Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Self-rule ex-Australian’s goal

Aboriginal territory seeking treaty, recognitio­n, he says

- LIVIA ALBECK-RIPKA

MILLN REEF, Australia — Murrumu of Walubara and his son, Thoyo of Walubara, paddled in the clear waters of the Great Barrier Reef, among corals of electric purple and burnt orange, trumpetfis­h, sea cucumbers and giant clams.

They were 35 miles off the coast of Australia — or, as Walubara says, what most people refer to as Australia.

To him and his followers, the Great Barrier Reef is a part of the Yidinji Territory, a self-declared nation spanning more than 6,000 square miles in the northeaste­rn part of the continent, which Walubara formed in 2014 but to which he says sovereignt­y was never ceded.

Five years ago, after realizing that as an indigenous man he was not recognized by Australia’s constituti­on, Walubara quit his job as a political reporter and renounced his Australian citizenshi­p and former name, Jeremy Geia. He returned his passport, public health care documents and driver’s license to their respective government department­s, he says, and destroyed his Australian bank cards.

“I had assumed that I had true and correct membership inside the Commonweal­th of Australia,” Walubara, who is now 45, recounted writing in the accompanyi­ng letters to each government department. “I have made a mistake: I’m no longer eligible for the benefits of your society,” he wrote. “Here are your instrument­s back.”

While experts say that Walubara has a long road ahead before Australia would recognize his claims to sovereignt­y, his argument has caught the attention of the public and the Australian news media. It also bears political weight in a country that has yet to recognize indigenous Australian­s in its constituti­on or to make a treaty with the marginaliz­ed population, who have long sought a voice in Parliament.

Now, with the recent re-election of a conservati­ve Australian government that has promised a referendum on the issue of constituti­onal recognitio­n, Walubara, who is the Yidinji Territory’s minister of foreign affairs and trade, is again pressuring federal leaders to make a treaty with the Sovereign Yidinji Government. A not-for-profit entity, it has a Cabinet of 10 ministers and, so far, close to 100 citizens (most of whom have both Australian and Yidinji citizenshi­p).

Being recognized within a Commonweal­th framework, Walubara says, is insufficie­nt. Treaties with sovereign indigenous government­s are the only appropriat­e remedy, he says, for the exclusion and pain inflicted on generation­s of indigenous people, who are thought to have inhabited Australia for at least 65,000 years before being displaced and in some cases massacred after the British arrived in the late 1700s.

“We’re not going away, and we don’t want the Commonweal­th of Australia to go away. However, it is on our territory,” Walubara said.

His government doesn’t want compensati­on, he said, but only for Australia to recognize the Yidinji Territory as an official entity, and the right to maintain a police force and an army.

“That’s as simple as it is — it’s just paperwork,” Walubara said. “This is the absolute remedy.”

Walubara was born in 1974 in Cairns, in Australia’s north, to an aboriginal mother and Croatian Jewish father. He sought answers for his feelings of displaceme­nt while traveling through dozens of countries including Cuba (he immersed himself in communism) and Mexico, and, eventually, in journalism, where he believed he could hold the powerful to account.

He spent two decades as a reporter, in 2012 conducting one of the first interviews with Julian Assange at the Ecuadorean Embassy in London and rising up the ranks of the Australian news media to become a political reporter in Canberra, the nation’s capital. There, he says, he grew frustrated both with the repetitive stories about indigenous Australian­s’ high incarcerat­ion and suicide rates and the childish antics of the country’s politician­s.

“I thought people deserved better than this, and if indigenous people were pinning their hopes to that kind of leadership, then good luck,” Walubara said.

It was at that time that he began to fully comprehend his own exclusion from the constituti­on and began researchin­g what it would take to move toward a treaty between Australia and its aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

“I realized that they weren’t going to do it,” he said of Australia’s leaders, “so I had to.”

Friends were surprised but mostly respected Walubara’s decision to leave his job.

“He gave away a very strong career,” said Mark Davis, a former colleague. But “he’s a man of his own principles” Davis added. “I think it’s remarkable, and history will vindicate him. Most people don’t give him the seriousnes­s that he’s due.”

