Warriors of the Aboriginal Resistance (WAR)

Aboriginal activists and supporters have been protesting in Bundjalung Country, also known as the Gold Coast, exposing the whitewashing Commonwealth Games.

Continuing the legacy of actions against the Commonwealth Games in 1982, the 鈥淔reedom Camp鈥 at Doug Jennings Park has been exposing the Games鈥 establishment elitism with actions almost every day. Aboriginal activists from Western Australia, the Northern Territory, New South Wales and north Queensland have converged on the park.

Two weeks after the Australian cricket team demonstrated the true level of integrity in Australian sport, the Commonwealth Games 鈥 dubbed the Stolenwealth Games 鈥 opened on the Gold Coast on April 4.

About 100 protesters highlighted Australia鈥檚 colonial history and the ongoing genocide of indigenous peoples as the opening ceremony got under way. The protest was organised by a national committee including Indigenous activist group Warriors of the Aboriginal Resistance (WAR) and the Brisbane Aboriginal Sovereign Embassy.

The enormous 鈥 some estimate 60,000-strong 鈥 Invasion Day rally in Melbourne was a fitting rejoinder to the conservative campaign pushed by the mainstream media and politicians in the lead-up to January 26.

The right-wing released a poll on January 24 that, unsurprisingly, found just 11% of those surveyed want the date changed.

Wendy Brabham

Melbourne Resistance Centre was packed on May 9 as people gathered to hear First Nations activists and other anti-racism activists talk about fighting racism in Australia today. The seminar began with Wendy Brabham, nationally-respected Aboriginal academic and traditional owner from the Wamba Wamba, Wergaia, Nyeri Nyeri and Dhudhuroa first nations.

Protesters in Melbourne against forced closures

From Darwin to Hobart, Sydney to Perth and all points in between, thousands of people marched in rallies across Australia on May 1 to stop the Western Australian government closing 150 remote Aboriginal communities.