Nelson Mail

PM apologises for slavery comments

- Australia

Scott Morrison has apologised for remarks about slavery in Australia and tried to distance himself from ‘‘history wars’’.

The prime minister drew widespread criticism after saying on Thursday ‘‘there was no slavery in Australia’’ when the country was founded. Morrison said his comments were about how NSW was settled on principles which included that the colony was not to have slavery.

‘‘My comments were not intended to give offence and if they did, I deeply regret that and apologise for that,’’ he said yesterday in Canberra.

He acknowledg­ed ‘‘all sorts of hideous practices’’ had been waged against indigenous people.

‘‘In Australia we know we have had problems in our past. We have acknowledg­ed those,’’ he said.

The prime minister also described indigenous incarcerat­ion rates as heartbreak­ing, saying there was a commitment to act and no shortage of funding to address the problem.

Indigenous historian Bruce Pascoe was among those to criticise Morrison’s remarks on slavery.

‘‘It’s pretty obvious that when you chain people up by the neck and force them to march 300km and then work on cattle stations for non-indigenous barons, then that is slavery,’’ Pascoe told ABC radio.

He said Australia needed to confront and acknowledg­e its past. ‘‘It’s about recognitio­n, it’s about embracing the history — good and bad,’’ he said.

Black Lives Matter has shone a light on Australia’s systemic mistreatme­nt of Aboriginal people.

Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton lashed out at an apparent rash of ‘‘cancel culture’’ in response to the protest movement.

Netflix has pulled four shows featuring controvers­ial Australian performer Chris Lilley and there are supposedly calls to topple statues of British explorer Captain James Cook.

‘‘I don’t think ripping pages out of history books and brushing over parts of history you don’t agree with or you don’t like is really something the Australian public is going to embrace,’’ Dutton said.

‘‘There are good and bad parts of our history.

‘‘You learn from that.’’

Dutton said Netflix’s decision to remove the Chris Lilley shows, depicting the comedian in a range of characters including blackface, was absurd.

The prime minister has bigger priorities.

‘‘I’m not interested in what they’re showing on streaming services. I’m interested in getting Australian­s back to work,’’ he said.

‘‘Honestly people, let’s focus on what’s really happening.

‘‘What you’re watching on television is your business. It’s not going to create one job.

‘‘Let’s focus on where Australian­s are hurting today. They really are hurting, and I will not be distracted.’’

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese does not want statues removed.

‘‘You can’t rewrite history, you have to learn from it,’’ he said.

‘‘The idea that you go back to year zero of history is in my view, just quite frankly unacceptab­le.’’ –

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Prime Minister Scott Morrison says he is sorry for saying ‘‘there was no slavery in Australia’’ when the country was founded. There was a backlash about his remarks.
GETTY IMAGES Prime Minister Scott Morrison says he is sorry for saying ‘‘there was no slavery in Australia’’ when the country was founded. There was a backlash about his remarks.

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