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Australia: Palm Islands dark history of Aboriginal repression
Part One
By Erika Zimmer
1 March 2005
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This is the first of a two-part article on the history of
Australias Palm Island settlement.
Last November 26, the Aboriginal residents of Palm Island,
65 kilometres from Townsville in the northern state of Queensland,
stormed the islands police station, barracks and courthouse
after the death in police custody of a local man, Cameron Doomadgee,
36. He was found dead in a police cell at 11:20 a.m. on November
19just an hour after he had been locked up for the minor
offence of causing a public nuisance.
The riot was triggered by the Queensland State Coroners
partial release of an autopsy report indicating that Doomadgee
may have been beaten by police. It found that Doomadgee had died
of internal bleeding, after suffering four broken ribs and a ruptured
spleen and liver. His death was not an aberration. Since 1980,
nearly 300 indigenous people have died in custody in prison cells
or police lockups.
As soon as the riot erupted, the police invoked far-reaching
emergency powers and flew in at least 80 officers, including members
of the Special Emergency Response Team (SERT), to take over Palm
Island. Backed by the state Labor government, they took control
of the airport, school and hospital, closed roads and launched
police raids on homes.
An official inquiry into the incident is being conducted by
the Queensland Crime and Misconduct Commission, (CMC), which is
relying on the police to gather evidence. Every other such inquest
held since the late 1980s, including the 1994 hearings held by
the CMCs predecessor, the Criminal Justice Commission, into
the police killing of 18-year-old Aboriginal dancer Daniel Yock,
has exonerated the police.
In the wake of these events, Premier Peter Beatties state
government and the corporate media attempted to blame Aboriginal
residents themselves. By any measure, Palm Island is a social
and economic catastrophe. Its population of approximately 2,500
people is crowded into 200 homes. Their average life expectancy
is 50 years30 years less than Australias average.
Unemployment levels are between 80 and 90 percent.
Several days after the Palm Island riot, Queensland Police
Minister Judy Spence declared: Sadly, I think its
a product of the fact that many of the communities were
talking about are very dysfunctional and while were doing
a lot of good work in those communities, theres still unacceptable
levels of violence and the courts are responding to that violence
by sending people to prison.
However, an examination of Palm Islands past demonstrates
that the appalling conditions on Palm Island, as in other Aboriginal
communities, are the product of two centuries of oppression. For
most of the twentieth century it functioned as a brutal prison
for Queensland Aborigines. Established as a penal colony, its
purpose was to enforce the good behaviour of Aborigines
confined on the states reserves. Its history can only be
understood as a product of the capitalist settlement of Queensland,
one of the last regions of Australia to be cleared of its indigenous
population.
Violent dispossession
Queensland came to self-government late. It was proclaimed
a colony separate from New South Wales only in 1859, by which
time the pastoral land in the southern states had been swallowed
up. At the same time, Queensland still had a substantial indigenous
population. In The Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders of
Queensland, A.H.Campbell calculates that the population was
at least 70,000 but cites the estimate of 200,000 made by the
governments so-called Southern Aboriginal Protector, Archibald
Meston. [1]
By comparison, Tasmanias Aborigines had been completely
wiped out by 1847. Ten years later, and a year before Queensland
was officially gazetted, a government report observed that Aboriginal
tribes in the southern mainland state of Victoria had been largely
destroyed. A Report of the Select Committee on the Aborigines
noted: The state of Victoria is now entirely occupied by
a superior race, and there is scarcely a spot, excepting in the
remote mountain ranges, or dense scrubs, on which the Aborigine
can rest his weary feet.
As the north of the Australian continent was opened up, relations
between the Aborigines and settlers spiraled downward, along a
familiar and brutal path.
The missionary William Ridley described the effect of pastoral
expansion on Aboriginal tribes around the Balonne River in Queensland:
Before the occupation of this district by colonists, the
Aborigines could never have been at a loss for the necessaries
of life. Except in the lowest part of the river, there is water
in the driest seasons; along the banks game abounded; waterfowl,
emus, parrot tribes, kangaroos, and other animals might always,
or almost always, be found. But when the country was taken up
and herds of cattle introduced, not only did the cattle drive
away the kangaroos, but those who had charge of the cattle found
it necessary to keep the Aborigines away from the river....
After some fatal conflicts in which some colonists and
many Aborigines have been slain, the blacks have been awed into
submission to the order which forbid their access to the river.
And what is the consequence? Black fellows coming in from the
west report that last summer very large numbers, afraid to visit
the river, were crowded round a few scanty waterholes, within
a days walk of which it was impossible to get sufficient
food....that owing to these combined hardships many died.
[2]
Aborigines, deprived of their traditional food sources, turned
to hunting the sheep and cattle, actions which quickly developed
into outright warfare and a policy of exterminating indigenous
inhabitants. In Black Pioneers, historian Henry Reynolds
concluded: (T)alk of war was commonplace in Queensland in
the second half of the century, many people agreeing with the
local politician who told his parliamentary colleagues in 1861
that (T)he people of this colony must be considered to be,
they have always been at open war with the Aborigines.
[3]
In this war, the government allowed the settlers complete freedom
to take whatever action they considered necessary, usually the
use of guns or poison or both. It also employed black troopers
in the Native Mounted Police for punitive expeditions to track
down and kill resisting tribes.
By 1897, according to Campbell, nine out of every ten Aborigines
south of Cape York Peninsula had been eliminated. By the governments
own count, the states population of Aborigines had plunged
to 15,000 by the end of the century, of which only 5,000 lived
below Cape York Peninsula. Numerous contemporary accounts testified
to their wretched state.
