human rights : news index (return to eniar.org indigenous human rights page)
Trooping the tribal colours
5 June 2008 - The Economist UK - WHEN the five nations that assert sovereignty (and economic rights) in the melting Arctic conferred in Greenland last month, it sounded to the untrained earlike good news for the polar region and its people: they vowed to obey international rules (ie, not fight) and to counter the risk of oil spills in newly navigable waters.
Amnesty International Report 2008: State of the world’s human rights
28 May 2008 - Media Release Amnesty International - Governments must turn around 60 years of human rights failure
Forget a treaty, say Pearson, Yunupingu
25 April 2008 - TWO of the nation's most powerful Aborigines have dismissed the treaty movement as a political "dead horse" and have urged their fellow indigenous leaders to embrace the mainstream push towards constitutional recognition of Aboriginal people.
The gains must not be squandered
24 April 2008 - Aboriginal children "can't eat the constitution," Professor Marcia Langton said at the 2020 Summit. She is one of various high-profile indigenous commentators who have criticised the indigenous stream's emphasis on constitutional reform since the weekend. She is right, of course. Constitutional reform alone will not fix the problems facing indigenous children and their families in Australia.
Aborigines to welcome Pope Benedict
17 April 2008 - Aboriginal elders will be the first Australians to officially welcome the Pope when he arrives in Sydney for the Catholic Church's World Youth Day (WYD) in July.
The battle for Aboriginal rights
15 April 2008 - New Statesman UK - An apology from Kevin Rudd to Australia's aboriginals and a pledge about closing the life expectancy gap are steps in the right direction
Landmark housing project for NT Indigenous communities
12 April 2008 - A landmark joint housing program between the Australian and Northern Territory Governments will deliver vital construction, refurbishment and infrastructure developments, as well as jobs in 73 Northern Territory Indigenous communities and some urban areas.
Indigenous mining share deal
1 April 2008 - More than 2500 of the country's most disadvantaged Aborigines will become shareholders in an Australian Securities Exchange-listed mining company under an innovative native title agreement.
Aborigines 'locked out of real economy'
1 April 2008 - Aboriginal people are condemned to poverty and treated as "museum pieces" by governments whose education policies have locked a generation out of the real economy.
10 point plan to improve NT intervention
31 March 2008 - Media Release - Modifying the Northern Territory intervention legislation to maximise protection of children from abuse without racially discriminating against Indigenous people is one of the major elements of a 10 point plan outlined in the Social Justice Report 2007 officially launched in Sydney today.

QLD Government’s insults Aboriginal workers again
25 March 2008- Media Release - The Queensland Government’s amended Stolen Wages settlement to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander workers has come under attack from Indigenous rights organisation, ANTaR.

