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University of Technology Sydney Law Research Series |
Last Updated: 17 May 2017
FACING AUSTRALIA’S HISTORY: TRUTH AND RECONCILIATION FOR THE STOLEN GENERATIONS
Ramona Vijeyarasa[∗]
I. ABSTRACT
The Tasmanian State Government and Australian Federal
Senate have taken recent steps towards setting up a Reparations Tribunal for
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (ATSI) people who were separated from
their families and communities under State-based forced
removal policies of the
20th Century. This renewed interest in the wrongs perpetrated against members of
the Stolen Generations provides
an opportunity to revisit the unimplemented
recommendations from the Federal Government’s National Inquiry Report,
Bringing Them Home, released in 1997. Moreover, a decade after the
release of the Report, this is an ideal time to develop the most appropriate
model
to fully achieve justice for the ATSI population. This paper proposes a
Truth and Reconciliation Commission drawing on the lessons
learned from the
National Inquiry, as well as numerous international truth commissions such as in
Canada, South Africa and Peru.
A Reparations Program must be attached. A new
chapter in Australia’s history can be opened by facilitating
reconciliation between
indigenous and non-indigenous Australians, through
truth-telling and by recognizing the ongoing consequences of forced removal for
descendants of the Stolen Generations and their communities.
Key words:
reparations, indigenous, truth-telling, reconciliation,
II. INTRODUCTION
From 1910 to the early 1980s, somewhere between one
in three and one in ten Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
(ATSI)[1] children in Australia were
removed from their families.[2]
Legislation was passed in the early years of the twentieth-century which gave
Aboriginal protectors guardianship rights over ATSI
people up to the age of
sixteen or twenty-one, in all states of Australia and the Northern Territory,
with the exception of Tasmania,
where Aboriginal children were removed under
general welfare legislation.[3]
Subsequently, police officers or other agents of the State began to locate and
transfer babies and children of pure-blood or mixed
descent, from their mothers,
families or communities into government or missionary institutions.
The
Australian Federal (then Labor) Government instituted a National Inquiry in 1995
into the Stolen Generations through the Human
Rights and Equal Opportunity
Commission (HREOC), as pressure swelled from various avenues through the late
1980s and early 1990s.
The Federal Government issued its Terms of Reference for
the National Inquiry to HREOC on 11 May 1995. The Inquiry was initially
aimed at
determining how many children were taken away and how this occurred, hearing
from ATSI people about how they had been affected
and what must be done to
compensate and finally, considering whether the policies of removal fell within
the definition of genocide
in Article II(e) of the United Nations Convention on
the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide.[4] This was later replaced
by four goals: tracing the past laws, practices and policies which resulted in
the Stolen Generations; examining
the adequacy of and the need for any changes
in laws, practices and policies relating to services and procedures
currently available to those ATSI persons affected by the Stolen
Generations; examining the principles relevant to determining the justification
for compensation for persons or communities affected by separation; and
examining current laws, practices and policies with respect
to the placement and
care of ATSI children, taking into account the principle of
self-determination.[5]
The
achievement of reconciliation required the detailed and extensive implementation
of the recommendations outlined in the resulting
1997 report Bringing Them
Home,[6] of which sixty thousand
copies were sold in the first year of its
release.[7] Yet, the
response of the Australian Federal Government (now Liberal Coalition, which has
been re-elected twice since the 1996 National
Inquiry, most recently in 2004)
announced on 16 December 1997 fell far short of the reparations goals outlined
in the van Boven principles.[8] Van
Boven found that under international law, the violation of any human right gives
rise to a right to reparations for the victim
and that particular attention must
be paid to gross violations of human rights, which includes genocide, systematic
discrimination
and the forcible transfer of
populations.[9]
The National
Inquiry has been described as an example of a “historical truth
commission” involving an historical inquiry
into past government
practices.[10] Yet, the ongoing
continual removal of ATSI children to
date,[11] and the failure of the
Australian Government to recognize the correlation between the sexual abuse
experienced by members of the
Stolen Generations and present-day sexual abuse
that is rife in many indigenous communities, highlights the need for a Truth and
Reconciliation Commission that acknowledges both past and present patterns of
abuse.[12] The Australian
Government, which has thus far refused to publicly apologize to the members of
the Stolen Generations, has rejected
the proposal for a Reparations Tribunal.
Instead, it has left incremental efforts by the Tasmanian State Government in
2006 and the
Australian Democrats in the Federal Senate in March 2007 to
establish either a state-based or a national compensation program, a
cursory
paper-based solution with monetary compensation awarded for claims assessed by a
Stolen Generations Assessor.
Despite the National Inquiry giving the ATSI
people a voice, and Bringing Them Home creating the path for
reconciliation, the opportunity was wasted. Ten years on, the Australian nation
has still not moved forward
and beyond its history of genocide and exploitation.
This paper proposes, as the best model to address the historical wrongs
perpetrated
against members of the Stolen Generations, a Truth and
Reconciliation Commission, with an attached Reparations Program. The Truth
and
Reconciliation Commission will build upon the work of past and existing
inquiries, including Bringing Them Home, whilst incorporating into its
mandate a requirement to report on the implementation of recommendations at
regular intervals after
the completion of hearings. At the same time, the
proposed Truth and Reconciliation Commission will incorporate culturally
appropriate
mechanisms to allow truth-telling and healing for ATSI victims,
including special recognition of the difficulties for mothers and
stolen
children who were the victims of sexual abuse to tell of their suffering in the
environments previously offered by the National
Inquiry.
Today, a Truth and
Reconciliation Commission will help facilitate this healing through
truth-telling as well as enhanced public awareness
of the experiences and
consequences of “forced” removal. Therapeutic for both the
Australian nation as well as individual
victims, conducting hearings in each
State or Territory, in a localised setting, with indigenous and non-indigenous
Commissioners,
will also require the involvement of, and acceptance of
responsibility by each state government. This process will also best facilitate
recognition of the heterogeneity of each ATSI person’s experiences, the
different ATSI clans living in the different states
of Australia and the
numerous languages applicable to the those former or present inhabitants of a
particular state.
The success of such a decentralised model sitting under
the umbrella of the Federal Government is premised on an apology being made
by
the Australian Federal Government towards all of those persons affected by the
forcible removal policies of the 20th Century. The involvement of
State Governments is additionally essential given their fundamental relationship
to service delivery,
carrying the prime responsibility for education, health
services as well as law and order today.
The likelihood of success of this
model can be assessed in accordance with the progress of the truth-seeking
process presently being
undertaken by the Canadian Government. In Canada, a
package has been designed for the survivors of the Indian Residential Schools
(IRS) to address the injustices of the policy of assimilation, forcible removal
and cultural dilution, enforced by the Canadian Government,
Anglican, United
Presbyterian and Catholic Churches, for more than 100 years, most extensively
from the 1920s to 1960s, during which
time widespread sexual abuse
occurred.[13] Whilst this proposed
model to address the harms suffered by ATSI persons differs from the Canadian
Truth and Reconciliation Commission,
the similarities of the experiences of
indigenous Australians and Canadians provide Australia with a valuable learning
opportunity.
