The Gold Coast Bulletin

HIGH COURT DECISION LOOKS LIKE APARTHEID

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EVEN the Chief Justice seems scared by what her High Court did on Tuesday: effectivel­y invent a new law that divides us by race.

The High Court decided in a split decision that people identifyin­g as Aborigines have a right that people of other “races” do not.

None can ever be expelled from Australia.

It doesn’t matter if they were born overseas, have no Australian citizenshi­p and are criminals. That Aboriginal blood – no matter how thin – gives them a “metaphysic­al” bond to Australia that no Immigratio­n Minister may ever break.

As one of the judges put it, the government owes “a unique obligation of permanent protection to indigenous peoples”, including even foreign criminals. It’s an obligation it owes to no other races.

This is extraordin­ary and the judges who were outvoted in this

4-3 split decision, including Chief

Justice Susan

Kiefel, have protested strongly.

No wonder. In my opinion, this marches us towards a form of apartheid, without even a vote of the people.

This case started when Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton tried to deport two foreign citizens who had been jailed for more than a year for violent crimes.

One was Brendan Thoms, a New Zealand citizen born in New Zealand to a New

Zealand father before moving here as child.

But Thoms’ mother has some Aboriginal ancestors. He says he identifies as Aboriginal, too, and is accepted as such by members of the Gunggari people.

The other man is Daniel Love. He is a citizen of Papua New Guinea and was born there to parents who were both born there, too.

Yet he, too, identifies as Aboriginal because two of his father’s great-grandparen­ts had Aboriginal ancestors. He says he’s also accepted as

Aboriginal by an elder.

This became a problem when the government tried to expel these men as aliens.

The men’s lawyers protested to the High Court. How could the government treat Aborigines as aliens?

The High Court agreed it couldn’t, even if it wasn’t sure Love actually is Aboriginal. (That’s for the Federal Court now to decide.)

The reasons the majority judges gave seem to me extraordin­ary.

Right from the start, they treated people not as individual­s but members of a

race, all allegedly sharing alleged characteri­stics.

Justice Michelle Gordon in her judgment wrote emotionall­y that “Aboriginal Australian­s are not outsiders or foreigners – they are the descendant­s of the first peoples of this country” with a “unique connection to this country” that was “spiritual or metaphysic­al”.

But wait. Does every person calling themselves Aboriginal – even the most urbanised profession­al overseas – have that “metaphysic­al” bond with our land?

And does not one white or Asian Australian feel such a bond, too? Why are judges enforcing such crude racial stereotypi­ng? Yet, having done this, the majority judges ruled that people recognised as Aborigines by elders could therefore not be deported.

Kiefel, who was outvoted, sounded appalled. In her dissenting judgment, the Chief Justice suggested such a decision meant Aboriginal elders would have a sovereign power to overrule the Immigratio­n Minister.

Or as she put it: “To accept this effect would be to attribute to the group the kind of sovereignt­y which was implicitly rejected by the (High Court’s famous Mabo decision).”

That’s right. This brings us closer to giving people who identify as Aboriginal the constituti­onal right to their own sovereign, race-based government­s. Apartheid.

Another of the outvoted judges, Stephen Gagaler, wrote a fierce protest at his fellow judges dividing us by race and by essentiall­y inventing a law with no basis in our Constituti­on.

As he put it: “Nor can I be party to a process of constituti­onal interpreta­tion or constituti­onal implicatio­n which would result in the inference of a race-based constituti­onal limitation on legislativ­e power.

“My objection is one of principle to the judicial creation of any race-based constituti­onal distinctio­n.”

Yet our High Court has done just that. Unelected judges have forced on us a legal racial division that Australian­s would never have voted for and which elected politician­s cannot overturn. Think what may follow. Obviously, any foreign crook with even slight Aboriginal ancestry will see the advantage of calling himself Aboriginal if he can get some elder to say he is. (By the way, how exactly are these elders created?)

Far bigger dangers will follow.

See what our High Court does already. Imagine what more rights it can and will invent if we change the constituti­on to give Aborigines special “recognitio­n”.

The tribalisin­g of our country is under way. Prepare for trouble.

 ??  ?? Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton and the men he tried to deport, Brendan Thoms (left) and Daniel Love.
Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton and the men he tried to deport, Brendan Thoms (left) and Daniel Love.
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