'New Way' summit ends, plans for another |
Convenor Michael Anderson says a second 'New Way' summit in Canberra at Easter will explore deaths in custody, over-policing, racism and other issues. |
2 February 2010 |
A THREE-DAY Indigenous summit in Canberra concluded yesterday with the election of a taskforce to examine the issue of international and domestic sovereignty and a demand for the resignation of Federal Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin. Summit convenor Michael Anderson says the taskforce will also develop an Aboriginal Charter of Rights and establish protocols for inter-nation relations. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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TO town campers tread new path |
Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin says the change in underlying land tenure at Ilpeye Ilpeye will enable residents to move towards individual home ownership. |
2 February 2010 |
CAPITAL work on housing and infrastructure at the Alice Springs town camp of Ilpeye Ilpeye is believed to be underway, after resident traditional owners last week agreed to the Federal Government acquiring freehold title to the land under the NT intervention in exchange for 'just terms' compensation. The deal sits outside earlier agreement by 17 other town camps to grant the Government 40-year sub-leases over their land. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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TSRA: Climate crisis demands new funds |
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2 February 2010 |
TORRES Strait Regional Authority (TSRA) chairperson Toshie Kris says he's disappointed that the Queensland Government seems to want to use funds earmarked for closing the gaps in Indigenous communities to address the current tidal inundation threat in the Torres Strait. Mr Kris has sought Premier Anna Bligh's assurance that Major Infrastructure Program (MIP) funds won't be diverted from environmental health projects. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Report card delay a bad sign, say Greens |
Greens Senator Rachel Siewert has criticised the Government's record on service delivery to Indigenous peoples, and its failure to restore the Racial Discrimination Act or to deliver reparations to the Stolen Generations. |
2 February 2010 |
THE Australian Greens say the postponement of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's annual Indigenous 'report card' to the Federal Parliament from today's first parliamentary sitting day for 2010 is a sign that the Government is not up to the job of Closing the Gap. Mr Rudd deferred the statement until 11 February because it was closer to the second anniversary of the 13 February National Apology. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Invitation for opening of 'protest house' |
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2 February 2010 |
ABORIGINAL people who walked off the Northern Territory community of Ampilatwatja last year to protest the NT intervention plan to open a 'protest house' at a nearby bore on 14 February. Trade unions are helping to build the house within just six weeks, to illustrate unnecessary government delays in addressing overcrowding and providing other services in the community.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Goldfields meeting to target solutions |
CLSC chief executive Brian Wyatt |
29 January 2010 |
THE Goldfields Land and Sea Council has announced that The Goldfields Conversation would be held at the WMC Centre on 2 and 3 February 2010. GLSC chief executive Brian Wyatt said the Conversation would enable Aboriginal leaders, stakeholders and organisations to plan ways to address issues affecting their communities.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Kimberly schools below national average |
Kimberley Land Council Director Wayne Bergmann said the State Government was failing Aboriginal children in the Kimberley. |
29 January 2010 |
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KIMBERLEY Land Council Director Wayne Bergmann said new statistics that revealed local students were well below the national average should be cause for alarm, calling on the State Government to step up their support for education projects and work in partnership with the KLC.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Health workers to get peak national body |
File picture of Indigenous Health Minister Warren Snowdon. He launched a peak national body for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Workers in Ceduna in South Australia. |
29 January 2010 |
SOUTH Australian Indigenous Health Minister Warren Snowdon today launched a peak national body that will help to build the workforce capacity of the country's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health workers. Mr Snowdon said the Federal Government would provide $1.2 million over the next three years to establish the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Workers Association.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Funds to help those shunned by banks |
Minister Jenny Macklin in Melbourne today |
28 January 2010 |
THE Federal Government has committed $7.5 million towards growing the community development financial institution sector, to give Australians shunned by mainstream banks and services access to fair and appropriate financial products including loans. Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin’s announcement follows concern that desperation is driving vulnerable Aboriginal people in the WA Goldfields to accept high-interest loans from an unauthorised lender.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Goldfields conversation: plan for the future |