Bringing Them Home raised the issue of responsibility, which
has since largely been neglected. A Truth and Reconciliation Commission as
proposed in this
paper will once again provide an opportunity for developing a
collective memory and shared national history, and create the renewed
vigour for
the full achievement of reparations and the principles of reconciliation.
III. THE NATIONAL INQUIRY AND ITS LIMITED OUTCOMES
i. The extent of forced removal
It
is questionable how many non-Aboriginal Australians either did not know or were
dimly aware that for a period of nearly seventy
years, Australian State
Governments were involved in a process of ATSI child removal. Children were
removed for a number of reasons,
the dominant being the view that the full-blood
tribal Aborigine represented a dying race and that ATSI people were a lesser
culture,
believed not to be able to survive contact with higher
civilisations.[14] There was also an
emergence of mixed descent children. These children were born to ATSI mothers
after sexual encounters-sometimes
fleeting, sometimes exploitative, occasionally
more permanent or even matrimonial-with European and sometimes Chinese or
Pacific
Islander males. ‘Half-caste institutions’, government or
missionary, were established in the early decades of the twentieth-century
for
the reception of these children.
With increasing pressure placed on the
Australian Government to address this untold story, a National Inquiry was the
preferred option
because it was evident that, three years into the Royal
Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, a Royal Commission was not
a
suitable form of inquiry. It was far too formal and did not permit significant
participation by ATSI people. The National Inquiry
held hearings in every
capital city and several regional centres between December 1995 and October 1996
and received 777 submissions,
including 535 from Indigenous persons and
organizations, 49 from church organizations and seven from
governments.[15]
Australia-wide,
it is difficult to estimate the number of ATSI children who were removed. Peter
Read, co-founder of Link-Up (NSW),
estimates that around 50,000 were removed. In
NSW, for example, he estimates that the total number removed between 1921 and
1985
is close to 10,000.[16]
Surprisingly, he believes that there are approximately 100,000 people:
...who do not identify as Aborigines but who are entitled to do so because
their parent or grandparent had been
removed.[17]
The Australian
Bureau of Statistics conducted a survey in 1993, involving interviews with
15,700 ATSI people. It found that 5.7% of
those interviewed reported having been
taken away from their natural family by a mission, the government or
‘welfare’.
Applying these results with the 1991 Population Census
data, out of a total ATSI population of 303,000 in 1991, these statistics
indicate that approximately 17,000 had been removed from their families up until
1994.[18] Whilst this is likely to
be an under-estimation of the total number of removed persons, particularly when
set against Read’s
estimate, it is a figure that might more realistically
be accepted by the Australian Government when establishing a Truth and
Reconciliation
Commission and moreover, funding a Reparations Program. It is
hoped that a truth and reconciliation process will allow the stories
of a
broader depth of ATSI people to be told, reaching different language groups and
ATSI people who have lost touch with or are
otherwise unaware of their
aboriginality. This will facilitate a more realistic account of the numbers of
removed children.
ii. Implementing the recommendations of Bringing Them Home
The legally significant
consequences of forcible removal were that ATSI were denied the common law
rights which other Australians
enjoyed, suffered violations of their human
rights and were often subjected to other forms of victimisation and
discrimination.[19] Bringing Them
Home made 54 recommendations to address these violations. The
recommendations covered all the components of reparations: acknowledgement
of
truth and an apology; guarantees of non-repetition of violations;
rehabilitation; compensation and restitution.
A cursory review of the
Australian Government’s response is impressive, yet clearly reveals a
failure to understand the importance
of truth-telling and the centrality of an
apology to the healing of ATSI people. The Australian Government outlined a plan
to provide
$63 million over four years, primarily aimed at addressing
‘family separation and its consequences’.
Most significantly,
the awarding of monetary compensation for those removed and/or those affected by
the removals received opposition
from the Australia Government. In its
submission to the National Inquiry, the Australia Government raised as a concern
the difficulty
in estimating the monetary value of losses, on the grounds that
“[t]here is no comparable area of awards of compensation and
no basis for
arguing a quantum of damages from first
principles,”[20] a position
that will not be tenable as the Canadian Truth and Reconciliation Commission
begins its work.
Bringing Them Home recommended that all Australian
Parliaments, State and Territory police forces, churches and other relevant
non-government agencies,
‘acknowledge the responsibility of their
predecessors for the laws, policies and practices of forcible removal’ and
‘apologise
for the wrong
committed’.[21] A Government
apology is necessary for a sense of acknowledgment and to create a collective
memory and social solidarity.[22]
Yet, the Australia Government has lagged behind state and territory governments
in providing a formal apology to ATSI people. Instead,
The Sorry Day Committee
launched the first National ‘Sorry Day’ independently of the
Government on May 26, 1998. The
National Sorry Day was designed as a ‘day
when all Australians could [can] express their sorrow for the whole tragic
episode,
and celebrate the beginning of a new
understanding’[23] with
‘Sorry Books’ receiving hundreds of thousands of signatures and
Bridge Walks occurring in every major city in Australia
in a gesture towards
healing.[24] It was not until 26
August 1999 that the current Prime Minister, John Howard, proposed a Motion of
Reconciliation to Parliament,
offering a statement of regret but not sorry to
Aboriginal people in an attempt to reaffirm the Australian Government’s
so-called
commitment to reconciliation between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal
Australians.[25]
Bringing
Them Home specified that reparations include rehabilitation measures, such
as “legal, medical, psychological and other care
services”.[26] These measures
require culturally appropriate delivery of services. Yet, ATSI children continue
to be severely over-represented within
State and Territory welfare systems which
continue to discriminate against ATSI children and their families through the
application
of Anglo-Australian perspectives. These values reject as
non-beneficial ATSI values, culture and child-rearing practices. Bringing
Them Home noted that welfare agencies continue to fail to consult with ATSI
families and communities and their
organizations.[27] Though the report
recommended the establishment of minimum standards for the treatment of ATSI
children, including the Indigenous
Child Placement Principles which requires
that ATSI children in out-of-home care be placed with ATSI
carers,[28] the Australia Government
ignored the Bringing Them Home recommendation for national standards for
ATSI child removal. It resolved to leave the matter to the state
governments.[29]
IV. ESTABLISHING A TRUTH AND RECONCILIATION COMMISSION AND REPARATIONS PROGRAM
i. The shortfalls of Bringing Them Home
An
ongoing flaw in the methods of compensation implemented to date relates to the
approach of the National Inquiry. All fact-finding
and truth-telling missions
have been premised on a homogenous ATSI community. Services based upon the
recognition of a divergence
of ATSI cultures are often seen as
‘unnecessary duplication’. It is this misconception that underlies
the struggle of
the Stolen Generations for access to many services such as
archives and counselling. Furthermore, the National Inquiry did not recognize
that the needs of the Stolen Generations differ from those of other ATSI
non-removed people.[30]
A further
limitation of the Bringing Them Home was highlighted in the submission of
Link-up (NSW).[31] No mechanisms
were incorporated into the National Inquiry to account for the extreme levels of
trauma and the guilt felt by parents
unable to tell their stories. Link-up (NSW)
reported:
In preparing this submission we found that Aboriginal women were unwilling
and unable to speak about the immense pain, grief and anguish
that losing their
children had caused them. That pain was so strong that we were unable to find a
mother who had healed enough to
be able to speak, and to share her experience
with us and with the
Commission...[32]
In addition to
these ‘silenced’ mothers, Bringing Them Home reports that
children, especially girls, were vulnerable to sexual abuse. Based on testimony
of witnesses before HREOC, almost one
in ten boys and just over one in ten girls
alleged they were sexually abuse in a children’s institution, one in ten
boys and
three in ten girls alleged they were sexually abused in a foster
placement or placements and one in ten girls alleged they were sexually
abused
in a work placement organization by the Protection Board or
institution.[33] On this basis
alone, it is an obvious concern that victims of sexual abuse can easily become
‘silenced’ victims in a
National Inquiry process if special
mechanisms are not implemented to create an environment in which these victims
are able to tell
their story.
