Nick
G.
The
case for “Constitutional recognition” of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
(ATSI) peoples is an attack on the unceded sovereignty of Australian First
Nation peoples.
It
is driven by the demands of big mining and other corporations for access to
Aboriginal land.
It
is driven by the pious wishes of both Liberal and Labor for an end to ATSI
peoples’ demands for self-determination and their opposition to the racist
practices of the colonial structures imposed on their communities.
It
is driven by neo-liberal assimilationists within the ATSI peoples, by the
Pearsons, Langtons and Mundines who grovel at the feet of imperialism and
demand of their own people that they “improve” themselves by obliterating their
identity and becoming happy wage slaves within the mainstream capitalist
economy.
Its
capacity for deception is enormous.
Very
good people, people of great compassion and good-will, are attracted to the
cause of the big “R” because “R”ecognition of ATSI peoples in the Constitution through
a national referendum sounds, on the surface, to be such an obvious good, an
obvious – if belated –act of justice towards ATSI peoples.
Surely
only racists and bigots would oppose a referendum on the issue.
Referendum excludes
considerations of ATSI sovereignty and rights
Well,
there is opposition, and it is being led by ATSI people.
In
fact, the issue has deeply divided the ATSI community.
Opponents
of the referendum point to the exclusion of the issue of sovereignty from the
proposals for Constitutional change. The Expert Panel appointed by Gillard to
report on Constitutional recognition determined that sovereignty not be
considered:
“Any proposal relating to constitutional recognition of the sovereign
status of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples would be highly
contested by many Australians, and likely to jeopardise broad public support
for the Panel’s recommendations. Such a proposal would not therefore satisfy at
least two of the Panel’s principles for assessment of proposals, namely
‘contribute to a more unified and reconciled nation’, and ‘be capable
of being supported by an overwhelming majority of Australians from across
the political and social spectrums’.
“While questions relating to sovereignty are likely to continue to be the
subject of debate in the community, including among Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Australians, the Panel does not consider that these questions
can be resolved or advanced at this time by inclusion in a constitutional
referendum proposal.” (P. 213)
Also excluded from the Expert
Panel’s Discussion Paper are definitions of ATSI peoples’ rights. Minutes of the Expert Committee reveal an
early agreement to replace the term “rights” with “values”. Doing this represents a massive capitulation
to a reactionary agenda to nobble the struggles of ATSI peoples.
Fears that recognition will weaken ATSI land rights
Recognition of ATSI peoples’ prior
occupancy of Australia will not be expressed in terms of their continuing
ownership and custodianship of the land.
Instead, it proposes to acknowledge “the continuing relationship of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples with their traditional lands and
waters” without reference to ownership and custodianship. Legally, ownership of Australian land is
vested in a Minister of the Crown. The
1992 Mabo case negated “terra nullius” and recognised native title in those
parts of Australia not subject to freehold title; and the 1993 Native Title Act
created laws to administer native title claims in these very restricted areas
of unallocated Crown land and some National Parks. However, these are legal mechanisms and not
inalienable rights embedded in a Constitution.
Recognition of prior occupancy and “a continuing relationship” changes
nothing in this regard.
Fears that recognition will weaken self-determination
Removing the offensive references to
race is long overdue, but will do nothing to embed Aboriginal
self-determination in the Constitution.
It is proposed to change that part of the Constitution which gives Parliament
the power to make special laws for “the
people of any race, for whom it is deemed necessary” to one that gives Parliament the power to
“make laws for the peace, order and good government of the Commonwealth with
respect to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples”.
ATSI
peoples are to have no say in the matter.
Under the new wording a racist attack on ATSI peoples such as the
intervention in the Northern Territory or the imposition of income management,
or changing collective community land ownership to individual capitalist land
ownership are all possible. They are
even more likely.
For a treaty and an
anti-imperialist, republican constitution!
The
Australian Constitution was unworkable and out-of-date even as it was
proclaimed. It retained certain powers
for British imperialism and imposed a hopeless shambles of divided powers
between the State and the Federal governments.
It was racist in its denial of injustices towards the ATSI peoples.
In
time it will be swept from the shelves of lawyers. The people will enact a Treaty between the
ATSI peoples and the national government. It will have the status of
government-to-government agreement and be the basis for the entire Australian
people’s single and unitary national sovereignty. It will acknowledge that ATSI peoples never
surrendered their sovereignties and are the traditional and continuing owners
and custodians of their lands. It will
condemn the seizure by force and violence, or the threat of force and violence,
of ATSI lands by British colonialism. It
will acknowledge ATSI peoples’ rights to self-determination.
(Above: the Flag of the Sovereign Union of First Nations Peoples)
An
anti-imperialist and republican constitution will be created. It will contain an Australian people’s Bill
of Rights. It will declare that our
territorial integrity and national sovereignty are vested in the Australian
people and are never to be surrendered or weakened or undermined or subverted
by trade pacts, alliances, shared military facilities or by any other means.
This
is not a pipedream. It is not wishful thinking.
It is embedded in every act of people struggling against injustice and
in defence of their rights. It must be
at the core of an independent agenda that relies neither on parliament nor on
its parties, but on the conscious organised strength of the people.
From
little things, big things grow. From our
actions for anti-imperialist independence and socialism shall come the
Australia of its own people, by its own people and for its own people.
No
fraudulent tinkering with an obsolete and unworkable Constitution!
Fight
for unity of purpose in our communities and organisations and build our own
agenda!
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