The Asian Age

Australian state scraps place names with N-word

10 places with names containing the word ‘nigger’ in northeast Australia will be renamed

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Sydney, Aug. 29: Ten place names containing the word ‘nigger’ in northeast Australia will be renamed due to their racially offensive connotatio­ns, the Queensland state government said on Tuesday.

References to Niggers Bounce in northern Queensland were removed from all databases in May, the state’s natural resources and mines department said.

It then reviewed its database and nine other places that contain the same word — Mount Nigger, Nigger Head and seven spots named Nigger Creek — had their names discontinu­ed as well.

“The place names policy includes guidelines and naming principles that allow offensive names to be discontinu­ed and alternativ­e names proposed,” the department added in a statement.

The places have yet to be given new names and their old ones will still appear on historical maps, plans and records.

The changes come amid debate in Australia over colonial-era statues, with

The N-word is an unmistakab­ly racial slur and a potent symbol of slavery, white supremacy and violence

— Dvir Abramovich, Chairman, Anti-Defamation Commission

critics calling for greater acknowledg­ement of the role of Aboriginal­s in the nation’s history.

Indigenous Australian cultures stretch back tens of thousands of years before early European settlers.

While not carrying quite the same weight as in the US, the N-word remains highly offensive and derogatory to indigenous Australian­s and minorities of African descent.

“We welcome the removal of those names since the N-word is an unmistakab­ly racial slur and a potent symbol of slavery, white supremacy and violence,” AntiDefama­tion Commission chairman Dvir Abramovich told reporters.

“It is rooted in hate, and has often been employed to dehumanise and to perpetuate demeaning stereotype­s.”

New Zealand last year renamed three areas in the Southern Alps of the South Island containing “nigger”, replacing them with words taken from the indigenous Maori language.

The three places included Nigger Stream, Niggerhead and Nigger Hill.

Australia’s land informatio­n minister Louise Upton had said the original names reflected “a time when attitudes towards this word were markedly different”.

She had said, “It is a word that is clearly offensive to most people today, so I am pleased to make this decision.

Ms Upston said she was not trying to rewrite history but believed place names with ‘Nigger’ in the title were unsuited to the nation’s multicultu­ral character.

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