Annual Social Justice and Native Title Reports tabled in Parliament today
20 March 2008 - Media Release - Amending the Northern Territory intervention legislation to maximise protection of children from abuse while ensuring the basic human rights of Indigenous people are protected is one of the major elements of a 10 point plan outlined in the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Report 2007 tabled in federal Parliament today.
Australia's hidden empire
6 March 2008 - The New Statesman (UK) - That Canberra runs an imperial network is unmentionable, yet the chain of control stretches from the Aboriginal slums of Sydney to the South Pacific.
Guides to help do the right thing with Indigenous culture
28 February 2008 - Media Release - The Australia Council for the Arts has released a fully revised second edition of its protocol guides to help Australians better understand the use of Indigenous cultural material.
Govt preparing to endorse Declaration
21 February 2008 - The federal government is preparing to endorse the landmark United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which was opposed by the former Howard government.
First Nations set to implement UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
19 February 2008 - Assembley of First Nations - Today First Nations leaders are gathering for a two-day symposium in Vancouver where they will consult representatives from the United Nations about how the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples can be implemented in Canada. AFN National Chief Phil Fontaine says First Nations are set to implement the UN Declaration.
UN rights experts welcome Australia's apology to indigenous peoples
18 February 2008 – UN - A group of independent United Nations human rights experts have welcomed Australia's recent apology to its indigenous peoples for the pain and indignity they endured under the Government's past laws and policies.
Government commitment to UN Indigenous Declaration is common sense
17 February 2008 - Media Release - Confirmation by the Foreign Affairs Minister,Stephen Smith, that Australia would acknowledge the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, is commonsense and a return to international political reality, said Les Malezer today.
Response to government to the national apology to the Stolen Generations
13 February 2008 - HREOC Tom Calma - I have been asked by the National Sorry Day Committee and the Stolen Generations Alliance; the two national bodies that represent the Stolen Generations and their families, to respond to the Parliament’s Apology and to talk briefly about the importance of today’s events.
Aboriginals to fight Queensland invasion
21 December 2007- Media Release - We will join with other Aboriginal leaders in Queensland to fight the introduction of forced income control over Aboriginal families in Queenland.
WGAR - The Working Group for Aboriginal Rights
5 December 2007 - Media Release - WGAR urges PM and Minister for Indigenous Affairs to place a Moratorium on the NT Intervention and immediately ratify and implement the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
Maori Party Endorses Indigenous Ingenuity
27 November 2007 - Media Release The Maori Party - The Maori Party is celebrating the enterprise of indigenous leadership in forming the United League of Indigenous Nations; an international initiative which Aotearoa will formally ratify in Whakatane on November 28, 2007 (tomorrow).
British based mining companies
12 November 2007 - EDM 210 - British House of Commons - That this House notes that London is the world's biggest centre for mining investment and that the activities of mining companies listed on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) are causing significant concern around the world;
Aeotearoa Declaration puts Australia under international microscope
18 October 2007 - Australia's poor record in overcoming Indigenous disadvantage has again come under the microscope overseas, with an international health meeting making a formal declaration to urge the Australian government to act.
UN: On the rights of Indigenous peoples
30 September 2007 - After a decades-long struggle, the United Nations General Assembly on Sept. 13 approved the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Among other points, the non-binding Declaration states that Indigenous peoples have the right to maintain their cultures and remain on their land.
UN Declaration a milestone for Indigenous Peoples
14 September 2007 - HREOC Media Release - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma today welcomed the decision of the United Nations General Assembly to adopt the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
United Nations adopts Declaration on Rights of Indigenous Peoples
13 September 2007 – The General Assembly today adopted a landmark declaration outlining the rights of the world’s estimated 370 million indigenous people and outlawing discrimination against them – a move that followed more than two decades of debate. The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples has been approved after 143 Member States voted in favour, 11 abstained and four – Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States – voted against the text.
UN indigenous rights declaration rejected
12 September 2007 - THE (Australian) Federal Government will not support a United Nations declaration on indigenous rights, in part because it puts customary law above national law, and "there should only be one law for all Australians".
UN set to adopt native rights declaration, no thanks to Canada: critics
6 September 2007 - Canada was cast Thursday as a bad actor that aggressively campaigned alongside countries with tarnished human rights records in its failed bid to derail the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
Dealing with a national tragedy - failure is not an option
3 September 2007 - Since taking office in July 2004, I find myself as the sole independent statutory watchdog on Indigenous affairs in Australia. And what a roller coaster ride it’s been trying to keep track of the constant shifts in policy as new ministers seek to make their mark on this portfolio.
Indigenous protesters target Aust UN mission
