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Australian federal parliaments sorry resolution:
the real agenda
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party
12 February 2008
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Millions of ordinary Australians will undoubtedly welcome the
federal parliaments formal apology to the Aboriginal stolen
generation on Wednesday as a necessary step towards acknowledging
the genocidal crimes inflicted upon Australias indigenous
population over the past two centuries.
After their forebears had been shot, poisoned, or deliberately
infected with diseases such as smallpox, tens of thousands of
indigenous childrenmainly those of mixed Aboriginal and
European descentwere taken from their parents as part of
an official program that sought to breed out the colour.
Its aim was nothing less than the elimination of the Aboriginal
race.
Between one in three and one in ten of all Aboriginal children
were forcibly removed from their families between 1910 and 1970.
Children were cut off from their culture and language, and often
subjected to horrific physical and sexual abuse in institutions
and foster homes. Survivors and their families continue to live
with the daily effects of the trauma they suffered.
The newly-elected Rudd Labor government is touting its apology
as a sincere gesture aimed at resolving past injustices and paving
the way for Aborigines to move forward. Every section
of the media is endorsing and promoting it as a major national
event. The ABC will broadcast proceedings live on television,
and large video screens are to be erected on the lawns in front
of Parliament House, where hundreds of people are expected to
gather. Screens are also being installed in Sydney and Melbourne,
and the broadcast will be followed by music concerts featuring
indigenous artists. Rudd has stressed the bipartisan character
of the apology and opposition leader Brendan Nelson has fallen
into line. Former Liberal Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser will attend,
as will former Labor prime ministers Gough Whitlam and Paul Keating.
State and federal governments are paying for more than 100
members of the stolen generation to be in Canberra for the event.
Invitees include former Aboriginal tennis star Evonne Goolagong-Cawley
and footballer Michael Long. Aboriginal leaders have unanimously
welcomed the apology, although many have criticised the Labor
government for ruling out compensation for any of the surviving
victims.
To understand the real political calculations motivating the
apology, however, one must look behind this media-political hoopla.
All those hailing the Rudd governments apology as a major
advance are carrying out a monstrous deception. The real aim of
the sorry resolution is to facilitate Labors
plan to draw in a layer of privileged indigenous leaders and utilise
them to continue and deepen the policies of the former Howard
government. The Labor Party supported Howards military-police
intervention in the Northern Territory, along with the suspension
of the Racial Discrimination Act and the arbitrary suspension
of welfare payments to Aboriginal families. Moreover, Labor declared
it would consider extending similar measures to Aboriginal communities
throughout Australia.
Howard sought to ram through his draconian program while, at
the same time, rejecting many aspects of the so-called reconciliation
agenda, including recognition of the stolen generation. Rudd,
on the other hand, wants to advance fundamentally the same program
in a more nuanced and less abrasive manner.
There is an old maxim that when the ruling class apologises
for past crimes, it is only in order to better commit those of
the present. The record of the past 200 years demonstrates that
the entire Australian ruling establishment is organically incapable
of addressing the terrible conditions facing Aboriginal people.
For decades, it deliberately covered up the crimes that accompanied
the establishment of capitalist property relations.
The dispossession and massacres of Aborigines in the nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries formed part of protracted attempts
by the emerging capitalist class to extinguish the communal system
of land tenure, which was completely incompatible with private
ownership. Both Labor and the conservative parties, along with
every section of the media, suppressed any examination of the
filthy underbelly of Australian capitalism, promoting instead
the myths of a democratic and egalitarian society offering a fair
go for all.
But by the 1960s international considerationsthe need
to engage more closely with the markets of Asiatogether
with mounting domestic opposition to the treatment of Aborigines
required that the overt official racism of the past be supplanted
with something more acceptable.
In 1967, the Holt Liberal government held a referendum to grant
the federal government authority to pass special legislation affecting
Aborigines, and include indigenous people in the national census
for the first time.
The referendum, which won the support of the overwhelming majority
of the population, was widely viewed as a watershed that would
quickly see a significant improvement in the social and economic
position of Aboriginal people. But those hopes were quickly dashed.
