The Borneo Post

Australian ministers under fire for backing ‘okay to be white’ vote

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SYDNEY: Australia’s indigenous affairs minister and several of his colleagues faced calls to resign yesterday, after they backed a failed parliament­ary motion tabled by a controvers­ial senator that declared: ‘ It is okay to be white.’

Several government ministers – including those for trade, communicat­ions and indigenous affairs minister Nigel Scullion – backed a resolution drafted by populist firebrand senator Pauline Hanson which railed against what it described as ‘ the deplorable rise of anti-white racism’. Luke Pearson, the founder of influentia­l anti-racism group, Indigenous­X, echoed a string of calls for Scullion to resign after the vote.

“The minister for Indigenous Affairs, voting in support of what is widely known to be a white supremacis­t slogan, ‘ It’s okay to be white’, makes his position as minister entirely untenable. He needs to resign,” Pearson wrote.

Scullion, a white senator for the Northern Territory, has held the Indigenous Affairs portfolio since 2013. During parliament­ary debate Hanson defended trying to codify what opponents see as race baiting.

“Such a simple sentence should go without saying,” Hanson told the chamber, before her motion was defeated 31 votes to 28. “But I suspect many members in this place would struggle to say it.”

Greens leader Richard Di Natale decried the move.

“It’s not just okay to be white in Australia, it’s actually a ticket to winning the lotto. Look around this chamber and see how many faces aren’t white,” he said.

“The reality is this ‘it’s okay to be white’ slogan has a long history in the white supremacis­t movement where both these clowns get most of their material from,” he said referring to Hanson and another senator who supported the motion. Although one-in-two Australian­s has a parent born abroad, racial inequality and public discourse on the issue is fraught.

Australia’s treatment of its indigenous population has long been a festering historical and political sore. The Aborginal population, who have occupied Australia for 50,000 years, were dispossess­ed of their lands by the arrival of settlers two centuries ago.

They remain among the most disadvanta­ged Australian­s. They were believed to have numbered around one million at the time of British settlement, but now make up only about three percent of the total population of 25 million. — AFP

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