31 August 2007 - Demonstrators have protested outside Australia's United Nations mission in New York, calling on the Government to end its opposition to the UN's Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
Call for UN to supervise Govt intervention
24 August 2007 - A group of Aboriginal people in Central Australia is calling on the United Nations to oversee the Commonwealth's intervention in the Northern Territory.
UN General Assembly Must Adopt the UN Declaration
9 August 2007 - Bangkok - On this International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples, FORUM-ASIA wishes to extend solidarity to Indigenous Peoples, nations and organisations in Asia and throughout the world. We would like to emphasise the urgent need for the United Nations General Assembly (GA) to adopt the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (DRIP) before the end of its 61st session in September 2007.
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
18 July 2007 - Statement as delivered at a press conference at UN Headquarters presented by Les Malezer, Chairperson of the Indigenous Peoples Caucus - I open this statement with the acknowledgement of the First Peoples of this region and, as such pay our respects to them, their ancestors and their lands and territories.
Dion Calls on Harper Government to Sign UN Rights Declaration
8 July 2007 - OTTAWA - Liberal Opposition Leader Stéphane Dion today sent a letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper calling on his government to uphold Canada's reputation as a promoter and protector of human rights by ceasing its efforts to block passage of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
Why I support the aboriginal National Day of  Action - Ottawa is wrong to oppose UN declaration on  aboriginal rights
29 June 2007 - by Kenneth Deer - The Harper government has warned aboriginals not to engage in blockades  today on the National Day of Action. Yet a Canadian envoy will speak on  the floor of the UN General Assembly today to oppose the Declaration on  the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, as adopted last June by the UN Human  Rights Council.
“Lost year” for the rights of Indigenous peoples worldwide: Canada must stop stalling on vital United Nations declaration
28 June 2007 - Indigenous peoples, social justice organizations and independent experts today urged the government of Canada to stop obstructing an important instrument adopted one year ago by the UN Human Rights Council.
A human rights based approach is vital to address the challenges in Indigenous communities
26 June 2007 - Media Release - The Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC) has welcomed the Australian Government’s announcements to act to protect the rights of Indigenous women and children in the Northern Territory and urges it to adopt an approach that is consistent with Australia’s international human rights obligations.
Did Australia demand reversal on natives? Ottawa pulled support after Howard's visit
9 June 2007 - The Globe and Mail - Canada's decision to withdraw support for the United Nations Declaration on the Right of Indigenous Peoples coincided with a visit to
Ottawa by Prime Minister John Howard of Australia -- a country that strongly opposes the declaration.
Letter from Amnesty International, Secretary General to Canadian Prime Minister
8 June 2007 - I am writing to urge the Government of Canada to withdraw its opposition to the adoption by the UN General Assembly of the vitally important and long overdue UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
UN man condemns Australia for housing failures
1 June 2007 - The United Nations Special Rapporteur on housing has condemned Australia for failing to implement the human right to adequate housing, warning that groups such as indigenous people and women are missing out on safe and affordable accommodation.
Call for human rights probe into 99-year leases
23 May 2007 - An Indigenous rights organisation has called for a human rights investigation into the Commonwealth's new 99-year lease agreements.
UN indigenous forum erupts in anger over Tiwi lease plan
19 May 2007 - Angry exchanges between government officials and black activists over John Howard's plan to introduce private home ownership on Aboriginal traditional lands have taken centre stage at the annual session of the UN's Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.
Community discusses indigenous rights decleration
3 February 2007 - One-hundred people gathered at Brisbane’s Riverside Centre on January 27 to discuss Indigenous self-determination and the United Nation’s draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which is expected to be ratified this year.
The Last session of the Working Group on the draft Declaration of the rights of indigenous peoples.
30 January–3 February 2006 - The eleventh session of the inter-sessional working group on the draft United Nations declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples took place from 5-16 December 2005 and its resumed session from 30 January–3 February 2006 in Geneva.
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
29 November 2006 - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma today expressed his disappointment at the decision of the United Nations General Assembly to delay consideration of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples for up to 12 months.
UN affirms Indigenous Peoples are not equal to all other Peoples
28 November 2006 - The Indigenous Caucus is shocked and outraged by the actions of the United Nations, who today failed to adopt the most important international instrument for the promotion and protection of human rights for Indigenous Peoples.
U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
12 November 2006 - Why a proposal to delay adoption should not be supported
Support the decleration
18 October 2006 - The Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples will be adopted by the General Assembly during this session. Consistent with the promotion and protection of human rights for all, it is in best interest of all States to support the adoption of this historic Declaration.
UN official shocked at Indigenous housing conditions
8 August 2006 - A UN official who has been inspecting Australia's Indigenous communities says the housing situation there is amongst the worst he's seen in the world.

