logo
Victoria's Indigenous people experienced ‘genocide', truth-telling inquiry says

Victoria's Indigenous people experienced ‘genocide', truth-telling inquiry says

The Guardian19 hours ago
Australia's first truth-telling inquiry has labelled the injustices experienced by First Nations people in Victoria a 'genocide' and urged the state government to provide redress for injustices from 'colonial invasion'.
The Yoorrook Justice Commission's final report was tabled in the Victorian parliament on Tuesday, and made 100 recommendations aimed at truth telling, healing and reconciliation. The recommendations relate to a range of institutions including health, education, the justice and child protection system.
The report found that from 1834, mass killings, disease, sexual violence, the destruction of languages and cultures, and child removals from families and communities combined to 'bring about the near-complete physical destruction of First Peoples in Victoria'.
Indigenous peoples in Victoria were 'decimated', with the report stating: 'this was genocide'.
The treaty commissioners called on the Victorian government to provide redress for injustices that occurred during and as a result of invasion, including the loss of traditional lands, waters and natural resources. Redress should take the form of monetary compensation, including tax relief or other financial benefits as negotiated through treaty, the report found.
The report examined the impact and trauma of colonisation through testimony from 67 days of public hearings, more than 200 witnesses, 1300 public submissions and more than 10,000 public documents.
The final report outlined injustices stemming from colonisation, including massacres, destruction of culture, language, land loss, as well as the over-representation of Indigenous children in out-of-home care and detention.
The report details deaths stemming from 50 massacres recorded between 1831 and 1854, in which at least 978 Aboriginal men, women and children were killed. All but three of the massacres were committed by colonisers, with one perpetrated by Aboriginal people against settlers and two others committed by and against First Nations people.
The commission is urging the Victorian government to establish a truth-telling body to continue building a public record as a key priority.
It also called for the Victorian education department to embed Indigenous representation and perspectives within the curriculum and ensure schools are culturally safe for students.
The four-year inquiry was not without criticism or controversy, with several commissioners quitting or exiting during the probe.
The commission's deputy chair, Travis Lovett, led a 486km 'walk for truth' from Portland on the state's south-west coast, arriving atstate parliament last month. Hundreds of people joined the final stage of the journey.
But notably, three commissioners – deputy chair Sue-Anne Hunter, a Wurundjeri and Ngurai Illum Wurrung woman and adjunct professor at Federation University; University of Tasmania professor and Palawa woman Maggie Walter; and former federal court judge and chair of the Victorian Law Reform Commission Anthony North, a non-Indigenous man – did not.
According to Nine Newspapers, Hunter, Walter and North considered writing a dissenting report but instead agreed to a compromise.
In the report commissioners Walter, Hunter and North made their dissent clear, noting they 'did not approve of the inclusion of the key findings in the final historic record. They urged readers read the report's findings along with Yoorrook for Justice (2023) and Yoorrook for Transformation (2025).
They said that the work of Yoorrook was just beginning with 'much more work to be done'.
Co-chair of the First Peoples' Assembly, Rueben Berg, said Yoorrook's final report revealed the wide-ranging impact of colonisation and how treaty could underpin change.
'Truth and treaty go hand-in-hand,' the Gunditjmara man said.
'Treaty will acknowledge our shared history and be an agreement between First Peoples and the Victorian Government on how we move forward together to help right past wrongs,' he said.
'Victorians know that we can't keep doing the same thing and expecting different results. When it comes to issues facing First Peoples, we need a different approach, one that draws on the expertise of First Peoples to design and deliver practical solutions to local challenges.'
The state government said it was carefully considering the commission's final findings and recommendations.
The Victorian premier, Jacinta Allan, acknowledged the 'immense undertaking' of commissioners and staff during the Yoorrook reports and the thousands that submitted or gave evidence in the inquiry.
'Victoria's truth-telling process is a historic opportunity to hear the stories of our past that have been buried – these are stories that all Victorians need to hear,' Allen said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why Anthony Albanese is being urged to get rid of his beloved dog Toto NOW: 'Awful'
Why Anthony Albanese is being urged to get rid of his beloved dog Toto NOW: 'Awful'

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Why Anthony Albanese is being urged to get rid of his beloved dog Toto NOW: 'Awful'

