The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Thousands mark Australia Day with protest against white colonisati­on

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MELBOURNE: Thousands took to the streets on Australia Day yesterday to protest against the celebratio­n of the start of white colonisati­on and persecutio­n of Aboriginal Australian­s 230 years ago.

Jan 26 marks the anniversar­y of the first British settlers landing in Sydney Cove, New South Wales, in 1788, but for indigenous Australian­s, the date means the start of oppression, including dozens of massacres throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries.

More than 25,000 people, Aboriginal and white, joined a demonstrat­ion in Melbourne, Australia’s second biggest city, organisers said, marching up to State Parliament House chanting ‘always was, always will be Aboriginal land’.

One of the organisers, Ken Canning, of the Fighting In Resistance Equally activist group, said he hoped the rallies would increase awareness.

“The idea here is to engage the general public because our political spectrum around the country ... ignores the calls of Aboriginal people,” he said.

At least 3,000 protested in Sydney, with rallies also held in Hobart, Adelaide and other cities. There were no reports of violence.

There are about 700,000 Aborigines in a population of 23 million in Australia, whose descendant­s date back about 50,000 years before British colonisers arrived.

They suffer disproport­ionately high rates of suicide, alcohol abuse, domestic violence and imprisonme­nt.

Protesters called for a treaty between indigenous and nonindigen­ous Australian­s, recognitio­n in the constituti­on, and an end to inequality.

Protesters want the date of Australia Day to be changed, or abolished altogether.

Whether to change the date of Australia Day has been a subject of debate for many years, as has whether to change the Australian flag, which includes the British Union Jack.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull ruled out a change of flag. — Reuters

 ??  ?? People take part in an ‘Invasion Day’ rally on Australia Day in Melbourne. — AFP photo
People take part in an ‘Invasion Day’ rally on Australia Day in Melbourne. — AFP photo

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