Australia’s Assimilation Shame: Indigenous Children Still Being Stolen
By John Pilger
Guest Writer for Wake Up World
On an episode of the ABC’s Q&A last month, Liberal “elder” and former NSW Opposition Leader Peter Coleman advocated
the policies of assimilation – the breeding out of First Nations’
Peoples – a feature of the White Australia Policy and the Stolen
Generations. Rather than Coleman’s voice being a relic of the past, John
Pilger showed such abhorrent racist ideas, which are based on the
principles of eugenics, are still widely practiced in Australia today,
especially in the Northern Territory.
Australia’s Assimilation Shame
THE TAPE IS SEARING. There is the voice of an infant screaming as he is wrenched from his mother, who pleads:
“There is nothing wrong with my baby. Why are you doing this to us? I would’ve been hung years ago, wouldn’t I? Because [as an Australian Aborigine] you’re guilty before you’re found innocent.”
The child’s grandmother demands to know why…
“… the stealing of our kids is happening all over again.”
A welfare official says:
“I’m gunna take him, mate.”
This
happened to an Aboriginal family in outback New South Wales. It is
happening across Australia in a scandalous and largely unrecognised
abuse of human rights that evokes the infamous Stolen Generation of the last century
Up to the 1970s, thousands of mixed race children were stolen from their mothers by welfare officials. The children were given to institutions as cheap or slave labour; many were abused.
Described by a Chief Protector of Aborigines in 1933 as the “breeding out the colour”, the policy was known as “assimilation”. It was influenced by the same eugenics movement that inspired the Nazis.
Peter Coleman Promotes Assimilation
In 1997, a landmark report, ‘Bringing Them Home’, disclosed that as many 50,000 children and their mothers had endured
‘… the humiliation, the degradation and sheer brutality of the act of forced separation … the product of the deliberate, calculated policies of the state.’
The report called this genocide.
Assimilation
remains Australian government policy in all but name. Euphemisms such
as “reconciliation” and “Stronger Futures” cover similar social
engineering and an enduring, insidious racism in the political elite,
the bureaucracy and wider Australian society.
When, in 2008. Prime Minister Kevin Rudd apologised for the Stolen Generation, he added:
“I want to be blunt about this. There will be no compensation.”
The Sydney Morning Herald congratulated Rudd on a ‘shrewd manoeuvre’ that…
‘… cleared away a piece of political wreckage that responds to some of its supporters’ emotional needs, but changes nothing.’
Today,
the theft of Aboriginal children – including babies taken from the
birth table – is now more widespread than at any time during the last
century.
As of June
last year, almost 14,000 Aboriginal children had been ‘removed’. This is
five times the number when ‘Bringing Them Home’ was written. More than a
third of all removed children are Aboriginal — from 3% of the
population. At the present rate, this mass removal of Aboriginal
children will result in a stolen generation of more than 3,300 children
in the Northern Territory alone.
Pat
(not her real name) is the mother whose anguish was secretly recorded
on a phone as four Department of Child Services officials and six police
descended on her home.
On
the tape, an official claims they have come only for an “assessment”.
But two of the police officers, who knew Pat, told her they saw no risk
to her child and warned her to “get out of here quick”. Pat
fled, cradling her infant, but the one-year-old was eventually seized
without her knowing why. The next morning a police officer returned to
apologise to her and said her baby should never have been taken away.
Pat has no idea where her son is.
Once,
she was “invited” by officials to bring her children to “neutral”
offices to discuss a “care plan”. The doors were locked and officials
seized the children, with one of the youngest dragging on a police
officer’s gun belt. Many Indigenous mothers are unaware of their legal
rights. A secretive Children’s Court has become notorious for
rubber-stamping removals.
Most
Aboriginal families live on the edge. Their life expectancy in towns a
short flight from Sydney is as low as 37. Dickensian diseases are rife;
Australia is the only developed country not to have eradicated trachoma,
which blinds Aboriginal children.
Pat
has both complied with and struggled bravely against a punitive
bureaucracy that can remove children on hearsay. She has twice been
acquitted of false charges, including “kidnapping” her own children. A
psychologist has described her as a capable and good mother.
Josie Crawshaw, the former director of a respected families’ support organisation in Darwin, told me:
“In remote areas, officials will go in with a plane in the early hours and fly the child thousands of kilometres from their community. There’ll be no explanation, no support, and the child may be gone forever.”
In 2012, the Co-ordinator-General of Remote Services for the Northern Territory, Olga Havnen,
was sacked when she revealed that almost $80m was spent on the
surveillance and removal of Aboriginal children compared with only
$500,000 on supporting the same impoverished families.
She told me:
“The primary reasons for removing children are welfare issues directly related to poverty and inequality. The impact on families is just horrendous because if they are not reunited within six months, it’s likely they won’t see each other again. If South Africa was doing this, there’d be an international outcry.”
She and others with long experience I have interviewed have echoed the Bringing them Home report, which described an official ‘attitude’ in Australia that regarded all Aboriginal people as ‘morally deficient’.
A
Department of Families and Community Services spokesman said that the
majority of removed Indigenous children in New South Wales were placed
with Indigenous carers. According to Indigenous support networks, this
is a smokescreen; it does not mean families and is control by
divisiveness that is the bureaucracy’s real achievement.
I met a group of Aboriginal grandmothers, all survivors of the first stolen generation, all now with stolen grandchildren. “We live in a state of fear, again,” they said.
David Shoebridge, a State Greens MP told me:
“The truth is, there is a market among whites for these kids, especially babies.”
The New South Wales parliament is soon to debate legislation that introduces forced adoption and “guardianship”. Children under two will be liable – without the mother’s consent – if “removed” for more than six months.
For many Aboriginal mothers, like Pat, it can take six months merely to make contact with their children. “It’s setting up Aboriginal families to fail,” said Shoebridge.
I asked Josie Crawshaw why:
“The wilful ignorance in Australia about its first people has now become the kind of intolerance that gets to the point where you can smash an entire group of humanity and there is no fuss.”
Note: You can download a copy of John Pilger’s ‘Utopia’ – an exposé on the continued persecution of Indigenous Australians – at utopiajohnpilger.co.uk
About the author:
John
Pilger is a distinguished Australian journalist based in London. He has
twice won Britain’s Journalist of the Year Award, and has won an Emmy
and a BAFTA for his documentaries, which have also won numerous US and
European awards. He has also received several honorary doctorates.
Follow John Pilger on Twitter @johnpilger or visit www.johnpilger.com
This article courtesy of www.independentaustralia.net
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