GLSC Chief Executive Officer Brian Wyatt said there were many challenges facing the local community in Kalgoorlie and surrounds and the forum was a pre-cursor in implementing the commitment to an Australian Dialogue, a national initiative led by Patrick Dodson and Lieutenant General John Sanderson. |
28 January 2010 |
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A TWO-DAY forum facilitated by the Goldfields Land and Sea Council (GLSC) will bring together Aboriginal groups to plan for the future needs of the community. The Goldfields Conversation, to be held in Kalgoorlie early February will engage the community in identifying key issues and solutions for disadvantage including health, education and employment.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Loansharking prompts financial services |
Generic file photo only. |
27 January 2010 |
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THE Federal Government has announced extra emergency relief and financial counselling services for local residents of Laverton and the Ngaanyatjarra Lands in WA experiencing financial hardship. The WA Consumer Affairs Department is investigating a complaint against a local businessman providing Aboriginal people with unofficial, very high-interest 'loans', which he recovers by holding people's bankcards and PIN numbers.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Surviving Australia Day |
The crowd at the Too Solid Music Festival, hosted in Perth's Supreme Court Gardens by Noongar Radio, Abmusic and the City of Perth. Photo by TASH NANNUP. |
27 January 2010 |
AUSTRALIA Day has concluded for another year with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people involved in a wide range of events, from an Invasion Day rally in Hobart, a celebration of sovereignty at the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Canberra, Survival Day events in many locations, and several Indigenous people collecting Australia Day Honours.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Big night for our country king |
File image of Troy Cassar-Daley. He now has a total of 20 Golden Guitars - the highest honour in Australian country music - and his latest honours follow on from further success at the 2009 ARIA awards. |
25 January 2010 |
ABORIGINAL country music star Troy Cassar-Daley was the king of this year's Country Music Awards in Tamworth, taking home six Golden Guitars for his latest album 'I Love This Place'.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Qld to launch Indigenous sports Hall of Fame |
Trish Williams, Joel Hagan his dad Lawrence at the 2008 ISQ awards in Cairns. Joel, from Toowoomba, won the Robbie Williams Encouragement Award for an emerging sportsperson. |
22 January 2010 |
THE first seven inductees into the Queensland Indigenous Sport Hall of Fame will be announced on the Gold Coast on Friday 12 February. Indigenous Sport Queensland, which hosts the annual Queensland Indigenous Sports Awards, will announce the nominees when it launches the Hall of Fame website at its 2009 sports award gala dinner at Skilled Park, Robina - the night before the big Indigenous All Stars National Rugby League (NRL) All stars game at the same venue. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Nuclear victims can sue UK: ALRM |
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SA tackling domestic violence |
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Changes to child protection in NSW |
Community Services Minister Linda Burney says the changes will allow her department to concentrate on the most serious cases of child abuse or neglect. |
20 January 2010 |
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THE way that NSW authorities handle cases of suspected child abuse and neglect will change this Sunday, with only children deemed ‘at risk of significant harm’ to be reported to the Department of Community Services. Teachers, doctors, nurses, police officers and other mandatory reporters will refer less serious cases to non-government organisations and other government agencies. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Qld set to defend title |
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Prince welcomed in Redfern |
Prince William read the Mem Fox classic Adventures of Possum Magic to the children of the Redfern Children's Program. Photo by MAHALA STROHFELDT. |
20 January 2010 |
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PRINCE William got an enthusiastic welcome when he visited The Block in the inner Sydney suburb of Redfern yesterday on the first day of his Australian visit. Met by Elders and local Aboriginal housing and health representatives, the 27-year-old heir to the heir of the British throne toured the Redfern Community Centre and read and yarned with Aboriginal kids. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Dodson optimistic after year as top Aussie |
Professor Mick Dodson pictured at a pre-Australia Day event in the Blue Mountains this morning. |
19 January 2010 |
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2009 Australian of the Year Mick Dodson says he's confident that Australians will one day choose a more inclusive date than 26 January to celebrate the country's national day. Professor Dodson says he's still optimistic about the prospect of a reconciled Australia but questions about Indigenous land and compensation for the Stolen Generations remain 'unfinished business'. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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'Safe and sober' program for Alice Springs |
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19 January 2010 |