A Truth and Reconciliation Commission provides
an opportunity to accommodate these ‘silenced’ interest
groups.[34] Vasuki Nesiah discusses
the treatment of gender crimes by truth and reconciliation commissions in a
paper titled, ‘Gender and
Truth Commission
Mandates’.[35] Nesiah
highlights that truth commissions have been valuable in identifying sexual
violence against women, as well as men. When testifying
before the Peruvian
Truth and Reconciliation Commission, there are a number of reasons why many
female victims downplayed their suffering,
including shame and fear of social
condemnation. Rather, women vocalized suffering as the wives, mothers, daughters
and sisters of
predominantly male
victims.[36] To encourage women to
participate, the Peruvian Truth and Reconciliation Commission developed a series
of training documents that
included communication strategies on how to conduct
investigations in the country’s rural areas and providing guidelines for
interviewers, an aspect that would be a valuable contribution to culturally
sensitive investigations amongst indigenous populations
and in particularly,
with women unable to tell the stories of their stolen children. The Truth and
Reconciliation Commission of South
Africa organized several special hearings
focused on women, with a female-only panel of commissioners, and in one case,
‘allowing
a deponent to give testimony from behind a screen, in confidence
and out of view of the glaring television
cameras’.[37]
A further
example is the terms of reference of the Haitian Truth Commission which directed
it to pay particular attention to “crimes
of a sexual nature against
female victims that were committed with political ends”.
[38] This resulted in focused attention
to the subject throughout its work and a subchapter of its report dedicated to
sexual crimes.
Hayner notes this approach, ‘of focusing attention to the
matter in the mandate, should be seriously considered
elsewhere’.[39] It is an ideal
way to address both silenced and traumatised mothers and removed children who
are the victims of sexual abuse in the
hearings of the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission and its resulting report and recommendations.
A further issue is
the unimplemented recommendations, which stemmed from a lack of ongoing
reporting requirements in HREOC’s
initial National Inquiry mandate. On 24
November 1999, the Federal Senate requested the Senate Committee to conduct an
inquiry into
the Australian Government’s implementation of the
recommendations from the National
Inquiry.[40] Tabled in November
2000, the Senate Committee Majority Report: Healing: A Legacy of
Generations, made ten recommendations, largely in relation to the issue of
reporting and monitoring the responses to Bringing Them
Home[41] and the establishment
of a Reparations Tribunal.[42] In
June 2001, when the Australian Federal Government tabled its response to the
Senate Committee’s recommendations, it once
again rejected the notion of a
Reparations Tribunal and chose instead to allocate additional funding beyond 30
June 2002 for key
family reunion and health services at a cost of $52.9 million
over four years to 30 June 2006.[43]
Relying on the Dissenting Report of the Government Senators on the Senate
Committee, the Australian Federal Government response indicates
a lack of
understanding of the functioning and benefits of a truth and reconciliation
commission:
The government considers that establishing a tribunal with the comprehensive jurisdiction and extensive powers suggested would neither guarantee a less stressful consideration of matters nor less expense for either party than court proceedings. The same complex and costly legal and factual issues would need to be addressed in order to assess individual claims and such decisions would still be open to further judicial review. The experience of other administrative tribunals, including in the field of immigration and refugees, illustrates that it is not possible to insulate such deliberations from legal challenges and procedures...[44]
ii. Problems with proposed Reparations Tribunals and compensation packages
Numerous parties have recommended different forms of
reparations programs, yet all of these recommendations can be critiqued on some
level. Recommendations for a Reparations Tribunal have been made, though with
significant limitations, by the Public Interest Advocacy
Centre of NSW, an
independent and non-profit legal and policy centre located in Sydney, Australia
(PIAC) which was later endorsed
by the Senate Legal and Constitutional
References Committee (Senate Committee). Efforts have also been made by the
Tasmanian State
Government in the form of the Stolen Generations of Aboriginal
Children Act 2006 (Tasmanian Act) to provide compensation for Tasmanian
members
of the Stolen Generations. The Tasmanian Act was a catalyst for the Stolen
Generations Compensation Bill (Compensation Bill),
tabled before the Federal
Senate, to provide for a national Stolen Generations compensation
program.
These programs provide for monetary compensation. However, without
multiple efforts towards reconciliation, these programs fail to
fulfil the
requirements of the van Boven principles. This should include guarantees of
non-repetition including cessation and prevention
of continuing violations. This
is particularly important in light of the continually over-representation of
ATSI children among children
temporarily or permanently separated from their
families or communities.[45] A
further very applicable principle is public disclosure of the truth in terms of
historical records of individual and group experiences
and an official public
apology by the Australian Federal Government. These are all essential factors in
the “healing”
of the Stolen Generations and act as a starting point
for addressing some of the ongoing generational consequences of forced removal
policies.[46]
In PIAC’s
view, reparations should be provided to people affected by forcible removal
under the heads of damage proposed in
Bringing Them Home: racial
discrimination; arbitrary deprivation of liberty; pain and suffering; abuse,
including physical, sexual and emotional abuse;
disruption of family life; loss
of cultural rights and fulfilment; loss of native title rights; labour
exploitation; economic loss;
and loss of
opportunities.[47] PIAC also
recommended monetary compensation to all those persons affected by forcible
removal, including to those family members,
community members and descendants of
a person who were forcibly removed, if they can demonstrate a particular
harm.[48]
Yet, PIAC’s
model remains heavily adversarial and is not sufficiently different from often
unsuccessful attempts at litigation.
The recent award of $A500,000 by Justice
Gray of the Supreme Court of South Australian on 1 August 2007 to Mr Bruce
Trevorrow for
unlawful removal almost 50 years ago from the Adelaide
Children’s Hospital, whilst a watershed decision, does not indicate
a
lowering of standards of proof for future claims adjudicated through the
traditional legal system.[49] A
member of his legal team noted the ‘unusual’ volume of evidence in
this case, including letters exchanged between the
victim’s mother and the
Aboriginal Control Board.[50]
Therefore, despite the recent precedent of the Trevorrow decision, there remain
other obstacles, including difficulties in locating
evidence, particularly when
governments were lax in recording matters involving ATSI people, the emotional
and psychological trauma
experienced by claimants in the hostile environment of
an adversarial court system, the length of time involved before the outcome
of
litigation is finalised and the problem of establishing specific liability for
harms that have been caused and overcoming the
judicial view that
‘standards of the time’ justified removal in the ‘best
interests of the child’. Moreover,
the significant size of the award
recognises the seriousness of the harm and suffering caused by forced removal
policies and the
need for renewed widespread efforts to ensure compensation for
all affected.
