The Gold Coast Bulletin

Our ‘third world’ shame

- ANGIRA BHARADWAJ Angira Bharadwaj is The Daily Telegraph’s state political reporter

AS SOMEONE who spent their childhood in a “thirdworld country” – there isn’t much that easily shocks me when it comes to poverty and neglect.

But watching a generation of children be lost to violence and abuse in the middle of Australia felt far more harrowing than anything I have seen before.

I left India as a 10-year-old because my parents wanted a comfortabl­e world for me, but after our two weeks in Alice Springs I fear many children growing up in Central Australia, in the middle of a wealthy Western nation, face worse conditions than young kids in parts of Calcutta, Delhi or Mumbai.

So they act out. Break things. Attack innocent people who pay the price for problems they didn’t create.

I am not convinced government­s have the answers.

The answers sit with the organisati­ons that have been there long before and long after the political spotlight and they need to be funded urgently and appropriat­ely.

It’s a damning indictment that organisati­ons like the Arrernte Community Boxing Academy say they are not appropriat­ely funded or that others are crowdsourc­ing funding for their initiative­s like building a school closer to remote communitie­s.

It’s an even greater shame that organisati­ons like Pertame School would rather fundraise $300,000 than trust government funding.

A successful night patrol by Aboriginal people has also fizzled out while a desperatel­y needed boarding school in town is still in the planning stages.

Money has been poured into Australia’s bleeding heart but it doesn’t seem to go where it will make a difference.

The decision about an Aboriginal Voice to Parliament is for the nation to make collective­ly and if it is passed it can certainly make a positive difference in the lives of many Aboriginal people.

But as one Aboriginal elder told me in Alice Springs, by the time it reaches Central Australia, that voice will simply be an echo.

We can’t look to the Voice as a silver bullet for the issues that have existed for decades and constituti­onal change won’t extinguish fires that are already burning. Government­s on all levels urgently need to invest in proven initiative­s.

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