Shameful second intervention slips under the radar

Right now, Australian political commentary is focussed on the budget. For a while, it will
be the major topic of the day for journalists and the media. In the midst of all this, it
appears that something awful is going to slip under the radar.

That is, the second intervention. A raft of the so-called Stronger Futures bills is going to
be debated in the Senate. The Coalition and Labor support intervention two. The
Greens have valiantly struggled against the intervention, to little avail.

And when these laws pass, it will mean 10 more years of intervention.

By the time you read this, the laws may well have passed. As you have not heard any
debate about these policies, it is worth noting some of those who have raised their
voices.

I have been flooded with media releases of organisations condemning the legislation.
The Yolngu Nations Assembly, representing 8,000 Indigenous Australians in the
Northern Territory, declared that they:

... reject the Stronger Futures Bill (and those associated) and call on the Senate to
discard these bills in full. We have clearly informed you that we do not support the
legislation.

They have called on:

... both the Australian federal and Northern Territory governments to end their
interventionist policies and agendas, and return to a mindset of partnership based on
the principles of self-determination.

The National Congress of Australia's First Peoples declared that:

The Government has 'wilful deafness' on such a fundamental issue, even after
critical reports on the intervention by the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights and the Special Rapporteur for Indigenous Peoples ... Compulsory income
management remains offensive and does not support local decision making,
governance or self-determination.

Amnesty International issued a scathing denunciation of the new intervention
legislation. It urged:

... all senators to withdraw their support in light of the woefully inadequate
consultation process and overwhelming opposition to the flawed legislation. If passed,
the Stronger Futures Bills represent the continued disempowerment of Aboriginal
Peoples in the Northern Territory and the Government's blatant disregard for its human
rights obligations.... with very little proof that the measures being expanded or carried
over from the intervention are actually effective, Stronger Futures simply serves to
undermine the successful community-driven initiatives led by Aboriginal communities
themselves.... Stronger Futures would set in stone for the next decade harmful policies
that deny Aboriginal communities their basic human rights.

Amnesty continued to express concern at the lack of support for Indigenous
homelands, where about 35 per cent of Aboriginal peoples in the Northern Territory
live:

By concentrating investment into a small number of selected 'growth towns', a
significant proportion of the Northern Territory's population is being forced off their
ancestral lands in order to access adequate housing and essential services.

ANTAR (Australians for Native Title and Reconciliation) urged MPs and senators to
"consider the legacy these laws will leave in the history books and the damage they will
do to relationships between Aboriginal people and governments".

Former Liberal prime minister Malcolm Fraser, in a speech dripping with scorn and
sarcasm, said AO Neville, protector from Western Australia, would be "delighted" with
this legislation. Perhaps, he said, Macklin would make ministers of Aboriginal affairs
"Protectors", and perhaps we should call her "Protector" Macklin.

Fraser went on to note that if there was any evidence of any improvements brought
about by the intervention, we would know about it by now. But nothing like that has
been brought to our attention for the obvious reason that:

Improvement in the well-being of Aboriginal people is just not taking place under the
intervention. And it is not surprising that that's so. Racist policies have seldom had a
beneficial result.

The executive officer of the Aboriginal Catholic Ministry Sydney Archdiocese, Graeme
Mundine, said:

They need to throw out this flawed legislation and instead commit to real partnership
with Aboriginal peoples to develop sustainable solutions.

His Melbourne counterpart said:

The disrespect shown to Traditional Aboriginal Governance structures and
Traditional Custodians has been staggering and is set to worsen under the proposed
Stronger Futures legislation.

The Uniting Church in Australia National Assembly also condemned the legislation.
The moderator of the Uniting Church's Northern Synod, Mr Stuart McMillan, asked:

How many more decades of policy failure do Aboriginal people in the Territory have
to endure before Canberra learns the lesson that the only way forward is together? An
extension of the intervention only perpetuates their disempowerment.

The Australian Catholic Bishops Conference (ACBC) and Catholic Religious Australia
(CRA) call upon all federal senators not to pass the legislation of the 'Stronger Futures
Northern Territory 2011 Bill'.

We need to listen to the Aboriginal people. They are asking for their rights as human
beings and citizens of this country to be respected ... Social inclusion does not result
from intervention, imposition, discrimination and exclusion. We call for an urgent shift
from punitive controls to measures that restore community control, rebuild Aboriginal
initiative and capacity, improve living conditions and show respect for Aboriginal
languages and culture.

The secretariat of National Aboriginal and Islander Child Care announced that it
"stands in solidarity" with the Yolngu Nations Assembly in opposing the Stronger
Futures legislation.

One could go on and on. As Professor Jon Altman, from ANU's Centre for Aboriginal
Economic Policy Research noted, the Senate Inquiry into the laws was flooded with
over 450 submissions, and, "Almost all the submissions, including mine, opposed the
intervention and the three Stronger Futures bills."