Social Justice Commissioner praises United Nations Human Rights Council for adopting the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
29 June 2006

Human Rights Council adopts texts for protection from enforced disappearance, rights of Indigenous peoples
29 June 2006
Action Programme for 2nd Indigenous Decade Launched
15 May 2006 - Secretary General Calls for Programme to be translated into a change for the Better in Life of every indigenous Person
Indigenous rights on the move internationally
9 March 2006 - THE year of 2006 is shaping up as the most critical year in advancing the rights of indigenous peoples at the international level. There is much excitement, anticipation and caution that the advocacy of countless indigenous peoples at the United Nations (UN) level over the past 20 years will finally result in the comprehensive recognition of the rights of indigenous peoples.
U.N. negotiations on indigenous rights wrap up, for now
17 February 2006 - Indian Country (USA) - The current round of negotiations on the U.N. Draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples came to a close Feb. 3 with nearly two-thirds of the provisions agreed upon by the member states of the U.N. Human Rights Commission.
Australia's shame: report to UN raises plight of children
6 June 2005 - A report on Australia's children that highlights the "shame" of indigenous children's welfare and the plight of children in immigration detention will be handed to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child in Geneva this week.
Geneva vs Canberra
28 March 2005 - The UN has again attacked the Howard Government's record on race. But this time the politicians are shutting up and news of the verdict isn't getting out.
Damning UN verdict on race relations
22 March 2005 - The United Nations has raised serious concerns about race relations in Australia and has called on the Federal Government to work towards a "meaningful" reconciliation.
United Nations Committee issues observations on Australia
18 March 2005 - The United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination has issued its concluding observations on Australia. This follows consideration of Australia's 13th and 14th periodic reports in Geneva on 1 and 2 March 2005.
Govt. will ignore UN predicts ANTaR
4 March 2005 - Key Indigenous lobbyists predicted the Australian government will ignore UN concerns over abuses of Aboriginals expected to be raised yesterday in the European headquarters of the human rights watchdog.
Senior officials to front UN Committee
1 March 2005 - Senior government officials due to front the UN in Geneva tomorrow are likely to be quizzed over Sydney's Redfern riots and the death in custody of a Palm Islander.
International protection for indigenous peoples' human rights long overdue
10 September 2004 - Amnesty International News - The end of the International Decade of the World's Indigenous People is now less than four months away. The Working Group on the Draft United Nations Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples meets in its 10th session in Geneva next week (13-24 September), but the prospect of achieving one of the decade's principle goals -- the adoption of an international declaration for the protection and promotion of indigenous peoples' human rights -- seems increasingly at risk.
'Sorry Books' registered as historic documents
19 August 2004 - UNESCO - A collection of 461 Sorry Books recording the thoughts of thousands of Australians on the unfolding history of the Stolen Generations has been formally recognized as having powerful historical and social significance. The books are among nine significant documentary heritage items recently inscribed on the Australian Memory of the World Register – part of UNESCO’s Programme to protect and promote documentary material- that records or reflects significant milestones and events in Australia’s history.
Journée internationale des autochtones : L'ONU défend les droits des populations marginalisées
11August 2004 - Al Bayane (Morroco) - La Journée Internationale des populations autochtones a été célébrée, lundi au siège de l'ONU à New York. Lors de cette cérémonie, le secrétaire général de l'ONU soutient bec et ongles la démarginalisation de la population des autochtones qui selon lui, sont dépouillés de leurs terres, et dont la culture est dénigrée ou directement attaquée, alors que leurs langues et leurs coutumes sont reléguées au second plan...
Democrats Highlight Govt's Shameful Record on Indigenous Affairs here and at the UN
11 August 2004 - Democrats Senator Aden Ridgeway - The International Decade of the Worlds Indigenous Peoples has been marked in Australia by declining living standards for Indigenous Australians and a worsening relationship with the Federal Government, say the Australian Democrats. Senator Ridgeway said the decade was closing with Australia still attempting to remove any language of self-determination from the UN Draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
Indigenous Poeple's Day: Genocide It Is
9 August 2004 - IPS-Inter Press Service - When the Belgian Defence Ministry earlier this year blamed North America for the world's worst ever genocide over its killing of millions of indigenous peoples, outrage at the claim spotlighted a topic that rarely enters the public realm but has long been accepted by many native Americans and their supporters.
WIPO Director General Welcomes Growing Recognition Of Indigenous People's Rights
9 August 2004 - World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) - The Director General, Dr. Kamil Idris, welcomed the growing recognition by the international community of the need to promote the enjoyment of rights of indigenous peoples ... in the field of intellectual property (IP), he observed, this translated into greater respect and recognition for the cultural and intellectual framework and knowledge systems in which traditional cultural expressions (TCEs), traditional knowledge (TK) and associated genetic resources are developed, maintained, and transmitted to future generations within the traditional or customary context.
Populations autochtones : un 10e anniversaire qui doit déclencher des mesures concrètes
9 August 2004 - Trop longtemps dépouillés de leurs terres, attaqués dans leurs langues, leurs coutumes et leurs cultures, les peuples autochtones ont fait appel à l'ONU. Il est temps que le processus engagé se traduise par des actes concrets, déclare Kofi Annan à l'occasion du 10e Anniversaire de la Journée internationale des populations autochtones.

