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New powers, greater role for peak Aboriginal body in Victoria
New powers, greater role for peak Aboriginal body in Victoria

Sydney Morning Herald

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • Sydney Morning Herald

New powers, greater role for peak Aboriginal body in Victoria

In this series, we examine the work of Victoria's Yoorrook Justice Commission, a public inquiry into the impact of colonisation on Indigenous Victorians. See all 53 stories. Victoria's peak Aboriginal body, the First Peoples' Assembly, would be given a direct line to ministers and the power to make appointments to government boards under legislation being developed through the state's treaty negotiations. The assembly would also be given oversight over programs and policies designed to close the gap in life expectancy and living standards between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. Ministers and government departments would be required to consult with the assembly on any laws or policies 'specifically directed' to Indigenous Victorians, and the assembly would have the authority to question ministers and provide advice to them. The proposed reform, which would make the assembly a statutory corporation and bring it under the power of Victoria's public sector anti-corruption watchdog, IBAC, would satisfy one of the key recommendations within the Yoorrook Justice Commission's final reports tabled this week in parliament. The commission recommended the state government negotiate with First Peoples to establish a permanent, First Peoples' representative body 'with powers at all levels of political and policy decision making'. Loading The commission found that exclusion from processes of government was one of the historic and ongoing injustices inflicted upon Victoria's Indigenous people since colonisation. 'As shown in the evidence to Yoorrook, any inclusion of First Peoples in the State political life is limited, circumscribed and reliant on the continuation of political goodwill,' the commission noted. 'Numerous witnesses to Yoorrook submitted that the State continues to make government policy and laws for First Peoples, rather than with or by First Peoples. Government policy decision making continues to largely disregard the voices of First Peoples Elders, organisations and communities.'

New powers, greater role for peak Aboriginal body in Victoria
New powers, greater role for peak Aboriginal body in Victoria

The Age

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • The Age

New powers, greater role for peak Aboriginal body in Victoria

In this series, we examine the work of Victoria's Yoorrook Justice Commission, a public inquiry into the impact of colonisation on Indigenous Victorians. See all 53 stories. Victoria's peak Aboriginal body, the First Peoples' Assembly, would be given a direct line to ministers and the power to make appointments to government boards under legislation being developed through the state's treaty negotiations. The assembly would also be given oversight over programs and policies designed to close the gap in life expectancy and living standards between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. Ministers and government departments would be required to consult with the assembly on any laws or policies 'specifically directed' to Indigenous Victorians, and the assembly would have the authority to question ministers and provide advice to them. The proposed reform, which would make the assembly a statutory corporation and bring it under the power of Victoria's public sector anti-corruption watchdog, IBAC, would satisfy one of the key recommendations within the Yoorrook Justice Commission's final reports tabled this week in parliament. The commission recommended the state government negotiate with First Peoples to establish a permanent, First Peoples' representative body 'with powers at all levels of political and policy decision making'. Loading The commission found that exclusion from processes of government was one of the historic and ongoing injustices inflicted upon Victoria's Indigenous people since colonisation. 'As shown in the evidence to Yoorrook, any inclusion of First Peoples in the State political life is limited, circumscribed and reliant on the continuation of political goodwill,' the commission noted. 'Numerous witnesses to Yoorrook submitted that the State continues to make government policy and laws for First Peoples, rather than with or by First Peoples. Government policy decision making continues to largely disregard the voices of First Peoples Elders, organisations and communities.'

Government considers compensating aboriginal Australians
Government considers compensating aboriginal Australians