PIAC’s proposed model provides for the Australian Federal
Government to answer to (effectively defend) claims against it if
it can
demonstrate that the removal was in the best interests of the
child.[51] PIAC’s proposed
Reparations Tribunal provides that claimants must show sufficient evidence that
they were affected by forcible
removal and of the particular harm
suffered.[52] This onus of proof
fails to recognize that the purpose of taking cooperative steps towards
reconciliation recognizes that the policy
of forcible removal had, at the very
least, partly racist origins and ongoing harmful effects for those involved and
their descendants
and instead burdens victims with the challenge of
evidence.
Further, a Reparations Tribunal based on proof of evidence of harm
suffered, which requires locatable evidence, is not an ideal forum
for healing
but rather interrogatory. The monetary compensation awarded is linked to common
law damages principles which leads to
potential incoherence in the compensation
awarded, given that the model recommends a minimum lump sum payment, as well as
monetary
compensation where it can be shown that a person additionally suffered
“a particular type of harm or loss” resulting
from forcible
removal.[53] It also allows appeals
from the Reparations Tribunal to the Federal Court on questions of law,
resulting in a Reparations Tribunal
closely linked, if not situated within, an
adversarial litigious system. Rather than providing a system which recognizes
the widespread
and general harms suffered by the Stolen Generations that a Truth
and Reconciliation Commission would facilitate, PIAC’s Reparations
Tribunal would involve legal representation, legal procedures and rules (albeit
relaxed) and hearings or applications on papers that
do not facilitate the
truth-telling, extensive historical record-keeping and public participation that
a Truth and Reconciliation
model would encompass. It ignores the opportunity for
a hearing in a sympathetic setting, which would provide victims validation
through an official
acknowledge.[54]
Recent state and
federal legislative efforts towards reparations have also failed to completely
address the situation. The most robust
efforts towards reconciliation by any
state government were made by the Tasmania Government in 2006, following an
election commitment
to compensate ATSI Tasmanians who were removed from their
families, a commitment which led to the passing of the Stolen Generations
of
Aboriginal Children Act 2006 (TAS) on 28 November 2006 (Tasmanian Act). The
Tasmanian Act sets up a $5 million compensation fund
and provides for a one-off
cash payment to children who were taken from their families between 1910 and
1975 and remained removed
from his or her parents for a period of five months or
more.[55] Approximately 124
Aboriginal people are expected to qualify for the Tasmanian compensation
payment.[56] The package includes
compensation payments of up to $5,000 for descendants of deceased members
of the Stolen Generations[57]
(capped at $20,000 per family).[58]
The remainder of the funding will be divided between living members of the
Stolen Generations.[59] Applications
for payment, which were reviewed by the Stolen Generations
Assessor,[60] were accepted for a
period of six months from 15 January 2007 to 15 July 2007, with decisions on all
applications to be determined
by January 15,
2008.[61] The Tasmanian Act
specifically provides that an ex gratia payment made pursuant to the Tasmanian
Act does not render the State of
Tasmania liable for the admission of children
as wards of the State or removal from their
families.[62]
It is unfortunate
that there was no scope for public hearings at a localised
level.[63] What has been described
as the “historicizing of the victim/survivor” is limited in this
process.[64] Testimony, narration
and storytelling can be key to situating victims in a specific historical
context and reconstructing their identities
and roles in that
context,[65] particularly in light
of the importance of story telling to many ATSI cultures. Instead, the Tasmanian
Act provides that a Stolen
Generations Assessor will prepare a report for the
Minister for Community Development within 30 days of the last assessment
made,[66] tabled before each House
of Parliament.[67]
The
willingness of the Tasmanian State Government to pass the Tasmanian Act must be
considered in light of the fact that Tasmania
has the smallest ATSI population,
outside of the Australian Capital Territory. In 2001, the majority of ATSI
people live in New South
Wales (29% of the ATSI population) and Queensland
(27%), Western Australia (14%) and the Northern Territory
(12%).[68] ATSI people comprise
about 30% of the Northern Territory population but less than 4% in all other
State/Territory populations, including
in Tasmania.
[69]
Despite its limitations, the
Tasmanian Act has been a major catalyst for Federal Government legislation: The
Stolen Generation Compensation Bill 2007, tabled by Andrew Bartlett, Queensland
Democrat Senator and spokesperson on Indigenous Affairs, at the end of March
2007. Modelled
predominantly on the Tasmanian Act, the Exposure Draft of the
Democrats Stolen Generation Compensation Bill (Compensation Bill) seeks to
implement a federal reparations process for victims of the Stolen Generations
and has called for feedback
and comment from the wider community about how best
to address the unimplemented recommendations from Bringing Them
Home.[70] In the event that the
Tasmanian Act acts as an impetus for other States to pass similar legislation,
the Compensations Bill is intended
to give coverage to those applicants in a
State or Territory where there is no legislation. If legislation were later
enacted, the
applicant would be required to choose whether to claim under State
or Federal law, and not both.
What is most problematic about the Tasmanian
Act and Compensations Bill is that neither provides a forum for public hearings
and discussion
regarding the experiences of members of the Stolen Generation.
Rather, both involve a speedy process, completed within one year,
reducing the
time-period for awareness raising and education.
iii. A national approach to Truth and Reconciliation with localised hearings
A national approach to
setting up a Truth and Reconciliation Commission, to operate at a decentralized
community-based level, is preferable
to a system of state-by-state compensation,
with the gaps filled by a federal statute. The national umbrella will help
ensure a coherent
approach to decisions made regarding in what circumstances and
for which affected individuals compensation will be given under the
attached
Reparations Program. At the same time, hearings at a community level facilitate
proper recognition of the experiences of
heterogenous indigenous groups.
Truth and Reconciliation Commissions should be established in each state or
territory in Australia and should simultaneously accept
the applications and
hear the stories of ATSI people who qualify as members of the Stolen
Generations. Each local Commission would
include members of indigenous and
non-indigenous communities and include the participation of tribal elders to
give the process credibility
amongst ATSI people. Localised Truth and
Reconciliation Commissions also increase the potential for creating public
awareness amongst
non-indigenous people in each state or territory.
Most
significantly, localised Truth and Reconciliation Commissions will help to
address the problem that the ATSI community has thus
far been treated as
homogenous. The approach of the Tasmanian Act and Compensation Bill homogenises
the ATSI population in two ways,
only one of which is distinctly problematic.
First, it homogenises the harm suffered, considered by some as problematic in
terms
of restoring a victim’s
dignity,[71] yet in the
author’s view, to ensure a coherent system of reparations, is unavoidable.