Action Needed Now To End Abuse Of World's Indigenous Peoples
9 August 2004 - The United Nations today marked the International Day of the World's Indigenous People with calls to governments, intergovernmental organizations and the international community at-large for urgent action to end the gross human rights abuses, discrimination and marginalization that all too often are still their lot in society.
Kofi Annan lauds rich indigenous cultures - Ghana News Agency

U.N. Set to Designate Second Indigenous Decade
28 July 2004 - allafrica.com - A second U.N. decade spotlighting indigenous peoples is a step closer after the world body's economic and social council (ECOSOC) recommended another 10-year project after the existing decade expires Dec. 30. The decision will go before the 191-member U.N. General Assembly (GA) whose annual meeting begins in September. In their recommendation the members of ECOSOC, one of the U.N.'s five main bodies, said a second decade would have to take its mandate from a review of the first 10 years, and include concrete goals and adequate resources to ensure those aims could be met..
Presentation to the Twenty Second session of the Working Group on Indigenous Populations
23 July 2004 - Joint Statement on behalf of FAIRA, Forest Peoples Programme, Innu Council of Nitassinan, Ogiek Cultural Initiatives Programme, and Philippine Indigenous Peoples Links - Mr Chairman, with reference to the difficulties currently being experienced in finalising the text of the draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, we would like to make specific reference to the position of the United Kingdom on collective human rights. As UK or Commonwealth-based organisations we condemn the position stated by the UK government that collective human rights for indigenous peoples do not exist.
Aboriginals of Australia: Statement at the WGIP
23 July 2004 - Les Malezer, FAIRA - We take this opportunity to give our strongest support to this example of high utilization of expertise from human rights experts and the authorities of Indigenous Peoples, and to the pooling of knowledge and ideas. We are certain this is the intended approach in the International Decade of the World's Indigenous Peoples' Program of Action which gives emphasis to our participation at all levels of management and decision-making.
Populations en quete de droit
23 July 2004 - Libération (France) - La haute commissaire aux droits de l'homme, Louise Arbor, dansant au coeur de la grande ronde de célébration en l'honneur de Leonard Peltier, Indien lakota anishinabe, détenu depuis vingt-neuf ans dans une prison américaine et reconnu prisonnier politique par Amnesty international. Hier à Genève, dans le parc des Nations unies en marge de l'ouverture de la Journée internationale des peuples autochtones, c'était une vision surprenante. Mais représentative d'une volonté de l'ONU de faire progresser la prise de conscience internationale face aux discriminations dont souffrent des peuples spoliés de leur terre, dépossédés de leur culture, profondément niés.

Chirac veut lutter contre la "dissolution" des peuples premiers
23 June 2004 - Liberation (France) - Jacques Chirac a déclaré mercredi que la France refusait "la fatalité d'une dissolution progressive" des peuples premiers et a appelé de ses voeux une "rupture" politique et juridique afin de reconnaître leurs particularismes en droit international.
Chirac: "il est temps que la dignité des peuples autochtones soit protégée" - AFP
Acques Chirac reçoit les peuples amérindiens à l'Elysée - Presse Canadienne (Canada)

Stolen Generations case may go before UN
7 June 2004 - Legal avenues are being explored to take the case of the Stolen Generations to the United Nations Human Rights Commission.

