7th December 2000
Letters
Urge Howard to Initiate Treaty Negotiations
ATSIC Chair Geoff Clark today
delivered several thousand letters to the Prime Minister, calling on him
to initiate formal negotiations leading to a treaty or framework agreement
with Indigenous people.
The letters, from ordinary
Australians, include the first batch of letters collected by Australians
for Native Title and Reconciliation (ANTaR) as part of an ongoing campaign
to convey community support for a formal treaty process.
The presentation of the letters
coincides with the release of the final report of the Council for Aboriginal
Reconciliation.
"The future of the reconciliation
process over the coming years will depend on a formal and meaningful negotiations
process between Government and Indigenous Australians", ANTaR National
Coordinator, Dr David Cooper, commented. "Australia is the only former
British colony which has never negotiated a treaty with its Indigenous
peoples. Treaties reduce conflict and give certainty to all parties. They
are the mechanism for finding solutions which are both fair and lasting."
"It is heartening to see
that the Council's final report and strategies recognise the importance
of a treaty or agreements process", Dr Cooper added.
"A recent survey showing
53% support for a treaty demonstrates that ordinary Australians see the
wisdom of sitting down and negotiating with Indigenous people. It's time
the Government took notice", Dr Cooper said.
"A treaty process will
give Indigenous peoples the capacity to find their own solutions".
"It is completely misguided
for the Government to suggest that its so-called 'practical reconciliation'
measures (ad hoc grants for education or health initiatives) alone could
possibly achieve the kinds of positive outcomes which treaty talks would
achieve", Dr Cooper said.
"True reconciliation cannot
be achieved unless it addresses what Indigenous people themselves see
as unfinished business. Clearly issues such as rights protection, recognition
as First Peoples and a treaty are of central importance to Indigenous
people".
"Mr Howard cannot escape
the fact that the majority of Australians would prefer to see constructive
talks, not a senseless stand off."
Further information:
Dr David Cooper, 0418 486 310
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