Second, however, the approach of the Tasmanian Act and Compensation Bill
homogenises the ATSI population as a mass whose heterogeneity
is
irrelevant.[72] This is
particularly problematic given the composition of the ATSI population:
The population of Australia's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities is extremely diverse in its culture with many different languages spoken. Think of the Kimberly region of Western Australia... if you travel through the Kimberly with its large Aboriginal population and the diversity of people within this region, it's just like travelling through Europe with its changing cultures and languages. [73]
iv. A forum to voice grievances
A Truth and Reconciliation Commission allows a
much-needed move away from an adversarial approach. Litigation in the
adversarial court
system ‘is not a culturally appropriate or effective
remedy for the situation confronting the stolen generations, their families
and
communities’.[74] The
Tasmanian Act and Compensation Bill both reflect an adversarial, tort-based
approach. They require a system of justice to award
damages to each individual,
on the basis of the evidence supplied by the victim as to the magnitude of the
harm suffered, assessed
under standard procedural and substantive
rules.[75]
Rather, a Truth and
Reconciliation Commission has the advantage of providing indigenous persons
affected by forcible removal with
a forum in which their grievances can be heard
and allows those individuals to receive public acknowledgement of the harm
suffered.
It also allows those affected by forcible removal a role in shaping
the Reparations Programs. Participation is essential for reparations
to be
appropriate and effective. The Sixth Social Justice Report produced by HREOC
states:
The Indigenous perception of the inadequacy of government responses to
recommendations on these matters is met, not merely with disappointment
and a
sense of exclusion from government processes, it confirms an expectation that
this would be so. There is a strain of Indigenous
response which reveals the
cumulative effect of paternalistic policies and the lack of participation in
government processes: of
constantly being the subject of other people’s
decisions about what is best for you, what you deserve, what you are entitled
to.[76]
The Canadian IRS
Settlement Agreement most aptly addresses the issue of localised indigenous
involvement by establishing an Indian
Residential School Survivor Committee,
composed of 10 representatives drawn from various Aboriginal organizations and
survivor groups,
designed to advise Truth and Reconciliation Commissioners on
community issues, including criteria for community and national
processes.[77] However, whilst
Canada’s IRS Settlement Agreement provides for Regional
Liaisons,[78] neither the Regional
Liaisons nor National Commissioners will conduct formal
hearings.[79] In outlining this ATSI
Truth and Reconciliation Commission Model, the author believes that public
hearings provide the best solution
for healing and acknowledgement for
individuals, families and their communities. Public hearings, however, would not
be compulsory.
Either closed hearings would be conducted or victims would be
able to submit electronic or paper statements, particularly in cases
of physical
and sexual abuse.
The absence of individual storytelling under the Tasmanian
Act and Compensation Bill is key. Holocaust survivor Dory Laub has written
about
the process of telling and listening as an essential first step towards
healing.[80] Laub describes
story-telling as a two-step process: the telling itself, which breaks previous
frameworks of knowing and secondly,
what happens beyond words, which allows
emotional healing, the key to rediscovery of a lost
identity.[81] Since the tabling of
Bringing Them Home, hundreds of indigenous life narratives have been
published as well as films. For example, Philip Noyce’s awarded-winning
film,
Rabbit-Proof Fence, based on the auto/biographical narrative of
Doris Pilkington Garimara, tells the story of three removed children who
experience
a 1,600 kilometre journey in an attempt to return to their community
rather then remain at the Moore River Mission in Western
Australia.[82]
The greatest role
a Truth and Reconciliation Commission can play is allowing different ATSI
peoples’ stories to be heard and
acknowledged, giving recognition to the
different stories that need to be told. For example, when Lowitja
O’Donoghue in an
interview related that she was not “stolen”
but “removed” as her mother had agreed to her separation believing
it in the best interest of her daughter, the media exploited the remarks and
cast doubt on the harm suffered and reparations needed
for members of the Stolen
Generations.[83] Similarly, Nancy
Barnes in Munyi’s Daughter wanted to tell a different story, one
that highlighted triumph over adversity and the successful journey of a member
of the Stolen
Generations into relationships and employment, and yet found no
audience, in her own community or
others.[84] A Truth and
Reconciliation Commission would provide an audience for a heterogeneous recount
of history.
v. Determining the scope of those entitled to a hearing before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and compensation
A
significant issue to determine is how to address the harms suffered by the
descendants of victims. Both the Tasmanian Act and Compensation
Bill recognize
compensation for the living biological child of a deceased person who would
otherwise qualify for compensation but
not descendants of a person who was
directly removed, if the removed “child” is still
living.[85] A recent study by the
MCATSIA in June 2006 compares the relative socio-economic and health positions
of those ATSI people who were
removed (directly) and those not removed. The
study combines the framework used by the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander
Social Survey 2002 (NATSISS), which surveyed 9,400 ATSI people and the
National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey
2004-2005
(NATSIHS), which surveyed 10,400 ATSI people. The surveyors recognized the
limits in their methodology, and the resulting
degree of
uncertainty.[86] The NATSISS and
NATSIHS data was used to draw conclusions regarding such indicators as the rates
of disability, post-secondary education
participation and attainment, labour
force participation, victim rates for crime and imprisonment and juvenile
detention rates.[87] The results
showed that the removed population had worse outcomes than for the non-removed
population.[88] Disadvantage for
removed populations was not concentrated in any particular area, but rather
covered a broad spectrum of
indicators.[89] For example, removed
populations had lower rates of completion of year 10-12 school (28.5 per cent
compared to 38.5 per cent), lower
rates of living in owner occupied housing
(16.9 per cent compared to 28.3 per cent); higher rates of being arrested more
than once
in a five year period (14.6 per cent compared to 8.8 per cent) and
lower rates of full-time employment (17.8 per cent compared to
24.8 per
cent).[90]
The evident
disadvantage is illustrative of the ongoing effects of forced removal policies,
both on those persons directly removed
as well as their descendants. Indigenous
Australians are 45 times more likely to be a victim of domestic violence than
other Australians,
8.1 times more likely to be homicide victims and 16.6 per
cent more likely to commit homicide than the non-indigenous
population.[91] According to
Reconciliation Australia, ATSI people experience higher rates of self-injury,
suicide and incarceration-15 times the
rate of other
Australians.[92] Alarmingly, the
Australian National Audit Office reports that the mortality rate of ATSI people
is twice as high as the Maori, 2.3
times the rate of indigenous people in the
United States, and 3.1 times the total Australian
rate.[93]
Whilst monetary
compensation will be difficult, if not impossible to award to descendants,
particularly in terms of maintaining coherence
within the compensation program,
it is also questionable the extent to which such compensation will adequately
address the present
inequity experienced by ATSI descendants. However, this is
further impetus for a Truth and Reconciliation Commission which can play
a role
in restoring the dignity of all members of the ATSI community. All descendants
of the Stolen Generations would have an opportunity
to tell of their experience
with the ongoing effects of forced removal before a Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, which is likely
to impact both future government policy and public
perception.
