The Australian Government is obviously intending to downplay and mislead public
opinion on the recent decsion by CERD (Committee
on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination).  The Australian Government
considers:

"The CERD decision was in line with what we had hoped for.  Originally it was
said to be an urgent decision and now that's been put
back until next year, at the normal [CERD] reporting time processes."

Perhaps the Australian Government should read the attached press release issued
by the UN Press Office.  (The attachment is in
HTML format and should be opened in a web browser such as Netscape Navigator or
Microsoft Explorer.  A text version has been
also attached, just in case....)

___________________________________
Les Malezer
General Manager
FAIRA Aboriginal Corporation
PO Box 8402
Woolloongabba  Qld  4002
Australia

Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
URL: http//www.faira.org.au
Phone + 61 7 33914677
Fax   + 61 7 33914551

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

COMMITTEE ON ELIMINATION OF RACIAL DISCRIMINATION EXAMINES SITUATION IN
AUSTRALIA, ADOPTS
DECISION


MORNING
HR/CERD/99/52
16 August 1999


The Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination adopted a decision
this morning expressing serious concern that envisaged
changes in policy by the Australian Government risked creating an "acute
impairment" of the land rights of indigenous communities.

The decision also reaffirmed decisions taken by the Committee in March in
reference to the situation in Australia.

The actions came as the Committee reviewed circumstances in the country under
its early warning and urgent action procedures.

Gay McDougall, the Committee Expert who served as rapporteur on the situation in
Australia, said the recommendations contained in
the Committee's March decisions had not been acted upon by the Government and
there had been no progress with regard to
indigenous land titles in Australia.  Rather, she said, the situation was
becoming of greater concern in that amendments to the Australian
Native Title Act were being brought into effect within the jurisdictions of the
various states and territories of Australia.

In March, the Committee expressed concern "over the compatibility of the Native
Title Act, as currently amended, with the State
party's international obligations" under the International Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination.  It further
noted with concern Australia's proposed changes to the overall structure of its
national Human Rights and Equal Opportunity
Commission which would abolish the position of Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Social Justice Commissioner and assign those
functions to a generalist Deputy President.  The Committee urged the Australian
Government "to suspend implementation of the 1998
amendments and re-open discussions with the representatives of the Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander peoples with a view to
finding solutions acceptable to the indigenous peoples and which would comply
with Australia's obligations under the Convention".

The decision of the Committee took note of comments received from the Government
of Australia and said those comments would be
included in its annual report.

Australia is one of 155 States parties to the Convention and is obliged to
submit periodic reports to the Committee on efforts to comply
with the treaty and also required, when requested, to supply additional
information under the Committee's early warning and urgent
action procedures.

Participating in the discussion were Committee Experts Mahmoud Aboul-Nasr,
Michael P. Banton, Theodoor van Boven, Regis de
Gouttes, Yuri A. Rechetov, Ion Diaconu, Agha Shahi, Mario Jorge Yutsis and
Michael E.  Sherifis.

Also this morning, the Committee continued its discussion of proposed revisions
to reporting guidelines with particular reference to
article 5 of the Convention, which says that States parties must undertake to
prohibit and to eliminate racial discrimination in all its
forms and to guarantee the right of everyone, without distinction as to race,
colour, or national or ethnic origin, to equality before the
law.

When the Committee reconvenes at 3 p.m., it will take up an initial report of
Kyrgyzstan (document CERD/C/326/Add.1).

Decision on Australia

In its decision on the situation in Australia, the Committee reaffirmed the
decisions of March 1999.  In adopting those decisions, the
Committee was prompted by its serious concern that after having observed and
welcomed over a period of time a progressive
implementation of the Convention in relation to the land rights of indigenous
peoples in Australia, envisaged changes of policy as to the
exercise of those rights risked creating an acute impairment of the rights thus
recognized to the Australian indigenous communities.
The decision said the Committee had considered in detail the information
submitted and the arguments put forward by the Government
of Australia.

The Committee took note of the comments received from the State party, which
would be included in the Committee's annual report
for 1999 to the General Assembly.  It decided to continue consideration of the
matter, together with the tenth, eleventh and twelfth
periodic reports of Australia, during its fifty-sixth session in March 2000.

Situation of Australia

GAY MCDOUGALL, the Committee Expert who served as country rapporteur on the
report of Australia, recalled that in its
concluding observations on the report of Australia in 1994, the Committee had
welcomed the decision of the High Court of Australia
recognizing the survival of indigenous title to land where such title had not
otherwise been validly extinguished.  The High Court case
constituted a significant development in the recognition of indigenous rights
under the Convention, Ms.  McDougall said.

Ms. McDougall further recalled that the Committee, acting under its early
warning procedures in August 1998, had adopted a decision
requesting information from Australia regarding proposed changes to the 1993
Native Title Act, changes of policy as to Aboriginal land
rights, and changes in the position of the function of the Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner.

Also, last March, the Committee had adopted a decision in which it expressed
concern over the compatibility of the Native Title Act, as
currently amended, with Australia's international obligations under the
Convention, Ms.  McDougall said.  She said the Committee had
urged the Government of Australia to suspend implementation of 1998 amendments
and re-open discussions with representatives of the
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples with a view to finding solutions
acceptable to the indigenous peoples and which would
comply with Australia's obligations under the Convention.

Ms. McDougall reported that the recommendations contained in the Committee's
decision of March 1999 had not been acted upon by
the Government of Australia and that there had been no progress with regard to
indigenous land titles in the country.  Rather, she said,
the situation was becoming of greater concern in that the amendments to the
Native Title Act were being brought into effect within the
jurisdictions of the various states and territories of Australia.  The rights of
indigenous Australians were being increasingly attenuated in
that respect, making it an ever-increasing likelihood that indigenous
Australians would permanently lose significant land title rights, she
said.

Other Committee members also made general remarks on the situation in Australia
and on the draft decision, later adopted, which had
been introduced by several of the Committee's Experts.  One Expert said the
Australian Constitution included no prohibition of racial
discrimination and that the Native Title Act amendment devolved to states of the
Australian Commonwealth many of the
responsibilities for native title issues in such a way that there was now no
legal instrument in Australia which the courts could apply to
invalidate discriminatory provisions.


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