There has been little debate on the intervention's expansion. Yet by now, it is hard to
even see what case there is for it. Called the Northern Territory Emergency Response
originally, it failed to find the paedophile rings that caused the moral panic that triggered
it.

The number of convictions of child sexual abusers rose by about one or two a year in
the wake of the intervention to nine a year instead of seven or eight.

As I've written time and again, there is no evidence - even in the government's own
reports - of any improvements of socioeconomic indicators intervention supporters
claim to care about.

UTS academic Eva Cox wrote an exhaustive study for the Journal of Indigenous Policy
on the issue of income management, demonstrating the preponderance of evidence
against income management, and the lack of any actual evidence in its favour.

However, the Government has conceded again and again the hurt caused by the
intervention.

In the Evaluation Report, announced as vindicating the intervention, one finds
admissions such as this:

Many people in the consultation meetings said that they felt hurt, humiliated and
confused by the way the NTER had been implemented.

Furthermore, the compulsory imposition of income management across remote
Indigenous communities in the Northern Territory resulted in bitter feelings,
disillusionment, resentment and anger for many Indigenous community members.

Those feelings were exacerbated in the implementation phase by inadequate
communication and a lack of consultation

Some income-management customers report feeling stigma when they use their
store card or, more recently, the BasicsCard:

Some Aboriginal people living or shopping in the major regional centres (in Darwin
and Alice Springs especially) have suffered frustration, embarrassment, humiliation
and overt racism because of the difficulties associated with acquiring and using store
cards.

Yet what remains to be noted is that the new legislation gives Minister Jenny Macklin
broad ranging powers to expand compulsory income management. Right now, the
Arab community feels targeted because it is being directed at Bankstown (and four
other locations) from July this year. They are the targets today, but what happens when
Tony Abbott wins the next election?

People who make political predictions often look foolish. Yet it seems to me that Labor,
supposedly the party of the working classes, has given the Federal Government -
soon, a Coalition government - drastic power to reduce the dignity and living conditions
of working class people.

Australians are beginning to wake up to the shameful nature of the policies we have
forced on Indigenous Australians, but not quickly enough.

One day, we will look back with shame on what we allowed to happen to Indigenous
Australians in Australia. And we will look with dismay at how these punitive, degrading
measures gradually crept from one marginalised, vulnerable group to another.

I wouldn't be presumptuous enough to say when these policies will be ended. But one
day, they will. And we will look back with shame on the day they passed the Senate.
And most of us will have to say with shame that we did not do enough to raise our
voices for Australia's most vulnerable, and repeatedly betrayed communities.

Michael Brull is studying a Juris Doctor at UNSW. He tweets at @mikeb476. View his
full profile here.

http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/4003152.html

Comments

Yes this is shameful, and John Pilger warned of this happening at a conference my friend and I attended.
I'm on side with all the conscionable of course, and repelled and outraged by the unconscionable "Protector" Macklin and her advisors.
Eva Cox rightly foresaw this, I always commend her insights, understanding, humanity and raised voice.
We cannot let this happen, and if it does there will be a lot of Australians standing up asking questions of both governments and there will be Senate Inquiries as Professor Larissa Berendt has said, time.
I'm appreciative the Greens have spoken against this and they always seem to be the only party of the now three parties who do so.
Why, They see the whole picture and the details and do have humanity.
I don't believe Abbot will get into power.
If he does he wont last long.
It's true this is a very shameful second intervention that has slipped under the radar.
The two governments Labor and Liberal seem to think what fools the general Australian public are and how they don't care about our original people's or all our disadvantaged are, how wrong these governments are.
If it means civil disobedience, as John Pilger suggested, so be it.
The governments downfall will happem if they contiue to give to the plentyful and take from the most vulnerable.
The Northern Territory Aboriginals have been demoralised and naturally by the way the first Intervention was carried out. Demoralised to immobilisation.
This reminds me of something Australians did under Government policies to other disadvantaged goups in the 30's to 70's and that is now being addressed, and will continue to be.
Shame on Macklin and her advisors and shame on every Australian who does not speak up and out when any of our fellow man is damaged by policies and practices that are damaging and destructive, and these ones are.
The Northern territory intervention has been this for too long now, and another round will show the whole world what discrimination Australian Governments have towards not only the original people all the people in Australia, as we're all interconnected.

Does the government and Macklin in particular see what consequences she faces for being the chairwomen of this outrgaeous set of interventions we all know are having a rippling effect on the whole nation?
She doesn't have the capacity for empathy and for this doesn't belong in any leadership role, nor do her advisors and certainly not any of the likes of Abbot.

A lot more human rights injustices will be brought to the surface and investigated also because of this and all conscionable persons in Australia need to assert these 'interventions' desist, and assert with their efforts and media, as well as more, it's not on, at any time by any such chaotic, abusive and corrupt governance.
Yes, it's corrupt because there's never just abuse and chaos with this or anything, corruption goes with this as they all go together.