The Participation of Indigenous Peoples in the United Nations System's Political Institutions
27 May 2004 - Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission - Lecture by Professor Dr. Erica-Irene A. Daes at the Castan Centre for Human Rights
Black Voice catches ear of world
23 May 2004 - The initiative by Aboriginal writer, director and musician Richard Frankland to form a political party for indigenous Australians has attracted international attention.
If it's good enough for Iraq why not us - Damaging Australia's Reputation
21 May 2004 - Statement from UN by ATSIC NSW Metropolitan Zone Commissioner Cliff Foley - I am dumbfounded that the Australian Government can so strongly support the imposition of a democratic model on the people of Iraq, while virtually at the same time using strongarm tactics to take an equally democratic model away from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the basis for determining indigenous representation at the national and international levels.
UN told government backward on indigenous issues
21 May 2004 - A senior Aboriginal leader has used a United Nations meeting in New York to condemn the policies of the federal government.
Indigenous Peoples Speak Out: The Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
20 May 2004 - Cultural Survival - More than 1,000 indigenous people and indigenous rights advocates are gathered at the United Nations in New York City for the third session of the U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.
Federal Government Stooge Misleads UN
14 May 2004 - Statement by ATSIC Northern Territory Central Zone Commissioner Alison Anderson - On behalf of the ATSIC Board of Commissioners I would like to register my disgust at the misleading claims and distorted facts presented to the United Nations this week by an Indigenous woman employed by the Federal Government. The government-appointed Chairperson of the Indigenous Land Corporation, Ms Shirley McPherson had absolutely no right to speak on behalf of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples at the annual UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.
UN Forum: Indigenous Women Need Rights, Health Care
11 May 2004 - UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Native women die earlier, have more children and are more frequently attacked by the men in and out of their community, according to delegates attending a U.N. forum on indigenous people.
Mulheres indígenas têm menos direitos, diz fórum da ONU
11 May 2004 - NAÇÕES UNIDAS - Reuters - Mulheres indígenas morrem mais cedo, têm mais filhos e são agredidas por homens de dentro e de fora de suas comunidades com mais frequência, disseram delegados reunidos em um fórum da Organização das Nações Unidas (ONU) sobre povos indígenas.
UN Secretary-General's address to the opening of third session of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
10 May 2004 - New York - I welcome you all to the Third Session of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, and offer a special welcome to the indigenous women of the world, who are the special theme of this Session.
Annan calls for solidarity and respect as UN indigenous peoples forum opens
10 May 2004 - With native peoples worldwide continuing to encounter systemic prejudice and discrimination, United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan today called on the international community to confront such ill-will head on, in a spirit of solidarity and respect, to help indigenous peoples overcome a history of inequality.
UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
10 May 2004 - Statement by Ms Shirley McPherson, Chairperson of the Indigenous Land Corporation on behalf of the Australian Delegation - The special theme of this, the third session of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, is devoted to Indigenous Women, and was prompted by a recognition of the significant contributions made by those women to their communities and of the special challenges that they face. As an Indigenous Australian woman it gives me great pleasure to address the forum on behalf of the Australian government.
UN Addressed by Two Indigenous Australian Women
Paper Trail Grows at U.N. Indigenous Forum
8 May 2004 - MONTREAL (IPS) - The lengthy list of reports submitted to the only full-time United Nations body dedicated to indigenous peoples prior to its 2004 session is a sign of its success, say some observers. For others, it is a bad omen.
International Dance Day - Year 2004 - International Dance Day Message
29 April 2004 - International Theatre Institute/UNESCO - Stephen Page: Dance is the original most ancient form of human expression. Through the body and physical language, dance has a powerful connection with the emotional and spiritual worlds.
UN to hear Aboriginal plight
28 April 2004 - Aboriginal health workers will tell the world just how bad indigenous health services are in Australia at a meeting with the United Nations next month. The chairman of the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) Tony McCartney said the group would raise its concerns about indigenous health during a major presentation to a UN sub-committee in May.
Life of Aborigines second worst on earth
28 April 2004 - The quality of life of Australia's Aborigines is the second worst on the planet, according to a Canadian study of 100 countries. Only China performed worse, according to a United Nations index that measures human development.
UN human rights commission extends mandate of expert on indigenous rights
21 April 2004 - UN News - The mandate of the United Nations human rights expert who records and tries to help correct violations of the rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous people has been renewed for another three years by the UN Commission on Human Rights.
Indigenous Peoples and the Creation of an Inclusive International Legal System
14 January 2004 - Carnegie Council - Our guest, John Scott, focuses on a human rights-based approach to social justice for aboriginal and indigenous peoples. He has worked as a high school teacher, an aboriginal educational advisor, an indigenous policy officer, a university lecturer, and a senior manager at the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission. He has a particular interest in biodiversity and the protection of traditional knowledge.
Australian Un human rights chair 'a shame', says Aborigine
7 January 2004 - How can a racist country like Australia have a seat on the United Nations Human Rights Commission, much less chair it ? That's the question burning the gut of Aboriginal activist Michael Anderson.
Yorta Yorta to take title case to UN
13 September 2003 - The Yorta Yorta people of Victoria and NSW are preparing to lodge a complaint with the United Nations, claiming that the High Court's rejection of their native title bid denied them their inherent cultural rights.
Return of the native
1 September 2003 - New Humanist (UK) - On Human Rights Day 1992, the United Nations proclaimed an International Year of the World’s Indigenous People. A Decade for Indigenous Peoples was subsequently launched, to run from 1995 to 2004, and a Forum of Indigenous Peoples established. The inaugural meeting of the Forum, held in Geneva in 1996, was unfortunately disrupted by gatecrashers. A self–styled delegation of South African Boers turned up and demanded to be allowed to participate on the grounds that they too were indigenous people, and that their traditional culture was under threat from the new African National Congress government. They were unceremoniously ejected, and no doubt their motives were far from pure, but the drama might usefully have drawn attention to the difficultyof defining and identifying Indigenous People.
