American Renaissance
Previous Story       Next Story       View Comments       Send This Page       Date Archives       Category Archives

‘Tough Love’ in the Outback

More news stories on Australia/New Zealand

Yaroslav Trofimov, Wall Street Journal, Jan. 17, 2009

Two dead cows putrefy at the entrance to this Aboriginal town deep in the Australian outback. Mangy dogs scrape among naked children, as trash swirls around rusted vehicle hulks and cinderblock homes. Prominent on the local store’s notice board: the bus schedule to the nearest prison.

Yuendumu and dozens of similarly frayed Aboriginal communities weren’t supposed to turn out this way. Four decades ago, Australia enacted wide-ranging reforms to uplift its long-oppressed Aboriginal citizens. The laws mandated equal wages with whites, access to the country’s generous welfare system and the eventual transfer of vast chunks of land to near-total Aboriginal control.

Since then, Aboriginal society has experienced a dramatic decline — partly a result of these very reforms. Australia’s government has proclaimed the upsurge of violence, child abuse and alcoholism among Aborigines a national emergency. It is responding with controversial new policies that critics decried as racist, such as restricting welfare payments to Aborigines but not to whites or other Australians.

Those policies, however, are starting to show early results, the government says. They are also shaking up the Aborigines’ ancient social structure. In Yuendumu, for example, the policies have unleashed a nascent feminist movement which is threatening to erode the vast powers of male tribal elders.

On almost every score, from disease to unemployment to illiteracy, the social decay in remote Aboriginal towns like Yuendumu is stunning. Australia’s 500,000 Aborigines are seven times as likely as other Australians to have tuberculosis, and eight times as likely to be infected with Hepatitis A, according to government data. Their life expectancy lags the rest of the population by 17 years, and is lower than that of impoverished countries such as Bangladesh and Bolivia. By contrast, the life-expectancy gap between Native Americans and the general U.S. population has shrunk in recent decades to 2.4 years.

{snip}

Then, in 2007, Australia’s conservative federal government decided that such self-imposed isolation was the root cause of the crisis in Aboriginal areas because it allowed widespread abuses to remain hidden from the public eye. Citing numerous cases of sexual violence against children, then Prime Minister John Howard vowed to bring Aboriginal areas into “the mainstream of the Australian community.”

In June 2007, he launched a federal intervention here in the Northern Territory, Australia’s most heavily indigenous area. Aborigines make up one-third of the Territory’s population and own half its land; they also account for 84% of its prison inmates.

Mr. Howard sent in the army and deployed extra police. Suspending Australia’s 1975 Racial Discrimination Act, the government slapped alcohol and pornography bans on Aboriginal areas — but not on neighboring white towns — and restricted Aborigines’ ability to spend their welfare checks freely. It seized the management of Aboriginal townships, overriding the permit system and opening the doors to non-Aboriginals.

The intervention sparked accusations of racism from many Aboriginal leaders and from some officials in Australia’s Labor Party. Marion Scrymgour, currently the country’s most senior Aboriginal government official, at the time labeled the intervention “a vicious new McCarthyism.” Ms. Scrymgour, the Northern Territory’s deputy chief minister and a member of Labor, has since endorsed many aspects of the intervention, such as welfare controls.

{snip}

Under this policy, Aboriginal welfare and pension recipients — the bulk of the adult population in many remote towns, including Yuendumu — are paid half their money in cash. The other half comes in the form of a card which can only be used to pay for food and other essentials at specially licensed stores, and for gas and rent. The aim is to restrict the amount of cash Aborigines can spend on alcohol, gambling and drugs, and to combat child malnutrition. Aboriginal youths are more than twice as likely as other Australians to die of alcohol-related causes, according to a government survey.

A few days after the Review Board report came out, the Rudd government shocked many supporters by rejecting its recommendation. Instead, it extended the income-management rules by a year and maintained, for now, the suspension of the Racial Discrimination Act and other intervention policies, including the alcohol ban.

The reason: evidence that the intervention is working, according to Jenny Macklin, Australia’s federal minister for families, housing, community services and indigenous affairs. Ms. Macklin says she believes the policies are improving Aboriginal child nutrition and cutting the use of alcohol and tobacco. She points to a recent government survey that shows the overwhelming majority of stores in the outback that are licensed to sell to Aboriginal welfare recipients are reporting higher sales of healthy foods like fresh vegetables and fruit, and of clothing, particularly for children.

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on January 19, 2009)

     Previous story       Next Story       Post a Comment     Send This Page      Search

Comments

1 — Question Diversity wrote at 5:55 PM on January 19:

This doesn’t sound too shocking to me. What it seems like the Howard government did is what the American government did with “food stamps” awhile back, that is put them on cards to reduce the chances of people selling the paper coupons for cash.

2 — Anonymous wrote at 7:18 PM on January 19:

Did anybody stop and think that maybe the aboriginal people may just want to be left to their own devices? Maybe they don’t want to join the civilized world. Maybe welfare and all the “feel good” tactics of the white government won’t help these people. Leave them to their own ways.

3 — Anonymous wrote at 8:28 PM on January 19:

This begs the question, why doesn’t the US have a “tough love” program?

4 — Brian wrote at 3:18 AM on January 20:

The people who live in these remote communities choose to live their. Over the past 20-30 years, literally billions of dollars have been spent on Aboriginals to try and improve their lives, but to no avail.

There are enough educated people amongst them who use their positions to rip off and scam the whole system.

Aboriginals are a stone age people. They can’t comprehend the white mans ways, other than drinking, drugs and ‘sit down’ money, known to whites as unemployment welfare.

Because of the generous welfare system in this country, we are getting flooded with Third Worlders’ flocking to this country as either refugees or illegal immigrants.

This country will be stuffed in another 50 yrs if it continues the way it’s going.

5 — GenX in Oz wrote at 10:10 AM on January 20:

I worked with a guy from the Northern Territory here in Oz, where said ‘up there they have methylated spirits in the drinks fridge at the local 7/11’ and even though it has additives to supposedly make it undrinkable.
Apparently they filter it through their shirts in the street.
They have been genetically so isolated from the rest of humanity for so long 40,000-50,000 years, that interestingly they take only two generations of breeding outside of their race to lose almost all of their distinct physical charactistics.
Also we have World Vision here working in Australia (a 1st world country) helping them with Aid, that is embarrassing.
Unlike Africans, I actually do feel sorry for Aboriginies.
Not much we have done with the Aboriginies has worked so far in terms of assimilation, there are a few success stories in the ares of sports and the arts mainly.
They would probably would have been better off not meeting up with the modern world at all to be honest.

6 — Anonymous wrote at 11:11 AM on January 20:

Honestly I have nothing against Aborigines or Native Americans so as long white Europeans can do as they wish in Europe

7 — fred wrote at 1:56 PM on January 20:

im of the opinion that welfare is NOT a right. and that NONE of the money should be spent on nonessentials ie food, clothing, shelter with possible exceptions for job training. and this policy should be expanded to include EVERYONE on welfare.

8 — realist wrote at 8:17 PM on January 20:

Let the aboriginies live as they have lived before white men. Don’t interfere in their societies as long as they don’t want a handout from the tax payers! Just leave them alone and make their own lives again, hunting, gathering, and doing their rituals.


Home      Top      Previous story       Next Story      Send This Page      Search