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THE Federal and NT Governments have announced a $5.4 million 'Safe and Sober' program aimed at providing support to people at risk from alcohol abuse in Alice Springs. The funding will enhance rehabilitation facilities, expand community-based interventions and include a program for prison inmates. More than 65 per cent of assaults in the town in 2008 reportedly involved alcohol. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Prisoner mental health left untreated, says council |
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Tamworth welcomes Aboriginal country musos |
Roger Knox, one of the organisers of the Showcase, also known as the King of Koori Country. |
15 January 2010 |
THE Tamworth country music festival has kicked of another huge year with the Aboriginal cultural showcase setting the stage for over 100 musicians. The Showcase focuses on developing new talent but also boasts some iconic Aboriginal performers including Jimmy Little, Archie Roach, Charlie Trindall and Johnny Huckle.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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UN report figures outdated: Govt |
The United Nations emblem |
15 January 2010 |
A UNITED Nations report, The State of the World’s Indigenous Peoples, is based on outdated information, according to the Federal Government. A spokesperson said rather than a 20-year gap in life expectancy, the Australian Bureau of Statistics announced in May 2009 the new figures were now between 9.7 years for women and 11.5 years for men. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Calma welcomes UN report |
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma launched the Co-operative Research Centre for Aboriginal Health report in Canberra on 17 August. |
15 January 2010 |
ABORIGINAL and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma today welcomed the launch of the United Nation’s first report on The State of the World’s Indigenous Peoples. Mr Calma said although Australia had taken some 'giant steps forward', Indigenous people remained marginalised and faced ongoing discrimination and poverty. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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UN report paints a bleak picture |
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Our cultures ‘important’ to Aust Day |
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14 January 2010 |
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A National Australia Day Council survey has found 90 per cent of Australians believe it's important to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and cultures as part of Australia Day celebrations. The Council says this shows Australians are thinking about where we've come from and how to make Australia a better place, rather than just enjoying the public holiday. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Passing of Nyoongar leader |
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Canberra summit shapes up |
Activist Michael Anderson |
13 January 2010 |
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ABORIGINAL Tent Embassy founder Michael Anderson says there's been overwhelming interest in a summit he'll convene in Canberra on 30 January and 1 February. Mr Anderson says he hopes the summit will lead to a communique of grievances and suggestions for a new approach to Indigenous issues that can be read to the Federal Parliament. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Greens back wild rivers laws |
Photo by Christine Howes. |
12 January 2010 |
GREENS lead Senate candidate for Queensland Larissa Waters has warned that Federal Opposition Leader Tony Abbott's bid to overturn wild rivers laws in Cape York would threaten both Aboriginal jobs and the area's pristine environment. Ms Waters said the Greens backed the legislation as it safeguarded Indigenous rights and protected the environment.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Ethics council a 'double standard' |
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Abbott to take on wild rivers laws |
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Fellowship will aid racism research |
Charles Darwin University research fellow Dr Yin Paradies |
11 January 2010 |
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DARWIN-based academic Dr Yin Paradies has won a John McKenzie Fellowship to continue his research on the link between racism and ill-health among minority populations. Earlier studies have demonstrated a clear association between interpersonal racism and poor mental and general health outcomes as well as chronic disease and behaviours such as smoking.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Uluru Climb to remain open |
A view of Uluru |
8 January 2010 |
TOURISTS will continue to climb Uluru, with the Federal Government announcing today that the drawcard would remain open until its popularity dwindled, or new visitor experiences were developed. The Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park board of management lhad wanted to close the climb out of respect for the Indigenous owners and safety reasons, and concerns about visitors using the World Heritage-listed rock as a toilet and leaving litter behind.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Queensland drops Imparja Cup selection bombshell |
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Woodford welcomes Indigenous talent |
Multi-talented artist and musician David Williams blends the traditional sounds of the didge to James Morrison’s trumpet, drawing one of the biggest crowds of the festival. |
6 January 2010 |
ABORIGINAL artist and musician David Williams joined jazz legend James Morrison on stage for one of the most popular gigs at the six-day Woodford Folk Festival, wrapping up on the first day of the New Year. The Koori Mail were there to capture some of the festival highlights.
