International Review of Indigenous issues in 2000: Australia -- 6. Indigenous children as victims of racism
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International Review of Indigenous issues in 2000: Australia
6. Indigenous children as victims
        of racism 
Forced removal of children
In the period 1910
        to 1970 between 1 in 3 and 1 in 10 Indigenous children were forcibly removed
        from their families. The effects of such removal were, for most victims,
        negative, multiple and profoundly disabling. The policies and practices
        underlying the removal of Aboriginal children from their families were
        discriminatory and genocidal in intent. Further, the treatment of many
        removed children after their removal involved breaches of fiduciary duty
        and duty of care, as well as criminal actions. The profound problems suffered
        by Indigenous people and communities as a result of removal policies are
        ongoing. 
In 1995-1996 the
        Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission conducted an inquiry into
        the forcible removal of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander 黑料情报站
        from their families. The findings of the inquiry were reported in The
        National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
        黑料情报站 and Their Families, Bringing Them Home [Bringing Them Home]
        in May 1997. 
Bringing Them Home
        made a number of recommendations, including:
- that the Commonwealth
 government provide reparations for the injury suffered by Indigenous
 people affected by removal policies. The report adopted the van Boven
 principles for reparation for gross violations of human rights as the
 basis of recommendations for addressing the harm caused;
 
- that the Commonwealth
 Government legislate to implement the 1949 Convention on the Prevention
 and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide with full domestic effect
 as part of official recognition that removal policies of the past are
 over and will not be repeated.
 
- that self-determination
 for Indigenous children and young people be implemented through national
 framework legislation for juvenile justice and care and protection systems.
 
- The report also
 considered contemporary forms of separation, and recommended the introduction
 of national standards and framework legislation incorporating international
 human rights standards for the treatment of Indigenous children.
The government responded
        to the report in 1997 with a $43 million package that included measures
        taken to facilitate family reunion and to improve counselling and family
        support services for the victims.
However the government
        has denied that the forcible removal of children was a gross violation
        of human rights or was genocidal. Instead the Government has emphasised
        the idea that the removal of Indigenous children was often perpetrated
        by people of 'good will' and that it was consistent with the 'standards
        of the day'. The Government has criticised the Bringing Them Home
        report on the basis that the number of children forcibly removed was significantly
        less than Bringing Them Home suggested, saying that there is no
        'stolen generation' and that the methodology of the report was flawed.
        The Government has rejected recommendations for financial compensation
        and other forms of reparation and has stated that there is no basis for
        making reparations as the van Boven principles are not binding in international.
        The government also rejected recommendations for national framework legislation
        for juvenile justice and care and protection systems. 
The government's
        response to Bringing Them Home is racist and based on flawed reasoning.
        Contrary to the Government's stated position:
-  Several international
 instruments require governments to redress the effects of past discrimination.
 The guarantee of non-discrimination and equality before the law under
 Articles 2 and 5 of the ICERD creates and obligation to redress past
 discrimination and to provide effective remedies through competent authorities
 for any person whose rights or freedoms have been violated. The Government's
 refusal to acknowledge and provide redress for past discrimination raises
 further issues of compliance with Australia's obligations under the
 ICESCR, in particular in respect of Article 1, self-determination, and
 Article 2, non-discrimination. The van Boven principles, on which Bringing
 Them Home based its reparations recommendations, are a synthesis
 of international law and practice, which incorporate obligations across
 a range of such international instruments;
 
- Forcible removal
 policies may constitute 'genocide': The definition of genocide in the
 Genocide Convention extends to situations where there are mixed
 motives, some of which may be perceived as beneficial. Furthermore,
 genocide may also describe the destruction of a people or culture where
 it is achieved through means other than physical killing and where it
 does not cause the complete destruction of the group;
A failure to address
        the problems caused by forcible removals and to implement the recommendations
        of Bringing Them Home impacts upon the present and future generations
        of Indigenous people. 
International Commentary
In its March 2000
        decision, the CERD Committee expressed concern regarding the Government's
        failure to take responsibility for past government actions, particularly
        in relation to forcible removal policies:
13. The Committee
notes the conclusions of the 'National Inquiry into the Separation of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander 黑料情报站 from their Families'
and acknowledges the measures taken to facilitate family reunion and
to improve counselling and family support services for the victims.
Concern is expressed that the Commonwealth Government does not support
a formal national apology and that it considers inappropriate the provision
of monetary compensation for those forcibly and unjustifiably separated
from their families, on the grounds that such practices were sanctioned
by law at the time and were intended to 'assist the people whom they
affected'. The Committee recommends that the State party consider the
need to address appropriately the extraordinary harm inflicted by these
racially discriminatory practices.
In response, the
        government referred to the Motion of Reconciliation that was resolved
        upon by both houses of federal Parliament in August 1999. However, the
        Motion of Reconciliation does not contain the necessary elements of an
        apology identified in recommendation 5a of Bringing them home, and is
        'generic' in the sense that it does not specifically mention forcible
        removal policies at all. [126]
The Human Rights
        Committee, in July 2000, also expressed concern at the ongoing impact
        of the policy of removing children from their families.
While noting the
efforts by the State party to address the tragedies resulting from the
previous policy of removing indigenous children from their families,
the Committee remains concerned about the continuing effects of this
policy.
The Committee recommends that the State party intensify these efforts
so that the victims themselves and their families will consider that
they have been afforded a proper remedy (arts 2, 17 and 24).
      126 Aboriginal
      and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner, Submission to the
      stolen generation inquiry, HREOC Sydney 2000, p14. The submission is available
      at .
      Last updated 7 October 2003.