Likewise there were hopes that the equal pay court rulings
of the mid-1960s would end the virtual slave-labour conditions
endured by Aboriginal rural workers. But the logic of the capitalist
market took its revenge, and countless pastoral jobs were wiped
outultimately leading to the establishment of the impoverished
townships and settlements in the Northern Territory.
Promises by the Whitlam, Fraser and Hawke governments to improve
the conditions of the Aboriginal population came and went, with
no genuine advancesand reversals in many cases.
Then in 1992, the dawning of a new era was hailed with the
Mabo decision and the Keating Labor governments subsequent
land rights legislation. What a cruel joke! The real purpose of
the legislation was to ensure security of tenure for mining and
pastoral companies, while providing benefits for a very thin layer
of indigenous leaders along the way.
Forty-one years after the first promises of reform
following the 1967 referendum, what is the situation?
Aborigines continue to face conditions comparable to those
in the poorest developing countries. They can expect to live for
about 17 to 20 years less than the average Australian, with indigenous
infants three times as likely to die before their first birthday
as their non-indigenous counterparts. Aborigines are far more
likely to be unemployed, and they comprise 22 percent of the prison
population, while making up just 2.4 percent of the total population.
Unemployment, alcoholism, drug abuse and violence afflict many
Aboriginal communities and families.
Rudd is paying lip service to the need to provide decent living
conditions and better medical and other social services. But what
is his real agenda? Labor won last Novembers federal election
after attacking Howard from the rightstressing his failure
to push through sufficiently ambitious free market
reforms. Rudd received the backing of decisive sections of big
business and the media after pledging to boost corporate profits
through a major wave of economic restructuring comparable to that
engineered by the former Hawke-Keating Labor governments from
1983 to 1996. This period saw an unprecedented transfer of wealth
from the poor to the wealthy as Labor and the trade unions deliberately
suppressed wages and smashed all resistance to the program of
privatisation, job losses, and business deregulation.
In the name of maintaining Australias economic
competitiveness against rivals including India and China,
Rudd is now poised to launch a no less ruthless attack on the
social position of the entire working class. The world financial
crisis sparked by the US subprime mortgage disaster has added
further pressures. As a first step, big business is demanding
Labor implement enormous cuts in social spending. The government
has already foreshadowed a harsh austerity budget in April which
will slash $10 billion in spending, bringing with it, as Rudd
declared last week, screams and squeals and pain
and difficulty to ordinary people.
Labors economic agenda will inevitably hit the most vulnerable
layers of the working class, including Aborigines, the hardest.
That is why there is a major diversionary element to Wednesdays
parliamentary apology to the stolen generation. Like Rudds
ratification of the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, the official
apology costs the Labor government nothing, while allowing it
to posture as a progressive alternative to the former Howard government.
The entire reconciliation agenda seeks to obscure
the fundamental issuesabove all that responsibility for
the oppression of the Aboriginal people lies not with whites
but with the capitalist profit system, and that it is impossible
to overcome this centuries-old oppression within the framework
of the present social order. To genuinely redress the historic
injustices perpetrated against the indigenous people of Australia
requires nothing less than the abolition of the system of property
relations that gave rise to, and continues to perpetuate, these
injustices. Society must be reorganised from top to bottom on
socialist and genuinely democratic lines, ensuring that the basic
needs of all are met.
The precondition for such a transformation is the development
of a unified mass political movement of the working classAboriginal
and non-Aboriginal alikebased on a socialist and internationalist
perspective. That is the perspective advanced by the Socialist
Equality Party and World Socialist Web Site.
See Also:
Australian government
imposes military-police regime on Aborigines
[23 June 2007]
Nick Beams reviews
Keith Windschuttle's The Fabrication of Aboriginal History
An assault on historical truth--Part 3
[18 September 2003]
An assault on historical
truth
Part 1
[16 September 2003]
An assault on historical
truth
Part 2
[17 September 2003]
New book published
in controversy over Australian Aboriginal history
[5 September 2003]
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