Now, Walubara survives mainly on the goodwill of the supporters of his mission. He lives on the ground floor of a friend’s home in Cairns with his son, 11, and wife, who is also an activist.

He is not registered under his current name for Australian services, including health care, which caused worry and frustratio­n when, during a recent health scare, he refused to identify himself to a hospital’s staff as anything other than a Yidinji man, Davis recalled.

In 2015, Walubara was arrested over driving with Yidinji-issued license plates. He has since stopped using them in an effort to establish a working relationsh­ip with federal government ministers.

But at every other opportunit­y, Walubara pokes at assumption­s of Australian sovereignt­y and land ownership in the region where he lives: “It’s just a truth that’s unfamiliar to you,” he tells people who don’t follow his line of thinking.

On a day in early August, friends had organized for Walubara to take Thoyo on a trip to the reef for his birthday. Onboard, he spoke with tourists from India, Austria and the separatist Spanish region of Catalonia, questionin­g some about their rights to work in or visit Australia and confoundin­g others with his mission.

“See, the Catalonian­s get it,” he beamed.

From Walubara’s point of view, his mission is simple: The Sovereign Yidinji Government wants recognitio­n but is content for Australia to police and conduct other administra­tive functions on its territory and to represent its interests at the United Nations, so long as Yidinji ministers have a final say on environmen­tal issues, for example, and the capacity to fund projects including a school and university, which he says would provide better outcomes for aboriginal youth.

The ministers argue that in signing on to the U.N. Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Australia has already committed to allowing them to self-govern and receive restitutio­n.

While some experts said that the United Nations’ declaratio­n might support Walubara’s position, making a treaty possible in theory, they consider it unlikely that the Australian government will go to the negotiatin­g table in the near future.

Anne Twomey, a professor of constituti­onal law at the University of Sydney, said that it was important that Walubara’s claim is for political sovereignt­y as opposed to legal sovereignt­y.

The Uluru Statement from the Heart — a road map for recognitio­n created by representa­tives of various indigenous groups in 2017 — described this kind of political sovereignt­y, she added, and individual states in Australia have taken steps toward creating treaties, but none has been ratified.

A “limited degree of political control or recognitio­n” might well be possible for the Yidinji Territory, Twomey said, should the Australian government choose to confer it.

Walubara does have his critics. Some insist he is merely an attention seeker, while others say that despite good intentions, he has achieved little in the five years since renouncing his Australian citizenshi­p.

But others describe him as a bold leader carving a path for future generation­s.

“He’s one of the great elders of this land,” said Isaac Cassady, 19, who lives in Cairns and identifies as being of Yidinji descent.

“It’s not about guilt tripping people or blaming people,” he added of Walubara’s mission. “It’s about working together to recognize, respect and move on.”

For Walubara, the road ahead may be lonely and fraught, but he remains convinced that a treaty will occur in his lifetime. Looking at other struggles around the world, he said he had come to appreciate that there was no shortcut to healing the wounds of history.

“The peaceful way is the best way,” he said, “even if it is the longest.”

 ?? The New York Times/BROOK MITCHELL ?? Murrumu of Walubara (right), once known as political reporter Jeremy Geia, snorkels along the Great Barrier Reef with his son, Thoyo, on Thoyo’s 11th birthday Aug. 8. Walubara pokes at assumption­s of Australian sovereignt­y and land ownership in the region where he lives: “It’s just a truth that’s unfamiliar to you,” he tells people who don’t follow his line of thinking.
The New York Times/BROOK MITCHELL Murrumu of Walubara (right), once known as political reporter Jeremy Geia, snorkels along the Great Barrier Reef with his son, Thoyo, on Thoyo’s 11th birthday Aug. 8. Walubara pokes at assumption­s of Australian sovereignt­y and land ownership in the region where he lives: “It’s just a truth that’s unfamiliar to you,” he tells people who don’t follow his line of thinking.
 ?? The New York Times/BROOK MITCHELL ?? To his critics, Murrumu of Walubara is merely an attention seeker who has achieved little. Others see him as a bold leader blazing a trail for future generation­s of indigenous people.
The New York Times/BROOK MITCHELL To his critics, Murrumu of Walubara is merely an attention seeker who has achieved little. Others see him as a bold leader blazing a trail for future generation­s of indigenous people.

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