...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Festive Greetings from The Koori Mail |
Photo by JENET STEWART, Imajenit Photography |
18 December 2009 |
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THE Koori Mail office will be closed from Monday 21 December until Monday 4 January. We'd like to draw some inspiration from three-month-old Dustilee Jackson Willis-Ardler (shown here), from Dubbo in western NSW, in wishing all of our readers, subscribers and advertisers a very happy and relaxing festive season. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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WA native title agreement hailed |
WA Attorney General Christian Porter said the resolution of native title in the region would benefit all Western Australians. |
18 December 2009 |
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NEGOTIATIONS to resolve native title over Perth and south-west WA are underway, following the signing of an agreement between the State Government and the South West Aboriginal Land and Sea Council (SWALSC). Under the agreement, the Noongar people are expected to receive recognition of their traditional ownership, economic benefits, a revised heritage regime, land and joint management of some national parks. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Go-ahead for island airport upgrade |
Qld Premier Anna Bligh says the airport upgrade will contribute to the health, liveability and economic strength of the Torres Strait. |
17 December 2009 |
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A PLANNED $7.2 million upgrade of Horn Island Airport in the Torres Strait will proceed after the Queensland and Federal Governments committed $3.1 million to the project. Premier Anna Bligh said the upgrade would allow larger planes to once again land at airport, where surface damage had limited plane size, and cut the number of available passenger seats by around 2000 per month. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Lawyer laments no female SJC |
Outgoing Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma says Mick Gooda is a great choice for his replacement. |
16 December 2009 |
CANBERRA Aboriginal lawyer Louise Taylor says the Federal Government has missed an easy opportunity to appoint a woman to the job of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner, for the first time in its 17-year history. However, Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin and outgoing Commissioner Tom Calma have both backed health advocate Mick Gooda’s appointment to the position. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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AG names new Social Justice Commissioner |
Incoming Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Mick Gooda |
15 December 2009 |
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COOPERATIVE Research Centre for Aboriginal Health CEO Mick Gooda has been named Tom Calma’s successor as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner with the Australian Human Rights Commission. Attorney General Robert McLelland said Mr Gooda’s five-year appointment would commence on 1 February. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Income management working, says Govt |
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15 December 2009 |
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THE Federal Government says a new Australian Institute of Health and Welfare report is further evidence that income management is working in Indigenous communities under the NT intervention. Three quarters of 76 people on income management surveyed in four communities – out of 16,000 in 73 communities – reported that their children were eating more and were healthier, since income management began. ...for more on this story, grab the next edition of The Koori Mail. Or to subscribe, click here.
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Calma's final report points to brighter future |
Outgoing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma ... "Respect our voices, our rights, our lands, our resources and our waters. Only then will this country truly be able to retreat from injustice." |
27 January 2010 |
DELIVERING his sixth and final Social Justice Report in Sydney on Friday, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma called for what he labelled 'justice reinvestment' in communities with large numbers of offenders.
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Abbott to challenge Qld wild rivers laws |
Federal Opposition Leader Tony Abbott |
27 January 2010 |
QUEENSLAND'S wild rivers debate has found a national voice and opponent with Federal Opposition Leader Tony Abbott. New Cape York Land Council (CYLC) Chairman Richie Ahmat welcomed the news after Mr Abbott met with Aboriginal leaders and traditional owners in Cairns recently, lodging a private member's bill to over-ride the state's environmental laws.
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Sad truth in UN report |
UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues Chairperson Vicki Tauli-Corpuz. |
27 January 2010 |
A UNITED Nations report has highlighted how Australia's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are facing the same problems which plague Indigenous communities worldwide. The State of the World's Indigenous Peoples report lists violence, continuing assimilation policies, marginalisation, forced removal and denial of land rights among many other abuses.