No one has mentioned how the governments want the mineral resources from the Aboriginal lands, and I'm wondering why this hasn't been raised.
Nonetheless what has been raised here is enough and the noticeable voices from the admirable human rights advocares, and they are more than those mentioned here, are appreciated, respected and growung in numbers.

James
(Barrister)

Stronger Futures is established by persons with weaknesses.
These weaknesses are inability to have and hold our diverse cultural and other personal assets in Australia and lack of humanity, some things the younger generation are demanding from their governments, as are most Australians.

There is money involved, a great deal will be spent thoughtlessly to fund the bureaucrats who are far too many and for projects that not only destroy our Aboriginal persons but also destroy our international reputation.

I don't see Obama giving food tickets to the American Indians, and no one sees him being so racist as Australia is. This is not only because he has racial awareness and empathy there's more.

I don't see why Australia is causing suffering to anyone the government thinks and wrongly are not pulling their weight.
The unemployment figures have been skewered, are wrong and poverty in Australia is at an all time high, despite the opposite being true for the accumulative rich.
Whilst this is happening, this great divide, the scapegoats are to be the disadvantaged or those in hardship in the name of Stronger Futires? I think not ultimatelty. The two governments doing this will are going to fall on their own swords.

How can they use this terminoloy and act this out when if you are destructive to one it has a negative rippling effect for all, definitely including the governments themselves.
This escapes the Australian government both Labor and Liberal.
We all know the Greens are winning more votes by the minute because they are not only with their fingers on the pulse of humanness and ecology also because they actively denounce inhumanity and cruelty.

Look at the persons opposing all this, the list are all winners in the true sense, amd winners to the yoouth and most Australians.

More and more there are going to be anti-government sentiments and anti-Labor and Liberal support, and is that what they want. Appears they arenlt thinking at all.
They seem to feed off negativity as all bully's do, and get their paychecks without any social conscience. outrageous.

Macklin and her colleagues are living the dark side and don't for a minute think there's enough out there who support their vile, venal doings in the Norther Territory.

As a student I went to some parts of the Northern Territory and saw for my self what was going on.
The commercial news media are not telling the truth, and the original persons as do all persons deserve what Australia is meant to share 'a fair go'.

Shame, shame, shame, Stronger Futures.
Shame, shame, shame Intervention Two.
It ultimately will backfire.
Macklin has a vindictive, malicious, and arrogant inability to be in any leadership role and should be shamed for what she and her colleaguies are doing, publicly. She is a "slum-lord" the new kind Australia has made.

This will backfire, and also cost Australia a lot of money they wont want to spend to even begin to repair the inhuman damage.

What does the Health Minister think of all this.
Who said the Liberals were getting back into power.
What is it about negative bully politicians that makes everyone rise up and slam the governments who do these terrible things.
How can you have a stronger futures when the two governments Labor and Liberal are so weak in humanity?

Good, sad, article Indy
In hope
Neville

It wont happen and if it does the government are in for a lot of big shocks.
The Greens will be in power if they don't watch their step with this one and other outrageous abuses in Australia.
Josh and family

There is a bit of a double up with this blog or website on this topic.
I've just read and added my comment to the following on Indy:
"Act Against the Stronger Futures Legislation before it's too late".

I agree we all have to be assertive and act for justice here with this abominable matter.
Bullys are just that rather cowardly and insecure and that's why they bully, and we all want to stamp out all the bully thugs in Australia so neck treading doesn't happen to create an Australian 'Holocaust' that is well noted and observed by our overseas neighbour countries.

We can do better than this, and we do individually as my colleagues and I are doing.
If the governemnets go further into these hate crimes they pay high prices, every single person in the government who is involved.
James

I've also read Indy's "Act Against the Stronger Futures Legislation before it's too late".
I believe all Australians, as James has written, are affected adversely by these terrible Interventions.
Whoever thought we'd have any area and their people policed and "protected" as if they were savages, in this day and age in Australia, or anywhere.

I have a strong feeling from the Americans I work with Australian politics is being laughed at and not in a humorous way.
We're being scoffed at for not having the courage of our convictions (the governments that is) to clean up their acts and do the right things.

No two ways about it Labor and Liberal are looking like fools and the governments policies and practices are called something whilst being something totally the opposite.

I'm disgusted in "Stronger Futures" because it shows how segregated the governments in power can make our country.
We have at the beginning of every function and ceremony:
"With respect for our original peoples etc...." and the tokenisn here whilst they do their dangerous damage on our people.
This will rightly as James also says affect all Australians, and especially those with less, until and unless we all so "Stop Bullies, this is not on".
It's time we did this with the two governments always controlling and commanding their fellow citizens with the most callous ill-will, and it's all conscious, don't they dare. They cannot see the forrest for the trees, have no idea how they are looking to the world. I pity the Liberals and Labor governments. Shame, shame as well.

Abi (Gail)