vi. The awarding of reparations
It is essential to overcome the Australian
Government’s reluctance to award compensation. It is firstly importance to
accept
that under a Reparations Program, victims are likely to receive far less
compensation than through successful litigation. For claims
pursued through the
Victims Compensation Tribunal, claimants may receive $50,000 for the harm
occasioned by one act of
violence.[94] In civil courts, PIAC
suggests that successful claimants “would receive substantially
more” considering the harm identified
in Bringing Them
Home.[95] PIAC also identifies
the recommendation of the Reparations and Rehabilitation Committee in South
Africa, which provided that victims
receive a sum equivalent to the median
annual household income per annum for six years, as a
guide.[96] However, PIAC fails to
note that, in practice, very few South African victims identified by the
Committee have in fact received the
recommended compensation. Reparations in
South Africa have been highly controversial, with a failure by civil society to
pursue and
monitor the implementation of the South African Truth and
Reconciliation Commission’s reparations
recommendations.[97]
The
Canadian IRS Settlement Agreement has set aside $60 million for a range of truth
and reconciliation measures.[98]
Similarly, the amounts of monetary compensation allocated in the Tasmanian Act
and Compensation Bill are realistic, within the bounds
of state and national
budgets. Whilst the compensation falls far short of what may be received through
judicial means if the victim was to succeed, Pablo de Greiff uses the
example of Peru which valuably illustrates the difficulties of parallel systems
of ‘judicial’ and ‘political’
reparations.[99] The Peruvian
Truth and Reconciliation Commission discussed its reparations recommendations,
whilst simultaneously the Inter-American
Commission and the Court decided cases
of torture and disappearances, awarding between $100,000 to $200,000 per victim.
This raised
expectations of an impossible outcome for persons before the Truth
and Reconciliation Commission. If each family of the more than
69,000 victims of
death were awarded $150,000, the total cost would be more than the entire
national yearly budget of
Peru.[100]
De Greiff also notes
that the mere disparity in the award made by courts compared to those
distributed under mass reparations programs
does not illustrate a lack of
fairness in reparations programs. Rather, reparations programs provide other
benefits by obviating
the problems with litigation, such as long delays, high
costs, having to gather evidence that will be closely scrutinised, emotional
pain suffered through cross-examination and the real risk of an adverse
decision.[101]
V. CONCLUSION
There has been a multitude of litigious attempts to seek redress for the Stolen Generations. Such litigation may force the Australian Government and possibly other private parties involved in the forcible removal, such as church-run schools, to recognize breaches of the law and provide compensation for the harm suffered as a result:
Ultimately, governments will be forced to address the issue of liability for
forcible removal. Better that it be in an equitable,
efficient and constructive
manner, than one that is inequitable, inefficient and
adversarial.[102]
In response
to the law-suits filed against the Canadian government by between 5000 and 8000
former residential school students, which
the government initially fought, the
Canadian government began entering into settlement negotiations. In 1997-98, the
Canadian government
settled 220 claims out-of-court, paying more than $20
million to former victims of the schools run solely by the federal government
in
cases where employees were convicted of sexual
abuse.[103] In 1998-99, about $8
million was paid to 70 alleged victims of abuse, with settlements ranging from
$20,000 to $200,000.[104]
According to data provided by the Canadian Government, as of May 21, 2007, the
total value of litigation in relation to the Indian
Residential Schools amounted
to $120.7 million, whilst the total value of damages awarded from ADR decisions
amounted to $128.2 million.[105]
It is therefore unquestionably that it is financially beneficial for the
Australian Government to pursue the model of a Truth and
Reconciliation
Commission with a Reparations Program attached, rather than continuing on an ad
hoc road of litigation and victims
compensation applications.
The model
proposed in the Tasmanian Act and Compensation Bill is flawed in a number of key
ways. First, the paper-based process, which
is completed over a short
time-frame, fails to involve the wider community. Whilst a report by the Stolen
Generations Assessor will
be tabled before parliament, it is unfortunate that
the process does not give victims a voice to publicly re-telling their history,
in a way that would recognize the heterogeneity of the ATSI population. This
would also provide an opportunity for renewed vigour
towards ATSI languages,
particularly in light of the fact that a submission was made to the UN
Commission on Human Rights describing
the officially unacknowledged status of
ATSI languages.[106]
There are
a number of benefits of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission, with simultaneous
hearings taking place in each State or
Territory, with members of the indigenous
and non-indigenous community sitting as commissioners. This will be a positive
move away
from thus-far unsuccessful adversarial models. In addition, a
Reparations Program should be attached to the Truth and Reconciliation
Commissions and compensation coherently awarded in the amounts recommended by
the Tasmanian Act and Compensation Bill.
The Australian community has, to a
large extent, attempted to block out a very dark chapter of its history, or at
least deal with
it in a cursory manner. Given the ongoing consequences suffered
by the descendants of the Stolen Generations, the Australian people,
and in
particular the Australian Government, cannot deny the facts of its past, however
differently these have been interpreted.
Unity and reconciliation between
indigenous and non-indigenous Australians depends upon truth-telling,
remembering the past and accurately
re-writing Australia’s history. The
truth is necessary for the social catharsis of ATSI people and is an essential
part of
the national recognition of the ongoing consequences that the removal of
ATSI children from their families and communities continues
to have on the
poorer health, employment, education and social status of present-day Aborigines
and Torres Strait Islanders.
[∗]Ramona Vijeyarasa (LL.M
’07 NYU, LL.B ’05 UNSW, B.A. ’05 UNSW) was an NYU Human Rights
and International Law Fellow
at The Center for Transitional Justice. An
Australian lawyer, Ramona has extensive experience in the field of international
human
rights, including at the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women in Manila,
The Philippines and the Center for Reproductive Rights
in New
York.
[1] Australia officially has
two groups of indigenous people who are referred to as Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander people. For
the purpose of this paper, the acronym ATSI has been
applied. See “Indigenous Fact Sheet”, Australian Federal Government,
Department of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs, Available at
<http://www.atsia.gov.au/Facts/docs/FS_series23.pdf>
access on June 14, 2007.
[2] Human
Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, Bringing Them Home: Report of the
National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander
Child, Canberra, AGPS, 1997, [Hereinafter Bringing Them Home], Available
at
<http://www.humanrights.gov.au/social_justice/stolen_children/how_to.html>
access on January 20, 2007, p.
31
[3] A summary of all 'removal'
and general welfare legislation can be found in Bringing Them Home, n. 2,
pp. 600-648.
[4] Nigel
D’Souza, ‘Authors of Our Own History: The Challenge for All
Australians Presented by the Final Report of the Human
Rights Commission
National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Children from Their Families Forum-The
Stolen Generation: From Removal to
Reconciliation-Authors of our own History,’ (1998) 21 University of New
South Wales Law Journal pp. 204, 205 citing media release issued by SNAICC
on August 4, 1991, National Aboriginal and Islander Children’s
Day.
[5] Bringing Them Home,
n. 2, pp. 2-3.
[6] See Ibid.,
which cites throughout to the range of evidence heard by the National
Inquiry.