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Google faces battle over racist website |
Steve Gumerungi Hodder-Watts |
27 January 2010 |
AN Aboriginal man living in Alice Springs has taken on the search engine Google after discovering links to a racist website which vilifies Aboriginal people. Steve Gumerungi Hodder-Watts, a broadcaster, complained to the Human Rights Commission about Google's listing of the website Encyclopaedia Dramatica, which contains racist descriptions of Aboriginal people. Google Australia has since removed links to the site.
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Right royal welcome for Prince |
Prince William has a private word with Kieren, aged 10 before he read Mem Fox's classic children's book Adventures of Possum Magic to children in Redfern. |
27 January 2010 | by MAHALA STROHFELDT |
SYDNEY'S Redfern Aboriginal community welcomed Prince William with open arms during his visit to The Block last week. The 27-year-old second in line to the British throne, dubbed Australia's first 'Royalorigine', delighted local Elders during afternoon tea, read a story to a group of Redfern children and yarned with youth.
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RAW approach to mentor WA youth |
The head of the RAW program, Kooya Consultancy Manager Kim Collard. |
27 January 2010 |
AN Aboriginal consultancy in Perth has won a West Australian Government contract to trial a new mentoring service for Indigenous youth in the state's two juvenile detention centres. The service, called RAW, is a new approach to mentoring Aboriginal juvenile offenders involving a 10-week program that begins before the teenagers are released from detention.
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Commission to look into WA eviction |
Nyoongar couple Elder and Barbara Abraham who have been forcibly evicted from their house but dispute allegations of anti-social behaviour. |
27 January 2010 | by Perth Correspondent KEN BOASE |
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THE forced eviction of Nyoongar couple Elder and Barbara Abraham and their family from their Homeswest house in the Perth suburb of Armadale has been referred to the Human Rights Commission.
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Always was, always will be! |
Deadly Award winner country singer Adam James wowed the audience. |
27 January 2010 | by Tasmanian Correspondent JILLIAN MUNDY |
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'Always was, always will be, Aboriginal land'. This was the fitting theme to this year's putalina festival, in southern Tasmania. Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre State Secretary Nala McKenna Mansell said the festival celebrated the return of Aboriginal land to traditional owners.
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Chasing hat-trick |
Queensland captain Bradley Stout accepts the Imparja Cup from Imparja Television sales manager Steve Rattray at the 2009 presentation. |
27 January 2010 |
DEFENDING champions Queensland will take on Victoria in a Twenty/20 match on the opening day of the 2010 Imparja Cup cricket carnival in Alice Springs on Monday 8 February. The Maroons will be attempting to win the Cup for the third year in a row to make it their sixth victory in the Cup’s ten-year history. ...
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Queensland to launch Hall of Fame |
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Early start to Kaiwalagal league season |
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League in the wet |
Torres-Cape players from Cape York at the 2009 Foley Shield, back row from left, David Westley, Andrew Sampson, Garreth Smith, Jimmy Baira and Teleke Kofe; front, Jason Nixon. |
27 January 2010 |
AURUKUN, Mapoon, Napranum and Weipa teams look certain to take part in a Cape York wet season rugby league competition set to start next month. Nine rounds are planned, with the season opener on 27 February, semi-finals on 19 June and the grand final on 26 June.
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Ethics Council has rep body a step closer |
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Mr Tom Calma will be on the council, along with Professor Larissa Behrendt, Mr Wesley Enoch, Ms Mary Graham, Ms Nalwarri Ngurruwutthun and Professor Lester Irabinna Rigney. |
13 January 2010 | by DARREN COYNE |
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THE FORMATION of a new representative body for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people is one step closer with the appointment of six people to an Ethics Council to oversee the process.
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Big night for Bran Nue Dae |
Indigenous singers and actors Jessica Mauboy and Dan Sultan performing at the Melbourne launch of Bran Nue Dae. |
13 January 2010 |
THE stars turned out recently for the Melbourne premiere of the new movie Bran Nue Day. Based on Jimmy Chi's popular and historic stage play, the movie features a line-up of Indigenous talent including Ernie Dingo and Jessica Mauboy. Bran Nue Dae is in cinemas across the country now.
