Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Australia Using Troops To Combat A Social Problem

There is sure to be much discussion on whether this is a noble attempt to improve conditions in Aboriginal communities or whether this is a racist reaction. After all he Aussie's track record with Aboriginal society is on par with the US' relationship with the Native American tribes. I can't imagine using federal troops to combat child abuse, pornography and alcholism but on the other hand there is nothing I feel more strongly about than the need for society to protect all children.

Let's watch this situation closely.

plk.



Australia cracks down on Aborigines
Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

read the entire article at: http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0627/p06s02-woap.html?s=hns


Summary:
Federal troops arrived Wednesday to enforce tighter regulations on welfare payments and a ban on pornography and alcohol in Aboriginal communities.

Sydney, Australia They are deployed around the world, from Iraq and Afghanistan to the South Pacific, but in an unprecedented move Australian soldiers are being sent this week into their own backyard.

Troops are to be stationed across the Outback as the Australian government launches a massive crackdown on the alcoholism, sexual assault, and social dysfunction that a recent federal investigation alleges are tearing apart Aboriginal communities.

Shocked by the findings of an official report released earlier this month, the government of Prime Minister John Howard has decided to ban alcohol, confiscate pornography, and make welfare payments conditional on good parenting in more than 60 isolated Aboriginal townships.

But the government's robust intervention touched off a firestorm of political debate within Australia, with some politicians and Aboriginal leaders saying it smacks of racism and discrimination.

Amid an epidemic of child sexual abuse and domestic violence, all children under the age of 16 will be subjected to a compulsory medical checkup to make sure they are not being mistreated.

The first soldiers will start arriving in remote desert settlements in the sparsely populated Northern Territory starting Wednesday, backed up by police, social workers, and government officials.

The report, titled "Little Children are Sacred," found that "rivers of grog" [alcohol] are leading to the breakdown of Aboriginal society, with children as young as 3 exposed to hardcore pornography and others sexually abused by both black and white men.

It said teenage Aboriginal girls were prostituting themselves for drugs and alcohol with white miners in remote parts of the Outback.

The Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory have, until now, been governed by the local government, based in Darwin.

Mr. Howard's decision effectively places the townships' governance in federal hands.

Blighted Aboriginal communities The federal investigation shattered any lingering image of Aboriginal communities as tranquil desert outposts of dot painting and didgeridoo-playing.

It showed that a large proportion of the country's 450,000 indigenous people struggle with unemployment, ill health, high rates of crime, social alienation, and suicide.

Announcing the most dramatic shakeup of Aboriginal affairs for 40 years, Howard said the alcohol-fueled sexual abuse of Aboriginal children was a "national emergency."

"We are dealing with children of the tenderest age who have been exposed to the most terrible abuse from the time of their birth, virtually," Howard said.

A former conservative prime minister, Malcolm Fraser, said the government's actions were a "throwback to past paternalism" because there had been no consultation with Aboriginal people.

An Aboriginal activist and academic, Boni Robertson, described the emergency measures as "knee-jerk nonsense" that breached Australia's antidiscrimination laws.

As part of its sweeping overhaul, the federal government plans to scrap a 30-year-old system by which outsiders had to have a permit to visit Aboriginal townships.

The government said the permit system had enabled a veil of secrecy to be drawn over appalling levels of gang violence, substance abuse, and domestic violence.

But Aboriginal groups said that scrapping the permit system meant that settlements would be more vulnerable to drug dealers and "sly-grog runners," as smugglers of prohibited liquor are known.

"Removing permits could provide a free-for-all peddling of alcohol and marijuana and pornography, or the inflicting of further sexual or physical abuse on children," says David Ross, director of the Central Land Council in Alice Springs.

"At least with the permit system it was possible to ask somebody what they were doing in the community," he says.

One of the communities to which troops and police reinforcements will first be deployed is Mutitjulu, located in the shadow of Uluru, also called Ayers Rock.

The village has been branded a national disgrace -- a forlorn shanty-town ravaged by the scourge of petrol sniffing.

But indignant community leaders in Mutitjulu say they need social workers, not soldiers, and, on Tuesday, threatened to stop tourists from climbing Ayers Rock in protest of the government's actions.

Summarized by Copernic Summarizer

For more on this story:

Australian Aborigines fear government will snatch children

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070626/wl_asia_afp/australianativechild_070626133610

Abbott reassures indigenous parents

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21975213-5006790,00.html

Community residents flee, fearing children will be taken

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21968081-5006790,00.html

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