The Citizen (KZN)

Australia failing to close the gap

CAN’T IMPROVE INDIGENOUS PEOPLE’S LIVES Prime minister acknowledg­es several measures are below target.

- Sydney

Australia is failing to meet more than half of its targets aimed at improving the lives of its indigenous people, including increasing life expectancy and improving literacy, a government report said yesterday.

There are about 700 000 aboriginal Australian­s in a population of 23 million, dating back about 50 000 years before the British arrived, but they suffer disproport­ionately high rates of suicide, domestic violence and imprisonme­nt, tracking near the bottom in almost every economic and social indicator.

The tenth annual Closing the Gap report said Australia was failing to meet its targets in four out of seven measures, including reading and writing among indigenous students, a key driver behind its failure to boost employment.

A bid to close the 10-year gap in life expectancy between indigenous and non-indigenous Australian­s by 2031 is also behind schedule.

There were improvemen­ts in reducing child mortality rates, increasing high school attendance and improving early childhood education, the report said.

It comes a decade after then prime minister Kevin Rudd apologised to indigenous Australian­s, once administer­ed under flora and fauna laws, for the atrocities committed against them.

Anger among indigenous Australian­s has been stoked further by failure of the government to give them constituti­onal recognitio­n.

Aborigines believe such recognitio­n would help target injustices, which they say are reinforced by Australia Day celebratio­ns that mark the date the British “First Fleet” sailed into Sydney Harbour in 1788 and declared the land unoccupied.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull described the report as “promising”, acknowledg­ing several measures were behind target.

“The solution to Closing the Gap rests within the imaginatio­n, ingenuity, passion and drive of indigenous people themselves,” Turnbull told parliament yesterday. “Government­s must be the enabler of this success.”

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