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Healing group board named |
Members of the inaugural Healing Foundation board include Graham Gee, Judy Atkinson, Debra Hocking (Deputy Chairperson), Florence Onus (Chairperson), Toni Janke-Demmery, Noeleen Lopes, and John Roe (Chief Executive Officer). |
13 January 2010 |
BOARD members of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Healing Foundation have been named. It will address trauma and healing in Indigenous communities, using Federal funding of $26.6 million over four years. An official launch date for the Foundation will be announced soon.
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Political party idea supported |
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Compo payment inquiry is urged |
THE Stolen Generation Alliance National Chair Jim Morrison |
13 January 2010 | by KEN BOASE |
THE Stolen Generation Alliance (SGA) has called for an urgent national inquiry into compensation payments made by governments to individuals or groups who have suffered because of government policies or actions. SGA National Chair Jim Morrison said the 'pittance' of payments were yet another injustice for Indigenous people.
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Commission job to Gooda |
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Council faces legal action |
Two cartoons about the KKK that Aboriginal council worker Alan Tumeth says were left in his locker last year. Also other material has been distributed at the depot depicting him as a monkey and press clipping relating to the Ku Klux Klan were anonymously pinned on a staff notice board with a threatening reference to him. |
13 January 2010 | by KIRSTIE PARKER |
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COUNCIL worker and Wiradjuri father-of-four Alan Tumeth says he'll take legal action against his employer, the Gold Coast City Council, unless it puts a stop to what he says is ongoing racial bullying in his workplace, including being told repeatedly that Aboriginal people 'stank' and were nothing but lazy drunks.
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SA land is returned |
South Australian Governor Kevin Scarce and Maralinga Tjarutja Council Chairman Keith Peters unveil a plaque on country to mark the return of the land. Members of the Maralinga Tjarutja community cried as Admiral Scarce handed over the deed. The Governor said the land's return closed a 'sorry chapter' in Australia's history. |
13 January 2010 |
THE final section of the former Maralinga nuclear test site in remote South Australia returned to traditional owners will house a training facility for Aboriginal rangers tasked with caring for the former prohibited zone. The official return marked the end of a 50-year struggle for the Maralinga Tjarutja people.
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Qld bombshell |
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Our Jesse the only player in world team |
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Outer island footy |
Traditional owner Peter Warria (centre front) is holding the ball with North Queensland Rugby League Divisional Chairman Greg Sutherland. |
13 January 2010 |
AN outer Torres Strait Islands rugby league competition looks set to start this year. This follows a Queensland Rugby League (QRL) Northern Division summit hosted by Badu United Sporting Association at Badu Island just before Christmas. The summit examined the way forward for rugby league in the Torres Strait, Northern Peninsula Area, and Central Cape region. ...
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Torn between two sports |
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Torres Strait plea |
One of several king tides that inundated Saibai Island in the Torres Strait earlier this year. File photo by Dave Hanslow, courtesy TSRA. |
16 December 2009 |
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LEADERS in the Torres Strait have called on the Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to visit them during king tide season in January, to see just how urgently they need $22 million in funding to help combat tidal inundation and coastal erosion. ...
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Camp clean-up begins |
A work crew begins the clean-up at Little Sisters camp in Alice Springs |
16 December 2009 | by By DARREN COYNE |
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LITTLE Sisters town camp last week became first of the Alice Springs town camps to receive a clean-up under the Federal Government's $150 million Alice Springs Transformation Plan. Camp resident Baden Williams welcomed the arrival of a team of about 50 workers to clear the camp of years of accumulated rubbish, from bottles to car bodies. ...
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Putting things right |
Walmajarri people perform a smoking ceremony to cleanse the remains before last month's reburial. Photo by SIMON KEENAN, courtesy of KALACC |
16 December 2009 | by By KIRSTIE PARKER |
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THE Walmajarri people of the Kimberley region have finally been able to rebury on country five of their ancestors whose remains were stolen by a Swedish anthropologist almost a century ago. The remains, which were amongst 14 remain repatriated by a Swedish museum in 2004, were reburied at Old Cherrabun Station near Fitzroy Crossing on 25 November. ...