Second Session of Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues Opens in New York
17 May 2003 - Cultural Survival - Over 1,500 delegates converged on the New York headquarters of the United Nations this week for the second session of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues. Indigenous representatives, representatives of member states, and officials from international institutions such as the World Bank and the World Trade Organization met daily in Conference Room Two for six hours each day to wrestle with the issues of economic and social development, the environment and the methods of work of the Forum itself.
In Their Words – Voices from the Second Session of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
17 May 2003 - Cultural Survival - Below are excerpts from some statements made in the first few days of the second session of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues at the United Nations headquarters in New York.
As Permanent Forum Meets Down the Hall, Fake Didgeridoos Removed from Shelves at UN Gift Shop
17 May 2003 - Cultural Survival - The United Nations gift shop at its headquarters in New York is a wondrous affair, with magnificent artifacts drawn from the four corners of the globe. Divided into small sections, we see exquisite wood carvings from Ghana, dazzling Turkish ceramics, beautifully crafted dolls from China, and other representative works of member nations. Then in one corner, near some toy Koalas made in China, is a rack containing nine ‘Australian’ didgeridoos. Close inspection shows that they are all manufactured in Indonesia.
Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues takes center stage at United Nations
9 May 2003 - NEW YORK - On May 12, indigenous nations and supporters will gather at United Nations headquarters in New York for the second session of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues. With several hundred million indigenous people in the world, the forum was created to address issues indigenous peoples around the world are facing.
Speech by ATSIC Charman, Geoff Clark to Permanent Forum
Australia to stand firm over 'racist' sign
26 April 2003 - The Independent (UK) - Australian government is preparing to flout a demand by the United Nations for it to intervene to remove the word "nigger" from a sign on a sports stadium in Queensland.
Interview with Tom Goldtooth of the Indigenous Environmental Network
15 March 2003 - In Motion Magazine (US) - Tom Goldtooth "is the executive director of the Indigenous Environmental Network, a network of over 250 indigenous communities in North America. That includes Canada, the U.S. and some in Mexico. We also network with the indigenous peoples in Mesoamerica as well as South America and some in Africa." This interview was conducted during the United Nations World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg.
Stand-off on indigenous rights
26 December 2002 - Australia is the sole remaining country opposing the right of indigenous people to "self-determination" in United Nations negotiations towards an international statement of indigenous rights.
International Human Rights day
10 December 2002 - Statement by representatives of Indigenous Peoples, nations and organizations meeting in Geneva.
The Kimberley Declaration
20-23 August 2002 - International Indigenous Peoples Summit on Sustainable Development, Khoi-San Territory, Kimberley, South Africa "We the Indigenous Peoples of the World assembled here reaffirm the Kari-Oca Declaration and the Indigenous Peoples' Earth Charter. We again reaffirm our previous declarations on human and environmental sustainability."
Indigenous people get voice
14 May 2002 - United Nations: The world's indigenous peoples have held their first official forum, demanding the right to collective ownership of land and payment for their medicinal knowledge.
Address to the first session of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
13 May 2002 - United Nations Deputy Secretary-General - The Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues is a milestone in the struggle of thousands of indigenous peoples to win recognition of their rights and identities. We should give credit first and foremost to indigenous peoples themselves for coming together behind the idea of a Forum. Next, the Economic and Social Council - and in particular those members that long argued for greater participation of indigenous peoples in the United Nations -- deserves congratulations for its visionary decision to establish the Forum. And last but not least, the High Commissioner for Human Rights and her staff deserve praise for their hard work.
Tim to tell World about Aboriginal issues
1 May 2002 - Canberra student Tim Goodwin will be taking indigenous youth issues to the world next week when he goes to New York to address the United Nations special session on children.
Report by UN Special Rapporteur, Commission on Human Rights: Mission to Australia (PDF doc) 2002
UN Report on racism should be taken seriously
27 March 2002 - HREOC - Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner... Dr William Jonas, called on the Federal Government to treat seriously the concerns raised by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Racism in his report on Australia to the UN Commission on Human Rights.
Human Rights in Contemporary Australia
17 November 2001 - Speech: Dr Sev Ozdowsk - I am delighted to be invited to speak today at the Tasmanian Branch of the United Nations Association of Australia's Human Rights Seminar. Despite its rather grand title, this presentation will be a relatively modest attempt to set out the key challenges for human rights in Australia as I see them at the outset of my term as Human Rights Commissioner. Let us begin with a quick survey of the state of human rights internationally and in Australia today.
Aborigines' international hero unites warring parties
10 August 2001 - "Jack Beetson fights for the stolen generations," says the TV clip to be shown around the world about the Aboriginal leader the United Nations has named as one of only 12 Unsung Heroes.
We ignore UN rights report at our peril
29 December 2000 - Australia must recognise the increasing links between international trade and human rights, writes Angela Ward (Associate Professor in International Law at Essex University, and junior counsel to Cherie Booth, QC).
Australia is the only developed country whose government has been condemned as racist by the United Nations
13 October 2000 - By John Pilger. There is no doubting the efficiency of the Sydney Olympics, the friendliness of the people, the beauty of the setting; but there was a political façade. Soon after the Aboriginal runner Cathy Freeman won her gold medal, the cabinet of John Howard’s government met in Canberra to mount yet another attack on her people by planning to change the Land Rights Act.
UN reports finds Australian aborigines disadvantaged
1 September 2000 - BBC - A United Nations report says that Australia's Aboriginal people continue to be disadvantaged in employment, housing, health and education.
Facing the wrong way on human rights
31July 2000 - Australia is displaying increasing ambivalence towards the international human rights regime. Such ambivalence has been manifest in tardiness in complying with international reporting obligations and the rejection of a series of adverse findings by independent UN bodies.

