is evident in the latest on Indigenous policies, Closing the Gap ā Prime Minister's Report 2011. Under a section misnamed āA partnership approachā, Gillard outlined the need for Aboriginal people and communities to ātake responsibility to promote positive norms and social behaviours to create lasting changeā.
The government, she claims, supports this process through ānon-discriminatory welfare payment reformā to āencourageā welfare recipients to ātake responsibility for themselves and their familiesā. Punitive measures and curtailment of rights are dressed up as āencouragementā.
Anderson said the government had failed to recognise āwhat had been achieved in some places, or of a history of attempts by Aboriginal people and organisations to tackle the complex health and social issues in their communitiesā.
The government instead forced Aboriginal people to ābe the passive recipients of non-Aboriginal āhelpā.
āThis has left many Aboriginal people marginalised from the decision-making processes in their own communities. It adds to the sense of disempowerment and stress that many already feel ā¦ And we know that this diminished sense of control and increased stress will lead to poorer health and social outcomes in the future.ā
Shaw highlighted the combined impact of the intervention and local government reforms in radically undermining Aboriginal communities.
The NT government abolished Indigenous Community Councils, amalgamating them into nine super shires. The focus āon 20 town hubs in the NT set up to be smaller townsā means that āthey get services, while others are financially drained out until people are forced to leaveā.
The NT and federal government attacks together ātook all the self-control, decision making and empowerment away from peopleā, she said.
IRAG has been working on alternatives to address these issues, gathering peopleās ideas about how to make the communities viable again.
āAnd that doesnāt just mean go into mining,ā she said. It means setting up āagriculture and tourism and farming.
āWe need to start trading among communities, especially among us Territorians, because our main food source is from interstate.ā
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