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Last Updated: 9 September 2010
The Chooky Dancers from Elcho Island in Arnhem Land

Can't touch this

9 September 2010

THOSE sensations from Elcho Island in Arnhem Land, The Chooky Dancers, are in Sydney this week to perform their new dance/theatre production, Wrong Skin, at the Sydney Opera House. Inspired by Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, the play tells the story of lovestruck teenagers who break traditional marriage laws, bringing trouble on themselves and their community.

 

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Gas threat


Kimberley Land Council chief executive Wayne Bergmann
9 September 2010

Premier Colin Barnett sparked fury last Thursday when he announced his Government’s decision to compulsorily acquire the site of a proposed $30 billion liquefied natural gas (LNG) hub at James Price Point, 60kms north of Broome. Wayne Bergmann, head of the Kimberley Land Council declared the move a potential ‘game-changer’ that could lead to the project’s collapse.

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Males take a stand


Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal men and boys say no to domestic violence
9 September 2010

AROUND 200 males marched through Alice Springs on Friday to call for an end to domestic violence in their communities. Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal men and boys took part, holding placards demanding a zero-tolerance approach to violence. The march marked the beginning of a campaign by the Central Australian Aboriginal Congress to deal with high levels of domestic violence.
 

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Purple patch for winning author


Author Jeanine Leane received her award from Qld Premier Anna Bligh.
9 September 2010

Jeanine Leane has taken out the Unpublished Indigenous Writer David Unaipon Award at the 2010 Queensland Premier’s Literary Awards for her first-time novel. It has been described as a ‘sad, hilarious and moving yarn’ but more than that, she says, it is a collection of poignant memories of her growing up years.
 

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Australia blasted by UN committee


Foundation for Aboriginal and Islander Research Action (FAIRA) Chairperson Les Malezer said it was time for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to take their campaign for a treaty to the world stage.
9 September 2010

AUSTRALIA has copped another serve from the United Nations for its treatment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) delivered a damning report last week on Australia’s failure to meet international commitments on eliminating discrimination. The committee also recommended that Australia moved towards negotiating a treaty between Indigenous and other Australians.
 

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Tassie bypass fight goes on


Archaeologist Rob Paton addresses the meeting.
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THE campaign to protect Aboriginal heritage at the centre of the Brighton Bypass road controversy was taken to Hobart’s town hall last week. A lunchtime public meeting organised by the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre (TAC) attracted an attentive crowd of about 250 who came to hear about the value of the site. Archaeologist Rob Paton compared the 42,000-year-old site, known as the Jordan River Levee site, to World War I sites like Gallipoli.
 

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Congress deadline looms


Congress interim co-chairs Sam Jeffries and Kerry Arabena
9 September 2010

THERE’S less than a week left to lodge nominations to attend the first annual meeting of the National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples (NCAFP). The gathering of 120 delegates in Melbourne from 30 November to 2 December will elect the co-chairs and directors who’ll lead the Congress for the next two years.Nominations to attend the meeting close next Monday, 13 September, but nominees must first be Congress members.

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Proud to the end


22 AFL Crows v Saint Kilda match at AAMI Stadium, Adelaide, on Saturday 28 August. The Adelaide Crows 9.11 (65) beat the Saints 5.7 (37). (AAP Image)
9 September 2010

ANDREW McLeod has been hailed as a champion and a hero after ending an all-time great AFL career last month. The brilliant Adelaide Crow said he was proud of his journey from 'snotty-nosed young boy from the Territory' to revered status.

 

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KickStart in Sydney


Some of the Qantas KickStart boys meet Cathy Freeman and Greater Western Sydney coach Kevin Sheedy.
9 September 2010

FOR the first time, Sydney hosted the Qantas Australian Football League (AFL) KickStart Camp, which brought together 50 of the most promising Indigenous 14-15-year-old footballers. The camp was run by Koori Mail columnist and former Sydney 303-game superstar Michael O'Loughlin. The boys participated in high-performance training, playing at the Sydney Cricket Ground and learning from Indigenous role models.

 

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Webb to become an Eel


CARL WEBB
9 September 2010

PARRA-MATTA has confirmed the signings of North Queensland prop Carl Webb and former Canterbury and Cronulla backrower Reni Maitua for the 2011 National Rugby League (NRL) season. The pair have both agreed to two-year deals with the Eels, with Webb set to fill the gap left by retiring skipper Nathan Cayless.

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Happy AFL campers


Harley Bennell looks to get the ball away.
9 September 2010

INDIGENOUS up-and-comers feature in the list of young players invited to this year's AFL Draft Combine. Among them is this year's Larke Medallist and expected top-three Draft selection Harley Bennell, who will be with other potential stars of the future at the combine from 28 September until 1 October at the Australian Institute of Sport.

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Black stars fight it out


Edgar Wymarra, one of the Black Stars on the Wellington Fight Night card.
25 August 2010

WELLINGTON in central-western NSW will host a night of Aboriginal boxing on 11 September. The event, tagged as the Night of the Black Stars 2, will be a fundraiser for the Indigenous Boxing Academy. Organisers say the card will feature top NSW Aboriginal professional and amateur boxers together on the same card with local Wellington boxers.
 

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She's flying high


CASEY NARRIER
25 August 2010

WEST Australian high jumper Casey Narrier has her sights firmly set on representing her country – and her Aboriginal people – at the 2012 London Olympics. She gained a third-placing at the national championships earlier this year.