The Prime Minister has come under fire for pushing climate change policy while owning a 'climate criminal' dog by a top columnist. A US-based study, published in June, said that not owning a dog was something normal people could do with the highest levels of carbon emissions reduction. Taking one fewer flight or eating lower-carbon meats were also effective behaviours identified by the PNAS Nexus report. The finding was leapt on by The Daily Telegraph columnist Tim Blair who suggested Anthony Albanese should give up his beloved cavoodle Toto if he is calling for climate action. 'It's time for Albo to turn Toto over to the authorities, because it turns out that little cavoodle of his is an awful climate criminal,' Blair wrote on Monday. 'Cavoodle Toto may be way smaller than other 'oodle' varieties, such as the Bernese Mountain doodle, the Irish wolfhoodle and the fearsome pit boodle, but she's got one hell of a carbon pawprint. 'That's because Toto occasionally rides on Prime Ministerial flights. 'She's probably racked up more air time than any dog since Snoopy took on the Red Baron.' Blair quipped that 'it should be curtains for the PM's companion critter' in order to help nature balance itself. Toto is regularly photographed with Albanese, including on election day, and has her own X account. The Age even has an article page dedicated to Australia's first dog. Blair also took the opportunity to take aim at Australian billionaire and climate change warrior Mike Cannon-Brookes for buying a private jet earlier this year. The co-founder of software company Atlassian opened up about his challenging decision to purchase the multimillion-dollar Bombardier 7500 jet in March. 'I'm not denying I have a deep internal conflict on this,' the tech entrepreneur told his followers on LinkedIn. 'Personal security is the primary reason (an unfortunate reality of my world), but also so I can run a global business from Australia, and still be a constantly present dad. 'So, this is a hard, continual trade-off I've decided to make.' Blair said the declaration was his favourite example of 'self-appointed saviours (who) aren't hurting at all'. 'Modern parenting is full of tough decisions. Sometimes your average Aussie dad just has to bite the bullet and buy a $120million private aircraft,' the columnist said. 'All members of our saintly climate community are little Cannon-Brookeses, in their own ways. 'If they do give up anything, it's only in ways that won't cause any pain.' Blair joined 2GB on Wednesday to maintain that he remains in the 'pro-dog camp'. 'It's just that I am also not a climate hypocrite who carries on about everyone else surrendering their beloved things and then running a big climate-hating dog in the household.' It's not the first time Toto's jet-setting lifestyle has come under scrutiny. Nationals Senate Leader Bridget McKenzie grilled Air Force Chief Robert Chipman at an intense Senate hearing in 2023 about Toto's travels after it was revealed she had likely been travelling on VIP flights with the Prime Minister. 'Could you provide a list of all flights since the 21st of May 2022 on which animals – and specifically an animal called Toto – have been permitted on board special purpose aircraft?' she asked. Mr Chipman confirmed that a pet had been known to travel on the special purpose aircraft primarily used by the Prime Minister for official duties.

Australian Jewish leaders celebrate as Islamist preacher is banned from making anti-Semitic comments after racist sermons
Australian Jewish leaders celebrate as Islamist preacher is banned from making anti-Semitic comments after racist sermons

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Australian Jewish leaders celebrate as Islamist preacher is banned from making anti-Semitic comments after racist sermons