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Tassie protest arrests |
Aunty Pat Green was amongst those arrested for trespass. |
16 December 2009 | by By JILLIAN MUNDY |
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ABORIGINES in Tasmania have continued to protest the construction of a road, which they say will destroy Aboriginal heritage that is older than Egypt's pyramids. There have been more than 40 protester arrests for trespassing at the site, at the Brighton Bypass on the outskirts of Hobart. ...
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Dialysis deal for Central desert |
Western Desert Dialysis Project manager Sarah Brown welcomed the deal |
16 December 2009 |
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A DEAL has been struck between the NT and WA governments to provide dialysis services in Alice Springs for patients from across the WA border, but the SA Government has refused to support the solution. Western Desert Dialysis Project manager Sarah Brown said the deal paved the way for affected patients to re-engage with health care services in the NT and receive life saving treatment. ...
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Blessings and loss in funding changes |
Artistic Director of Perth-based Yirra Yaakin theatre company, Kyle Morrison, welcomed six-year funding to his organisation. |
16 December 2009 | by By MAHALA STROHFELDT |
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CHANGES to the Australia Council's Indigenous organisations arts funding have been alternately welcomed and condemned. Ten Indigenous arts and cultural organisations are in line to receive substantial long-term funding following a two-year review into the Indigenous arts sector, but others have missed out on vital funding. ...
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Gift from 'the girls' |
Lola Edwards and friend Nancy Hillwood with the Albert Namatjira painting. |
16 December 2009 | by By RACHEL SCOLLAY |
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FORMER residents of the Cootamundra Aboriginal Girls Training Home in NSW have donated to the National Museum of Australia a painting gifted to them by artist Albert Namatjira more than 50 years ago. The watercolour's whereabouts were unknown until it was discovered hanging in a NSW government meeting room in 1996 by one of the former Cootamundra 'girls' Lola Edwards. ...
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Elder warns of uranium mine danger |
Wongatha Elder Geoffrey Stokes |
16 December 2009 | by By KEN BOASE |
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WONGATHA Elder Geoffrey Stokes says damage to country by uranium mining will be far greater than that of feral camels being culled in some parts of Australia. Mr Stokes, from the WA Goldfields region, says a State Government decision to overturn a previous ban on uranium mining places the environment at risk of contamination from any accidents when transporting the deadly material. ...
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Stunning turnaround through arts |
The APY Lands Project team and mentorees. |
16 December 2009 |
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A UNIQUE arts program run in South Australia's Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands is being credited with reducing substance misuse among its young participants by 80 per cent. Eighteen young people from Ernabella and Amata took part in the APY Lands Project, which Carclew Youth Arts says also greatly increased participants’ engagement with education, employment and training. ...
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$400,000 for at-risk youth |
RIGHT: Parliamentary Secretary for Justice Brian Tee (centre) with others at the funding announcement at the Ngwala Willumbong Co-operative in St Kilda. |
16 December 2009 |
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A TRAINING course in youth work for young Koories at risk of contact with the criminal justice system is among ten programs receiving grants totalling $400,000 under the Victorian State Government's Aboriginal Justice Agreement (AJA). Share Your Story II will provide training to 12 young Kooris for a Certificate IV in Youth Work at Swinburne University. ...
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Bundjalung Elders mark council's 20th year |
Bundjalung Elders cut a cake to mark the anniversary |
16 December 2009 | by By MAHALA STROHFELDT |
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THE Bundjalung Elders' Council Aboriginal Corporation - believed to be Australia's first established Elders' council - recently marked its 20th anniversary. The council was established in 1989 in response to Elders' concerns about a breakdown in cultural values, and today plays an important role in educating younger generations about Bundjalung history. ...
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Young athletes sizzle in Hobart |
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Little athletics' big day out |
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First Contact Sports and Cultural Festival |
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'I'll whip him again': Choc |
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Palm's gold strike! |
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