UN censures treatment of aborigines
31 July 2000 - Guardian Unlimited - Australia has come under renewed fire from the United Nations for the way it treats its Aboriginal population.

Cherie Booth tells UN of `cruel and inhuman punishment.
20 July 2000 - The complaint by Ms Cherie Booth, QC, alleges "cruel and inhuman punishment". It says mandatory sentencing laws in the Northern Territory and police practices associated with them discriminate against Aborigines in comparison with their effect on other people.

Canberra denies unease over Blair
15 July 2000 - The Federal Government has denied embarrassment over the involvement of Cherie Booth, the barrister wife of British Prime Minister Tony Blair, in an international legal challenge by Aborigines to the government's mandatory sentencing laws.

A Black Day in London
8 July 2000 - In the British Parliament, a Labour MP, Mr Jeremy Corbyn, tabled a motion calling on "the governments and peoples of Australia to mark the Centenary of Federation by committing themselves to redress discrimination and disadvantage" of Aborigines.

Prime Minister's disregard of human rights obligations shocks A.I.
18 February 2000 - Amnesty International (UK) - In an ironic coincidence, the United Nations Secretary General's praise for Australia's assistance to East Timor today contrasts with the Australian Prime Minister's refusal to accept that universal human rights standards equally apply to his own country...

Australian Government's dismissal of UN criticism undermines hard-earned credibility in human rights diplomacy
19 March 1999 - Amnesty International (UK) - The Australian government's inappropriate attitude to United Nations criticism on its "racially discriminatory" practices puts at stake the credibility of Australia's human rights diplomacy...

Australia defends 'racist' land law
13 March 1999 - BBC - Australia has begun its defence at the United Nations against charges of racially discriminating against Aborigines. The Committee to End Racial Discrimination, in Geneva, wants Australia to explain changes to laws on Aboriginal land rights.

Prescriptions for the Problem: What is being done to improve the human rights problems of indigenous peoples?
January 1998 - Earlham University - Contents: Prescriptions from Important Actors: What is being done? Intergovernmental Organizations: United Nations; Council of Europe; Organization of American States. Nongovernmental Organizations. Critique and Suggestions: What else can be done?

Indigenous peoples emerging on the world stage
23 July 1993 - Third World Network Features - For some time indigenous peoples were denied recognition and a role in international fora. This has changed with the ILO Convention on Tribal and Indigenous Peoples and the UN Commission on Human Rights' establishment of a Working Group on Indigenous Populations.

Treaties, agreements and "constructive arrangements": indigenous people and the legal landscape
24 November 1992 - United Nations Information Centre in Sydney for Australia, New Zealand and the South Pacific - Many treaties between indigenous people and the Governments of the countries in which they live carry great symbolic and spiritual meaning. To indigenous people, treaties are seen as providing recognition of their right to self-determination and a guarantee of respect for their collective rights. Indeed, for people whose recent history has been largely one of discrimination and marginalization, marked by land dispossession, forced relocation, cultural assimilation and, in some cases, genocide, a foundation of legal protections is considered vital.
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