Daily Mail​

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • Daily Mail​

Government considers compensating aboriginal Australians

A landmark truth-telling inquiry's push to compensate Indigenous Victorians for historical injustices has not been ruled out by the Premier despite warnings it could bankrupt the state. After a four-year truth-telling inquiry, The Yoorrook Justice Commission delivered its final report to the Victoria state parliament on Tuesday. The Australian-first Indigenous truth-telling body calls on the Victorian government to provide redress for injustices. Among the proposals is a statewide redress scheme, including financial compensation for Indigenous Victorians. The report also suggests recognising Indigenous groups as sovereign nations, exempting them from taxes and rates, and granting them access to revenue from natural resources and Crown land. The report also calls for the state government to offer a formal apology and to acknowledge its responsibility for the wrongs of its predecessors. The apology would also see the state acknowledge that Aboriginal soldiers who served during the world wars were excluded from a scheme that gave veterans land when they returned home. Some controversial recommendations included a significant overhaul of the education system, which would exclude Indigenous children from attendance requirements, suspension and expulsion, as well as avenues for more appropriate cultural training. The report also pushed for the Treaty to be pursued and permanent funding streams to be instituted to help future generations of Indigenous people. It also called for a permanent First Peoples' Assembly - a move which would create a Victorian version of the Voice to Parliament, which was overwhelmingly rejected at the federal level following a referendum. During a press conference on Wednesday, Premier Jacinta Allan (pictured) refused to rule out any of the recommendations. 'I'm just not going to rule things in or out through a press conference,' Allan said. 'I think we can understand the need... for government to take time to consider the recommendations.' The report has given the Victorian government a two-year window to respond to its findings. Yoorrook held 67 days of public hearings, gathering the testimony of Stolen Generations survivors, elders, historians, experts and non-Indigenous advocates. It found there were at least 50 massacres across Victoria by the end of the 1860s, with eight colonists killed compared to 978 First Nations people. The mass killings, combined with disease, sexual violence, exclusion, eradication of language, cultural erasure, environmental degradation, child removal, absorption and assimilation, brought about the 'near-complete physical destruction' of Aboriginal people in Victoria. The 'decimation' of the population by 1901 was the result of 'a coordinated plan of different actions aimed at the destruction of the essential foundations of the life of national groups'. 'This was genocide,' one of the documents read. Ms Allan said the findings made for 'tough reading' because they 'tell the truth' about how the state was colonised. The recommendations will inform treaty talks between the state government and the First Peoples' Assembly of Victoria, with enabling legislation expected to be introduced later in 2025. The report received a mixed response, with some critics labelling the extensive list of recommendations as a 'disaster'. '[The list] read like demands that would send the state broke if they agreed to all of them,' one Indigenous critic told the Herald Sun. 'At a time when we are negotiating treaty and getting the Victorian people on board, it's just a disaster.' Others supported the report, claiming it was time for the state to start 'making things right'. Ms Allan encouraged Victorians to look at the report. 'I'm focused on getting better outcomes, because when you improve outcomes for Indigenous kids in schools, Indigenous kids in family settings, Indigenous men and women getting access to the health care that they need, that's better for all of us.' First Peoples' Assembly member Nerita Waight warned Ms Allan not to let Yoorrook's work go ignored, as politicians have done with previous major Aboriginal-related inquiries. 'The truth has been told and now the government has an obligation to act,' the Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service chief executive said. Yoorrook Justice Commission chairperson Professor Eleanor Bourke said the final report outlined recommendations that would be advanced through a treaty process while others needed to 'begin now' with urgent action and 'reforms'. 'These recommendations take the voices, lived experience and evidence of First Peoples into the places where decisions are made and where change must happen,' Ms Bourke said. 'To Premier Allan and the Victorian Government, I urge you all to implement the Yoorrook for Transformation recommendations with courage and commitment.' Independent Senator Lidia Thorpe (pictured) called on the federal government to press on with national truth and treaty processes. 'Genocide has not just occurred in Victoria, but has been perpetrated against all First Peoples of this continent,' she said. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese promised to set up a 'Makarrata Commission to oversee a national process for treaty and truth-telling' in 2021. His government allocated $5.8 million to commence work on establishing the independent commission, but it has not materialised after the failed Voice to Parliament referendum in 2023.

‘Woke' Allan government continues on ‘desperate path' towards Voice treaty
‘Woke' Allan government continues on ‘desperate path' towards Voice treaty

Sky News AU

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • Sky News AU

‘Woke' Allan government continues on ‘desperate path' towards Voice treaty

Sky News host Danica De Giorgio discusses the 'most woke government' in the country wanting to divide Australians by race. A report on Victoria's four-year truth telling inquiry has been tabled in parliament – and has delivered 100 recommendations for Indigenous Victorians, including cash compensation and a formal apology. 'We might just be about to find out what the Allan government is prepared to freely give away and give up – all at the expense of taxpayers – as part of its ongoing, desperate path to treaty,' Ms De Giorgio said. 'Let's be honest, if this big push for funding goes ahead, who is going to pay for it? The Victorian taxpayer of course.'

‘Can't get their act together': Yoorrook commission split over Indigenous injustices
‘Can't get their act together': Yoorrook commission split over Indigenous injustices

Sky News AU

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • Sky News AU

‘Can't get their act together': Yoorrook commission split over Indigenous injustices

Radio 2CC host Stephen Cenatiempo discusses the Yoorrook commission split over findings of injustices on Indigenous Victorians, claiming they 'can't get their act together'. 'We live in a post-truth world, don't we?' Mr Cenatiempo told Sky News host Danica De Giorgio. 'Once upon a time, truth was about actuality, now we have this concept of your truth, my truth, their truth, everybody has a different truth. 'If this 5-member committee can't get their act together, what hope has a bigger body got?'

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