Thus, a mine manager described the Aborigines in the Burke
district in northern Queensland in 1891: They are driven
back in the spinifex ranges and when I was up the Nicholson they
were living on ants. They dare not come on to where there was
game for fear of kidnapping parties. They were the poorest things
I ever seenperfect skeletons.... nothing to eat and sleeping
in holes in the ground....
Observers noted not only the poor physical state of the Aborigines,
with malnutrition, opium addiction, gonorrhoea and leprosy widespread,
but also their traumatised psychological condition. A Police Commissioner
reported in 1896: ...driven from place to place; though
not daring to resent insult, outrage or even murder committed
by the whites... they are yet a trouble to the settlers through
their broken-hearted ignorant helplessness.
Cheap labour
The first 40 years of colonial settlement in Queensland consisted
of keeping the blacks out of pastoral stations, a
policy which meant the extermination of the majority of Aborigines.
They were kept out due to the fundamental incompatibility
between the developing pastoral capitalist society of the settlers
and the tribal hunter-gatherer society of the indigenous population.
By the end of the 1890s, the remnants of Aboriginal tribes who
had survived were to be let in.
The legislative framework for the new policy was the 1897 Aboriginals
Protection and Restriction of the Sale of Opium Act (the
Act). Hailed as a benevolent law, ostensibly to save Aborigines
from extinction, its function was not only to serve as a system
of control but also to create a cheap and reliable labour force.
It was difficult to coerce Aborigines to adopt the capitalist
work ethiclabouring without rest from dawn to dusk on successive
dayswhile other means of subsistence remained. Employers
complained that in the course of clearing land, because it was
the Aborigines habit never to pass by food, the discovery
of wild yam, a bees nest or a wallaby would result in all
hands immediately ceasing work for however long it took to procure
the food source. Another barrier to the desire for steady
employment was the Aboriginal habit of shielding the
indolent by sharing the proceeds of the day among their
fellows, meaning that everyone received some return whether they
worked or not.
The move to establish legislative controls over Aboriginal
labour was also bound up with the political imperative of establishing
a federated nation in 1901, in order to strengthen the strategic
and economic position of the emerging Australian capitalist class.
The Queensland government had initially sought to meet employers
demands for a ready supply of cheap and tractable labour by setting
up schemes for importing indentured labourers, particularly from
China and the South Pacific islands.
Federation, however, was founded on the White Australia
policy. As part of the political settlement underpinning Federation,
the employers agreed with the trade union and Labor leadership
on a platform of excluding coloured races, in order
to divide Australian workers from their Asian-Pacific brothers
and sisters. Federation was accompanied by the passing of whites-only
labour laws, from which Aborigines were conveniently exempted.
It was in this context that the Queensland government directed
Archibald Meston, the Southern Aboriginal Protector, to devise
a scheme to solve the Aboriginal problem for the colony.
His extended tour of the state impressed upon him the degree to
which the colonys economy was already dependent on Aboriginal
labour, the chief virtue of which, Meston wrote, was its cheapness
and servility. [4]
On the cattle stations, an industry vital to Queensland, Aboriginal
stockmen outnumbered white stockmen by 5 or 6 to 1. Aboriginal
labour was also widely used in the towns. One official estimated
that in Normanton at the turn of the century, 150 Aborigines were
employed on a daily basis in a town with a total population of
500.
Meston drew up plans to regulate the labour of Queenslands
indigenous population and to train its future generations for
a life of exploitation. In three or four years, he
wrote, there would be hundreds of Queensland aboriginals
available to do work for which we now employ Papuans.
Under the guise of protection, the Act turned Aborigines
into the property of the state, subject to removal to distant
missions or reserves, which were located on areas not wanted for
pastoral or other commercial activities. Aborigines were only
permitted to leave reserves in order to take up regulated employment.
A police officer, or a pastoralist, merely had to point to an
Aborigine for him or her to be under the Act and they
could be ordered into forced labour for up to 12 months.
Protectors were given the right to decide which
industries Aborigines worked in, who could employ them and what
wages they were to be paid, although Aborigines, whether working
on reserves or contracted out frequently received
no monetary payment at all. Payment was commonly in cast-off clothes,
food scraps, alcohol or opium dregs.
Any wages were invariably paid into a fund, under the control
of the local Protector, with Aborigines receiving only a fraction
as pocket money. Aboriginal workers, particularly
those in the pastoral industry and on the reserves, were paid
well below award rates. For example, in 1966 when the carpenters
award rate of pay was $48 per week, builders on the Cherbourg
reserve were paid only $10. The award rate for apprentices was
$21, but apprentices on the reserve, who received no structured
teaching or training, were paid $3. [5]
According to recent estimates, from the 1890s to the 1970s
the amounts confiscated from Aboriginal workers under compulsory
contract to the Queensland government totalled $500 million in
wages and savings.
On the reserves, compulsory labour was mandatory for every
able-bodied individual, including children and women. Under-age
child labour was commonplace and Aboriginal girls were routinely
sent from the reserves at the age of 10 to work as domestic servants
in town households or on cattle stations.
The Act also gave the state the power to regulate the most
personal aspects of Aborigines lives, including whom they
married and whether they could keep their own children.
To be continued
Notes:
1. Campbell A.H., The Aborigines and Torres Islanders of Queensland,
Brisbane Western Suburbs Branch, United Nations Association, 1958.
2. Reynolds H, The Other Side of the Frontier, Penguin,
1981, p. 67.
3. Reynolds H, Black Pioneers, Penguin, 1990, p. 122.
4. Raymond Evans, Kay Saunders, Kathryn Cronin, Race Relations
in Colonial Queenslanda history of exclusion, exploitation
and extermination, University of Queensland Press, 1975, p.
112.
5. Kidd Ros, The Price of Justice, Hecate, 1996, p. 69.
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