COMMONWEALTH GAMES 'STOLENWEALTH GAMES' - ABORIGINAL PROTESTS SHOW DIVISIONS ENDURE
Australian Aboriginals have already held several protests at the Commonwealth Games. |
Many Australians see the Commonwealth Games as
a sporting celebration, but for some Aboriginal activists they symbolise
invasion, dispossession and a culture shunted to the sidelines.
Hundreds of protesters have already
made their presence felt at the Games' host city, Gold Coast, where three
people were arrested in scuffles just before Wednesday's opening ceremony.
Demonstrators also disrupted the baton
relay and more action is planned during the tournament, which was hit by angry
protests when it was held in nearby Brisbane in 1982.
This time around, the Games are taking
place during a period of heightened awareness for indigenous rights following
large-scale protests on Australia Day in January.
"We call this the 'Stolenwealth
Games' because we deserve more," protest leader Wayne Wharton told
demonstrators Tuesday.
"We
deserve more, and our kids deserve more than what we get."
At the 1982 Games, about 2,000 people
marched through Brisbane demanding recognition of Aboriginal land rights and an
end to discriminatory government policy.
Three
decades later, they say little has changed.
"What we are saying to the
Commonwealth countries that are coming here is that it is a damn shame that
they are willing to share in the crime scene of Australia," Wharton told .
"The whole goal of it (British
settlement in Australia) was for the colonial powers to be able to suck the
wealth out of our country. Now our people are the most impoverished people in
the whole of Australia," he added.
Three people were arrested after protestors scuffled with police outside the opening ceremony. |
Aboriginal culture stretches back tens
of thousands of years before the British began colonising Australia in the late
1700s.
Nowadays they are the most
disadvantaged Australians, with higher rates of poverty, ill-health and
imprisonment than any other community.
INVASION DAY
Aboriginals were believed to have
numbered around one million at the time of British settlement, but now make up
only about three percent of the national population of 24 million -- meaning
there are now fewer Aboriginals now than when the first Britons arrived.
Thousands of indigenous children were
taken from their homes and put in foster care with white families or
institutions under assimilation policies that ended only in the early 1970s.
Many of this "Stolen
Generation" never saw their parents or siblings again.
While their cause often struggles for
attention, indigenous grievances are being met with an increasingly sympathetic
ear from pockets of the public.
Tens of thousands of people marched on
this year's Australia Day, January 26, in "Invasion Day" protests
calling for a rethink of the national commemoration.
Australia Day marks the arrival of the
first British settlers in 1788 which, protesters say, heralded the beginning of
colonial oppression.
Consitutional reform to properly
recognise First Nations people is a burning issue at the national parliament in
Canberra, while the government has consistently missed targets to reduce
Aboriginal disadvantage in health, education and employment.
According to Tony Corbett, an
Aboriginal rights researcher at Griffith University in Queensland, indigenous
issues still lack genuine political support.
"We need to approach indigenous
issues with genuine good will and good faith, but that is not happening,"
he told.
Ted Williams, an elder from the
Yugambeh people, whose ancestral land is in the Gold Coast area, has chosen to
promote Aboriginal culture rather than protest during the Games.
"We can talk about the deaths in
custody, we can talk about the stolen generation -— all those at times quite
upsetting things that need to be discussed and have the world know about
them," Williams told .
"But the reconciliation movement
also has many wonderful things happening with it, and our involvement with the
Games I believe exemplifies it in many ways."
However, "Stolenwealth"
protestors disagree.
"Actions speak louder than
words," Aboriginal activist Ruby Wharton told , adding: "We want
progress and we want change."
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