[7] Anne Orford,
“Commissioning the Truth,’ 15 (2006) 883 Columbia Journal of
Gender and Law, p. 867.
[8] In
1989, the United Nations Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and
Protection of Minorities entrusted Theo van Boven
with the task of undertaking a
study concerning the right to restitution, compensation, rehabilitation for
victims of gross violations
of human rights and fundamental freedoms, taking
into account relevant existing international human rights norm and relevant
decisions
and views of international human rights organs. See Theo van Boven,
Theo van Boven, Final Report of the Special Rapporteur of the
United Nations,
Study concerning the right to restitution, compensation and rehabilitation
for victims of gross violations of human rights and fundamental
freedoms, UN
Doc. E/CN.4/Sub.2/1993/8
(1993).
[9] Van Boven, Final
Report of the Special Rapporteur of the United Nations, Study concerning the
right to restitution, compensation and rehabilitation for victims of gross
violations of human rights and fundamental
freedoms, UN Doc.
E/CN.4/Sub.2/1993/8 (1993), p.
4.
[10] Priscilla Hayner,
Unspeakable Truths: Facing the Challenges of Truth Commissioners
Routledge, New York and London, 2002, pp. 17-18,
313.
[11] See Bringing Them
Home, n. 2, p.15 regarding contemporary removals of ATSI children until the
release of the report in 1997, such as non-custodial sentences
applied to
indigenous people.
[12] See
discussion of inter-generational transfer of the effects of forcible removal
discussed in Bringing Them Home, n. 2, pp.174-175, 188-189 and 481-483.
See also research on the association of past unresolved trauma experienced over
many generations
of ATSI people with present-day child sexual abuse in
indigenous communities in Janet Stanley, ‘Child Sexual Abuse in Indigenous
Communities,’ Paper presented at the Child Sexual Abuse: Justice Response
or Alternative Resolution Conference, convened by
the Australian Institute of
Criminology and held in Adelaide, 1-2 May 2003, Available at
<http://www.aic.gov.au/conferences/2003-abuse/stanley.pdf>
,
access on August 26, 2007.
[13]
See International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ),
“Canada-Background,” March 2007, Available at
<http://www.ictj.org/en/where/region2/513.html>
,
access on June 14, 2007. See also Canadian Indian Residential Schools Settlement
Agreement, Schedule N: Mandate for the Truth
and Reconciliation Commission, May
8, 2006, [Hereinafter IRS Settlement Agreement], 5, §4(c), Available at
<http://www.irsr-rqpi.gc.ca/english/index.html>
access on 14 June 14 2007.
[14]
IRS Settlement Agreement, n. 13. See also Bringing Them Home, n.
2, p. 231.
[15] Coral Dow,
Parliament of Australia-Parliamentary Library, E-Brief: The Stolen
Generation, Issued April 2000 (Updated July 2006), Available at
<http://www.aph.gov.au/library/intguide/SP/Stolen.htm>
access on May 6, 2007. See also Bringing Them Home, above n 4, 16-17
regarding Australia-wide hearings, support granted for witnesses giving
confidential information and the obligation
on HREOC to archive all evidence and
submissions to the inquiry.
[16]
Peter Read, A Rape of the Soul So Profound, Allen and Unwin, 1999, pp.
25-26.
[17] Ibid, p.
26.
[18] Public Interest Advocacy
Centre, Submission to the Senate Legal and Constitutional References Committee:
Inquiry into the Stolen
Generation, Parliament of Australia, Canberra 2000,
Available at
<http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/other/IndigLRes/2000/1/index.html>
,
access on July 23, 2003 [Hereinafter PIAC Submission], p.
29.
[19] Antonio Buti,
‘Unfinished Business: The Australian Stolen Generations,’ (2000)
7(4) E-Law Murdoch University Electronic Journal of Law, Available at
<http://www.murdoch.edu.au/elaw/issues/v7n4/buti74.html>
,
access on June 14, 2007, par.
21.
[20] Bringing Them
Home, n. 2, p. 306.
[21]
Bringing Them Home, n. 2, pp.
245-249.
[22] See Pablo de
Greiff, ‘Justice and Reparations,’ in Pablo de Greiff (ed.) The
Handbook of Reparations, (2006), p.
468.
[23] Sorry Day Committee,
‘A National Sorry Day,’ updated May 16, 1998, Available at <http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/special/rsjproject/sorry/,
access on May 23, 2007.
[24] Kay
Schaffer & Sidonie Smith, Human Rights and Narrated Lives: The Ethics of
Recognition (2004), 107.
[25]
Buti, above n. 19, par. 33.
[26]
Bringing Them Home, above n. 2, p. 344 citing van Boven Principle
14.
[27] Ibid., p.
389.
[28] Bringing Them
Home, n. 2, p. 30.
[29] Buti,
n. 19, par. 43.
[30] Matthew
Story, ‘The Stolen Generations: More than Just a Compo Case’ (1996)
3(86) Indigenous Law Bulletin 4.
[31] Link-up NSW, Submission
186 part III, pages 30-31 cited in Bringing Them Home, n. 2, p.
185.
[32] Bringing Them
Home, above n. 2, p.
185.
[33] Bringing Them Home,
above n. 2, pp. 141-142.
[34]
See Anne Orford, ‘Commissioning the Truth,’ n. 7, p.
883.
[35] Vasuki Nesiah,
‘Gender and Truth Commission Mandates,’ International Center for
Transitional Justice, Available at <www.ictj.org>, access on July 10,
2007.
[36] Ibid.,
2.
[37] Priscilla Hayner,
‘Unspeakable Truths,’ n. 10, p.
78.
[38]
Ibid.
[39]
Ibid.
[40] Senate Legal and
Constitutional References Committee, Parliament of Australia, Healing: A
Legacy of Generations, (2000) [1.3], November 30, 2003, Available at
<http://www.aph.gov.au/Senate/committee/legcon_ctte/completed_inquiries/1999-02/stolen/report/index.htm>
access on July 23 2007, [Hereinafter Senate Committee
Report].
[41] Ibid.,
Recommendations 1, 2 and 6.
[42]
Ibid., Recommendations 7-9.
[43]
Coral Dow, Parliament of Australia, n.15.
[44] Commonwealth, Legal and
Constitutional References Committee: Report: Government Response, Parliament
of Australia, Senate Hansard, June 28, 2001, Available at
<http://parlinfoweb.aph.gov.au/piweb//view_document.aspx?TABLE=hansards & ID=1902233>
access on March 25, 2007.
[45]
See Bringing Them Home, n. 2, p. 15 regarding evidence of contemporary
removals of ATSI children up until the release of the report in
1997.
[46] See also the
principles of the Canadian Working Group on Truth and Reconciliation and of the
Exploratory Dialogues (1998-1999), which
include accessible, victim-centered,
public/transparent, holistic, inclusive, educational and forward-looking in
terms of rebuilding
and renewing Aboriginal relationships and the relationship
between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Canadians in IRS Settlement Agreement,
n.
13, 1: Principles.
[47]
Bringing Them Home, n. 2, pp.