Australian Jewish leaders have celebrated a win following a legal battle against an Islamist preacher who described their community as 'vile' and 'treacherous'. Sydney-based Al Madina Dawah Centre cleric, Wissam Haddad, was accused of racial discrimination in relation to a series of fiery sermons, which have racked up thousands of views online, since November 2023. The preacher, also known as Abu Ousayd, referred to Jewish people as 'vile, treacherous, murderous, and mischievous'. During the landmark case at the NSW Federal Court in Sydney, leaders from the Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ) argued the online lectures were offensive and could incite violence towards Jews. Justice Angus Stewart found on Tuesday that the speeches were disparaging and likely to offend, insult, harass or intimidate Jewish people. 'The imputations include age-old tropes against Jewish people that are fundamentally racist and anti-Semitic,' he said. 'They make perverse generalisations against Jewish people as a group.' ECAJ's co-chief executive Peter Wertheim and deputy president Robert Goot stood proudly outside the court after the verdict which 'vindicated' them. 'It confirms that the days when Jewish communities and the Jewish people can be vilified and targeted, with impunity, are a thing of the past,' Mr Wertheim said. '(This case) was about antisemitism and the abuse of those freedoms in order to promote antisemitism. 'If the 300 ancestry groups and 100 faith communities living in Australia today were all free to vilify one another in the way that Mr Haddad vilified the Jewish people, the door would be wide open to chronic racial and sectarian strife. '(This would be) of the kind that has devastated other countries, and the peace and harmony we have generally enjoyed in Australia would be ruined for everyone.' Mr Goot described the preacher as a 'picture of anti-Semitic hatred', adding that he had brought the case to court to protect the Jewish community's safety. 'No community in this wonderful country should be dehumanised in the way that Mr Haddad treated us,' he said. 'Freedom of expression must not be abused by the promotion of hateful antisemitism. 'Those that wish to do so, should know that that conduct will not be tolerated by us.' The ECAJ leaders' case sought the removal of the published speeches, a public declaration of error and an order restraining Mr Haddad from making similar comments in future. Mr Haddad denied breaching anti-discrimination laws and claimed he was delivering historical and religious lectures on events from the Qur'an to contextualise the war in Gaza. He said he was speaking about 'Jews of faith' rather than ethnicity while trying to explain that 'what the Israeli government is doing to the people of Gaza' is 'not something new'. Ruling against the preacher would be tantamount to restricting the free exercise of religious expression, Mr Haddad's lawyer argued. But Justice Stewart rejected the defence on Tuesday and ordered Mr Haddad to remove the speeches. He directed the preacher not to make any further comments that convey similar disparaging imputations. Mr Haddad has also been ordered to foot the legal bill for the ECAJ which the leaders told reporters would be 'several hundred thousand dollars'. The preacher's speeches were delivered during a time of heightened sensitivity after the designated terror group Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, sparking Israeli retaliation that has left the Gaza Strip in turmoil. The reporting of the war prompted questions and concerns from Mr Haddad's congregants and at the same time left Jewish Australians feeling unsafe, the court was told.

US, Indo-Pacific partners agree to strengthen maritime, critical minerals cooperation
US, Indo-Pacific partners agree to strengthen maritime, critical minerals cooperation

The Independent

time4 hours ago

  • The Independent

US, Indo-Pacific partners agree to strengthen maritime, critical minerals cooperation

The United States. Australia, India and Japan have agreed to expand their cooperation on maritime security in the Indo-Pacific and further collaborate on supplies of critical minerals and rare earths that are key components of high-tech production. The foreign ministers of the four countries, known as the 'Quad,' met in Washington on Tuesday as the Trump administration seeks to expand U.S. influence in the Indo-Pacific to compete with a rising China amid tensions with partners over trade and defense issues. In a joint meeting with his three colleagues, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the Quad must be a 'vehicle for action' that goes beyond statements of intent and stressed that commerce and trade will be critical to ensuring the group's relevance in the future. To that end, the four announced in a statement the creation of a 'Quad Critical Minerals Initiative' that aims 'to strengthen economic security and collective resilience by collaborating on securing and diversifying critical mineral supply chains.' The statement did not provide details of the initiative. 'We are deeply concerned about the abrupt constriction and future reliability of key supply chains, specifically for critical minerals,' they said. 'This includes the use of non-market policies and practices for critical minerals, certain derivative products, and mineral processing technology.' The statement did not mention China by name, but Chinese domination of the critical minerals supply chain has long been a concern of the U.S. and others. The ministers expressed specific concern about rising tensions in the East and South China Seas, where Beijing has become increasingly assertive of maritime and territorial claims that are rejected by its smaller neighbors. 'We reiterate our strong opposition to any unilateral actions that seek to change the status quo by force or coercion,' they said. 'We express our serious concerns regarding dangerous and provocative actions, including interference with offshore resource development, the repeated obstruction of the freedoms of navigation and overflight, and the dangerous maneuvers by military aircraft and coast guard and maritime militia vessels, especially the unsafe use of water cannons and ramming or blocking actions in the South China Sea.' The ministers also condemned North Korea for continuing to launch ballistic missiles, expand its nuclear weapons program and engage in malicious cyberactivity. In a veiled reference to North Korean support for Russia in its war against Ukraine, they expressed 'deep concern about countries that are deepening military cooperation with North Korea, which directly undermines the global nonproliferation regime.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store