The Guardian (USA)

Indigenous inequality in spotlight as Australia faces reckoning on race

- Luke Henriques-Gomes in Melbourne

Australia’s prime minister took his time before weighing in on the country’s Black Lives Matter movement. Five days after tens of thousands of people joined protests over Indigenous deaths in custody, Scott Morrison spoke out on Thursday, wondering aloud on a rightleani­ng radio station whether something that had started with a “fair point” had lost its way.

“I think we’ve also got to respect our history as well,” he said. “And this is not a licence for people to just go nuts on this stuff.”

As Black Lives Matter protests have swept around the world after the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander campaigner­s have sought to seize the moment. Pointing to figures showing 437 Indigenous people have died in custody since1991, they argue it is time for Australia’s own national reckoning.

Successive government­s have failed to move the dial on Indigenous inequality, despite an apology in 2008 to the stolen generation­s – Indigenous people who were forcibly removed from their families as children by the state – from the then prime minister, Kevin Rudd. Indigenous Australian­s account for 28% of people in prison. Life expectancy is 10 years less than that of the general population. Decades of calling for recognitio­n in the constituti­on have gone unanswered.

Now that racism is in the headlines, there has been a greater focus on

Indigenous Australian­s, although campaigner­s have expressed frustratio­n that it took the death of an African American man to shine a light on their plight.

The anger has coalesced around high-profile deaths in custody. Public rallies have become vigils to those lives lost: people such as David Dungay, whose last words were “I can’t breathe” as he was restrained by prison guards in 2015; Tanya Day, who died from a fall in prison in 2017 following an arrest for public drunkennes­s; and Ms Dhu, who was denied medical care by police who arrested her over unpaid fines and died in custody in 2014.

In the week before protesters took to the streets, a Sydney police officer slammed an Indigenous teenager’s face into concrete.

Morrison’s conservati­ve government has done little to directly address the frustratio­ns of campaigner­s who say recommenda­tions from a 1991 royal commission into Indigenous deaths in custody still have not been implemente­d.

The prime minister said he viewed the “very high level of Indigenous incarcerat­ion” as a genuine issue. Yet he dismissed the broader argument from campaigner­s that Australia should not see itself as absent of the kind of racism present in the US.

“Australia, in this global moment of Black Lives Matter, is revealing itself as the colonial outpost that it is,” said Dr Chelsea Bond, a Munanjali and South Sea Islander academic at the University of Queensland. She questioned how it was that Morrison could say in the radio interview that there was “no slavery in Australia”.

Morrison later acknowledg­ed he had been wrong. From the “blackbirdi­ng” of Pacific Islander people who were were kidnapped and forced into labouring work, to the Indigenous farmhands and domestic servants who were traded between settlers and not paid, there certainly was slavery in Australia. But in his apology, Morrison said he did not want to start a “history war”.

“Appealing for truth-telling in history is not a matter of feelings,” Bond said. “It’s deeply irresponsi­ble for our prime minister to be trying to incite a history war based on lies. It strikes me that he wouldn’t want to use this moment to honour the pain and trauma Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have experience­d in this country. Why wouldn’t you want to do that?”

The Labor opposition has sought to elevate the case for a “voice to parliament”, a constituti­onally enshrined representa­tive body to advise politician­s on Indigenous policy. This has been rejected by the government.

Labor has walked a fine line in declining to directly criticise people taking to the streets in defiance of rules on physical distancing, while arguing that everyone should follow the authoritie­s’ health advice. The advice, unequivoca­lly, is that protests should not go ahead.

“My point is that for people to think carefully about what they decide to do,” said Linda Burney, Labor’s most senior Indigenous MP. “It is not up to me or anyone else to tell people what to do, but to heed the health warnings and to think about what the issues are here. And that’s what I would like the media to also focus on: it’s not ‘do you or don’t you’. It’s actually thinking about deeply what the issues are.”

 ??  ?? Protesters gather in Sydney to honour the memory of George Floyd and protest the deaths of indigenous Australian­s in custody Photograph: Rick Rycroft/AP
Protesters gather in Sydney to honour the memory of George Floyd and protest the deaths of indigenous Australian­s in custody Photograph: Rick Rycroft/AP
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