303-307.
[48] PIAC Submission, n.
18, p. 32.
[49] See Penelope
Debelle and Jo Chandler, Stolen Generation payout, The Age, August 2,
2007, National, Available at
<http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/stolen-generation-payout/2007/08/01/1185647978562.html>
access on August 26, 2007 for further discussion of the
decision.
[50] Nick Bryant,
The agony of Australia’s Stolen Generation, BBC News, August 9,
2007, International, Available at
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/6937222.stm>
access on August 26, 2007.
[51]
Ibid., 3.
[52] Ibid,.
33.
[53] PIAC Submission, n. 18,
p. 32.
[54] Martha Minow,
‘The Hope for Healing: What Can Truth Commissions Do?’ in Robert I.
Rotberg & Dennis Thompson (eds.),
Truth v Justice: The Morality of Truth
Commissions, 2000. See also Anne Orford, ‘Commission the Truth,’
n. 7.
[55] Stolen Generations of
Aboriginal Children Act 2006, §§ 5(1)(d) and
5(2)(c).
[56] Ibid.,
§5(3)(b).
[57] Ibid.,
§11(1)(a).
[58] Ibid., §11(2).
[59] Ibid.,
§11(1)(b).
[60]
Ibid., §7.
[61]
Ibid., §6(3). See also Office of the Stolen Generations Assessor,
State Government of Tasmania, Available at
<http://www.dpac.tas.gov.au/stolengeneration/index.html>
access on June 1, 2007.
[62]
Stolen Generations of Aboriginal Children Act 2006,
§21.
[63] Ibid.,
§18.
[64] See Brinton
Lykes and Marcie Mersky, ‘Reparations and Mental Health: Psychosocial
interventions Towards Healing, Human Agency,
and Rethreading Social
Realities,’ in Pablo de Greiff (ed.) The Handbook of Reparations
2006, pp. 589, 605.
[65]
Ibid., 605-606.
[66]
Ibid., §20(1).
[67]
Ibid., §20(2).
[68]
Ibid.
[69] Australian Bureau of
Statistics, ‘4704.0-The Health and Welfare of Australia's Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander Peoples,’
29 August, 2005, Available on
<http://www.abs.gov.au/Ausstats/abs@.nsf/Lookup/3919938725CA0E1FCA256D90001CA9B8>
access on April 22,
2007.
[70]Australian Democrats
Press Release, Bartlett Tables Stolen Generation Compensation Bill,” 28
March 2007, Available at
<http://www.democrats.org.au/news/index.htm?press_id=5774>
access on May 7, 2007.
[71]
Jaime E. Malamud-Goti and Lucas Sebastián Grosman, ‘Reparations and
Civil Litigation: Compensation for Human Rights
Violations in Transitional
Democracies,’ in Pablo de Greiff (ed.) The Handbook of Reparations
(2006), p. 555.
[72]
Ibid.
[73] Dot West,
Chairperson, National Indigenous Media Association of Australia, Boyer Lectures
(1993) cited at Indigenous Australia, Australian
Museum 2004, Available at
<http://www.dreamtime.net.au/index.cfm>
access on July 23, 2007.
[74]
Senate Committee Report, n. 40, pars. 2.47,
8.123.
[75] See Malamud-Goti,
above n. 71, pp. 539, 541.
[76]
Zita Antonios, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Report
1998 (1998), 18, Available at
<http://www.humanrights.gov.au/social_justice/sjreport98/index.html>
access on March 25, 2007.
[77]
IRS Settlement Agreement, n. 13, 7, §7(a) and (c).
[78] Ibid., 6,
§6(d).
[79] Ibid., 3,
§2(b). The IRS Settlement Agreement does provide, however, for several
national events.
[80] Dori Laub,
‘Bearing witness, or the Vicissitudes of Listening and An Event Without a
Witness: Truth, Testimony and Survival,’
in Soshana Felman and Dori Laub
(ed.) Testimony: Crisis of Witnessing in Literature, Psychoanalysis, and
History (1992), cited in Schaffer, n. 24, pp. 21,
109.
[81]
Ibid.
[82] See Schaffer, above n.
24, p. 97 for a discussion of the power of the film to move audiences and
educate about the experience of
forced removal as well as the suspicion raised
from the potential to universalize and commodify the experience of the Stolen
Generations.
[83] Schaffer,
above n. 24, p. 111.
[84]
Ibid.
[85] See section
5(3) of the Tasmanian Act and Compensation
Bill.
[86] As a result of the
Relative Standard Error, differences in outcome were not done by directly
comparing estimates. Rather, significance
testing was used, the process of
determining if two population groups have different estimate rates after taking
into account the
uncertainty caused by sampling. See Ministerial Council for
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs (MCATSIA), Evaluation of
Responses to the Bringing Them Home Report (2003), Available at
<http://www.mcatsia.gov.au>
access on
March 25, 2007, p. 6.
[87] Ibid.,
p. 8.
[88]
Ibid.
[89]Ibid.
[90] Ibid., p.
9.
[91] ‘Decolonization and
Healing: Indigenous Experiences in the Untied States, New Zealand, Australia and
Greenland,’ Prepared
for The Aboriginal Healing Foundation by Linda
Archibald (2006), Available at
<http://www.ahf.ca/publications/research-series>
access on May 23, 2007.
[92]
Ibid, p. 18.
[93] Australian
National Audi office (2002), ‘The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Health Program Follow-up Audit,’ The
Auditor-General Report No. 15
Performance Audit on Department of Health and Ageing, Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Commission
(ATIC), 2002/2003, tabled 29 October 2002, Available
at
<http://www.anao.gov.au/uploads/documents/2002-03_Audit_Report_15.pdf>
access on May 23, 2007, par.
1.5.
[94] See, for example,
Schedule 1 of the Victims Support and Rehabilitation Act
(NSW).
[95] PIAC
Submission, n. 18, p. 34.
[96]
Ibid.
[97] See Christopher J.
Colvin, ‘Reparations Program in South Africa,’ in Pablo de Greiff
(ed.), The Handbook of Reparations (2006), pp.
200-201.
[98] ICTJ, n.
13.
[99] De Greiff, n. 22, p.
456.
[100] Ibid.,
456-457.
[101] Ibid.,
439.
[102] PIAC Submission, n.
18, p. 10.
[103] Ibid.,
p. 16.
[104]
Ibid.
[105] These
statistics included all individuals who had filed a claim in litigation and all
individuals who had participated in the Canadian
Government pilot project. See
‘Indian Residential School Statistics, Indian Residential Schools
Resolution Canada, Available
at
<http://www.irsr-rqpi.gc.ca/english/dispute_resolution_adr_decisions.html>
access on May 23,
2007.
[106] Lester
Irabinna Rigney, ‘Building Stronger Communities: Indigenous Australian
Rights In Education and Language,’ Sub-Commission
on the Promotion &
Protection of Human Rights Working Group on Indigenous Populations, Session 19,
July 25, 2001, Available at
<http://www.fatsil.org/papers/research/rigney-1.htm#contact>
access on March 23, 2007.
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