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    Australia condemned for `racist tendencies'

    By Miles Kemp

    Dr Samuel Kobia10 July 2004 - The World Council of Churches has condemned Australia as a nation it says has "racist tendencies".

    General Secretary of the council Dr Samuel Kobia made the comment in Adelaide yesterday following his visit to the Baxter Detention Centre and Aboriginal communities near Port Augusta.

    Dr Kobia, from Kenya, said Australia's international reputation had been damaged by the Federal Government's mandatory detention policy and Australia's treatment of Aboriginal people was still based in racist beliefs.

    "When I consider how the Aboriginal people are treated here and talking to them I cannot fail to detect some racist tendencies," he said.

    "I wouldn't however call the Australian people or country racist in the same way I talked of South Africa in the apartheid period because there have been commendable efforts." Dr Kobia criticised the abolition of ATSIC but said he had been "greatly encouraged" by Australia's process of reconciliation between the Aboriginal and white communities in recent years. Dr Kobia is one of the most significant Christian figures, as leader of the global protestant churches.

    Dr Kobia continued his attack on the Federal Government's mandatory detention policy, saying he had seen nothing as bad as the Baxter facility in any part of the world.

    His cited intimidation, blackmail, widespread depression, denial of information and psychological torture at the centre. "I consider what is happening at Baxter totally unchristian and a denial of their human rights.

    "I have not seen anything like this (Baxter) anywhere. The image of Australia has been gravely damaged by what is happening in these centres."

    Dr Kobia will address the National Council of Churches forum at Lincoln College in North Adelaide today.

    Source: Adelaide Advertiser


    Kobia expresses dismay at deteriorating Aboriginal situation in Australia

    World Council of Churches
    Press update

    9 July 2004 - "The right to self-determination is an inalienable right of Australian Aboriginals. It is unacceptable that in a democratic civilized country like Australia, the government denies the basic rights of the original inhabitants of the land," said World Council of Churches (WCC) general secretary Rev. Dr Samuel Kobia in his first public address in Australia.

    The WCC general secretary, who began an Australian visit at Port Augusta, South Australia, on 8 July, was welcomed by representatives of the original owners of the land in a traditional greeting at the old Umeewarra Mission at Davenport.

    Responding to the welcome, Kobia said that "We stand in this land with your permission, and we come here to express our solidarity with your struggle at a time when the Aboriginals are facing an unprecedented crisis in Australia."

    The Aboriginal leaders who spoke at the public meeting described how hard-won state Indigenous programmes are now being sidelined by the federal government, and how the democratically elected Indigenous voice in government is being curtailed through legislative measures.

    "A country which fought for the right to self-determination of the people in East Timor and Iraq, which at the same time is denying the first Australians who have been living here over 60,000 years, is a paradox," Aboriginal leader Khysstan Wanganeen stated.

    Expressing dismay about the deteriorating situation of Australian Aboriginals, Kobia warned that "the Australian government's recent decision to shift the Indigenous affairs and reconciliation programme from its current form as a special department to mainstream government administration will stall the reconciliation process." The Australian government has introduced legislation to disband the Aborigines' and Torres Strait Islanders' Commission (ATSIC), a decision which Kobia called "very unfortunate". Indigenous people see this as an attempt to silence the elected Indigenous voice.

    Kobia said that, after listening to Aboriginal people, he found the way they are treated reveals "some racist tendencies," although "he wouldn't call the Australian people or Australia as a country racist". "In any society, you will find individuals or some extreme organizations that would want to continue with racist attitudes," he added.

    Kobia also stressed the achievements in Australia's reconciliation process. "There are very commendable initiatives and efforts that the Australian people have made, both the churches and other communities." He emphasized that he is "encouraged by the process of healing and reconciliation that has been initiated by the churches in this country."

    "The government tends to put Aboriginal self-determination into the background," said Alwyn McKenzie, Port Augusta's ATSIC chairperson. "Indigenous people have an inherent right to be recognized as the first people of this country." To reach reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians, he suggested that "We must use the experience, the wisdom and the knowledge of all Australians, working in partnership."

    Accompanied by National Council of Churches in Australia (NCCA) president, Rev. Prof. James Haire, NCCA general secretary, Rev. John Henderson, and WCC Asia secretary, Dr Mathews George, Kobia visited Aboriginal elders at the Cooinda conference centre and the Pika Wiya Aboriginal health service, created in 1979 with a seed grant from the WCC. Later, he met with a large number of Aboriginal people at the Port Augusta Faith Community Centre.

    Kobia's programme in Australia ends on Sunday, 11 July, and includes a visit to the Baxter refugee detention centre, opening and delivering a keynote address at the NCCA trienniel forum in Adelaide, and meeting church leaders from around the country.

    For further information, please contact Juan Michel, WCC media relations officer, tel: +41 22 791 6153, mobile +41 79 507 6363, media@wcc-coe.org

    Source: World Council of Churches
    related links :
    • Church helps soothe Australia's Aborigines
      4 March 2004 - Ekklesia (UK) - The race riots in Australia's biggest city, Sydney, have focused attention on the role of the Church in helping to heal the country's fractured indigenous community reports the BBC. Dozens of police officers were injured in last month's confrontation in the inner-city district of Redfern. The violence was sparked by the death of an Aboriginal teenager, which is the subject of three investigations.
      Church helps soothe Australia's Aborigines - BBC
    • Pope says sorry to Aborigines
      23 November 2001- Pope John Paul II apologised to Australia's Aborigines and other indigenous peoples of Oceania for past "shameful injustices" of the Roman Catholic Church, in a message posted on the Internet yesterday.
    • God knows you should say sorry, new archbishop tells PM
      8 June 2001 - Is the Prime Minister out of step with God? Possibly, according to Sydney's new Anglican archbishop, at least over Aboriginal reconciliation and Uniting Church minister Harry Herbert agrees.
    • Church Leaders Take a Desert Trek to Bridge Australia's Divisions
      15 June 2000 - Christianity Today - Leaders of nine Australian churches have completed a pilgrimage of reconciliation—a week-long 1,900-mile bus trip to Australia's remote heart.

    Further information: reconciliation issues page - includes news index and external links


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