Australian Senate rejects National Sorry Day
Senate rejects National Sorry Day
"I am extremely
disappointed that the Government has refused to acknowledge
the importance of National Sorry Day to
Aboriginal
Australians, and refused to support even the
smallest symbolic gesture to recognise the grief caused by
the removal of children and the pressing need for
reconcilliation."
"However, given how very little was in yesterday's budget to address the huge gaps in health, housing and employment for Aboriginal Australians I am disappointed but not altogether surprised."
Senator
Siewert was responding to the defeat by the Government in
the
Senate today of a motion calling on the Senate to
recognise National
Sorry Day. The motion, put by Senator
Rachel Siewert was supported by the ALP, Greens and the
Democrats but opposed by the Liberals, Nationals. Family
First abstained from the vote.
The motion sought to correct a motion changing of the name of National Sorry Day to the 'National Day of Healing' last year - which was put by Senator Aiden Ridgeway at the behest of the Secretary of the National Sorry Day Committee (NSDC) and supported by the ALP and the Greens. At the time the Senators were not aware that community consultation hadn't taken place and the name change did not have the support of the NSDC.
"It is
nine years since the Bringing Them Home report was tabled
in
Parliament, and yet so very little has been done to
implement what were a very practical and achievable set of
recommendations," she said.
Senator Siewert addressed the chamber at length on the personal trauma caused by childhood removal and the growing gap between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and other ordinary Australians.
"It is a source of deep national shame
that at a time at which most
Australians have never had
it better many of our Nation's first peoples still live in
Third World conditions."
Her speech can be found at: http://www.rachelsiewert.org.au/