 

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Northern United look to finals


David Briggs junior breaks through for a try
25 August 2010

FINALS glory is again beckoning for Northern United. The predominantly Aboriginal rugby league club based in Lismore, northern NSW, is aiming to go one better this year after narrowly losing the 2009 Northern Rivers Regional Rugby League (NRRRL) grand final in their inaugural year. Northern United have already secured a finals berth after coming back from a slow season start to win eight games in a row. The club’s reserve grade side is also through to the season deciders.
 

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Winning artist's time has come


South Australian artist Jimmy Donegan with his winning work.
25 August 2010

UNTIL he was revealed as this year's winner of arguably the country's premier Indigenous art prize, South Australian artist Jimmy Donegan hadn't received much recognition for his work. Mr Donegan's vibrant canvas Papa Tjukurpa and Pukara took out both the $4000 general painting category and the prestigious $40,000 main prize in the 27th Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award (NATSIAA), announced at the Museum and Art Gallery of the NT (MAGNT) in Darwin on 13 August.

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$500,000 for NCIE


At the NCIE in Redfern, from left, Kateena Rose, Cecile Arif, Bobby Mailman, Kimberley Ella, NCIE CEO Jason Glanville, Premier Kristina Keneally, NCIE Director Sol Bellear, Suzanna Davison, Kristilee Cruse and Sherri Davison.
25 August 2010

REDFERN'S National Centre of Indigenous Excellence (NCIE) received a sizeable financial boost last week. NSW Premier and Minister for Redfern Waterloo Kristina Keneally toured the centre and handed over a cheque for $500,000 to assist it to support the next generation of Indigenous sporting and artistic leaders.

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NRL launches plan


At the launch, from left, Carl Webb, William 'Smiley' Johnstone, David Gallop, Tom Calma, Matt Bowen, Ty Williams and Johnathan Thurston.
25 August 2010

NATIONAL Rugby League (NRL) recently launched its second Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP) in Townsville last Thursday. Chief executive David Gallop outlined RAP's commitment to Indigenous communities through employment, education, health and sporting opportunities. He also said the NRL had reviewed all of its vilification policies.

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Participants shape up for military careers


A group shot of Indigenous Pre-recruitment Program graduates and trainers together with senior military officials.
25 August 2010 | by DARREN COYNE

THE Aboriginal recruits who recently took part in the Indigenous Pre-recruitment Program for the Australian Defence Force have shown they've got what it takes. Ernie Bridge, who heads up the WA-based training organisation Unity of First People of Australia (UFPA) said 36 participants had graduated and at least 80 per cent of them would pursue careers in the defence force, thanks to the support of UFPA.

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Recognition doubts


Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin announced that a re-elected Labor Government would pursue constitutional recognition of Indigenous people, but said bipartisan support was essential to its long-term success.
25 August 2010 | by MAHALA STROHFELDT

WHILE Indigenous groups across the country have welcomed pledges from the major parties earlier in the month to pursue constitutional recognition of Indigenous people, many remain sceptical that the promise will gain traction now the election is over. Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin announced to a Garma festival audience that a re-elected Labor Government would pursue constitutional recognition of Indigenous people.

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Gagged Wotton is welcomed


Gracelyn Smallwood, left, with Lex Wotton and his wife Cecilia. Mr Wotton has returned to live on Palm Island, and he and his wife Cecilia attended a NAIDOC dinner in Townsville on Friday, 13 August.
25 August 2010 | by ALF WILSON

PALM Island man Lex Wotton has made one of his first public appearances since being released from jail. Mr Wotton was jailed in November 2008 over riots on the island, sparked by the death in police custody of Mulrunji Doomadgee. Civil libertarians are outraged over a gag order imposed on Mr Wotton - referred by many community members as 'The Warrior' - as part of his parole conditions.

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Bold, beautiful women feature in Qld calendar


Aunty Bess Catley, Aunty Val Burns and Adelaide Saylor at the calendar event.
25 August 2010

BRISBANE-BASED Aboriginal businesswoman Sandra Georgiou wants the bold and black Indigenous women of south-east Queensland to stand up and be recognised. With an idea to make these women - our aunties, mothers and sisters - feel great about themselves, Ms Georgiou has created a glossy 2011 Black Bold and Beautiful calendar launched last week in Brisbane.

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Constitutional recognition promised


Warnidilyakwa dancers performing at the Garma Festival.
11 August 2010

FEDERAL Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin pledged that a re-elected Labor Government would pursue support to include Indigenous Australians in the Constitution. She made the pledge at Garma, the cultural festival in north east Arnhem Land following pleas from Yolngu leader and Yothu Yindi Foundation Chairman Galarrwuy Yunupingu and other Indigenous leaders. The promise was made as Indigenous affairs struggled to rate a mention in the general election campaign.

 

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Complaint dropped by ALRM


Neil Gillespie
11 August 2010

THE Aboriginal Legal Rights Movement (ALRM) in South Australia has withdrawn its 2008 complaint to the United Nations about the Australian Government after having its funding increased. The ALRM chief executive Neil Gillespie said the Federal Government announced recently that it would honour its pre-election promise by increasing funding to Aboriginal legal services around the country by $34 million.


 

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Aquaponics a-go!


From left, students Bill Hansen and Craig Hansen and Challenger Institute of Technology lecturer Tony Bart.
11 August 2010

The Armidale Noongar Corporation (ANC), along with Challenger Institute of Technology, has been trialling a pilot commercial aquaponics system in Armidale, with surprising results. The system teaches the group how to sustainably cultivate fruit and vegetables, providing both training opportunities and the opportunity to produce an income. The system was designed by aquaculture and aquaponics lecturer Tony Bart and built by ANC members.

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Canning Stock Route from a new perspective


Artists in front of a painting which depicts the country surrounding the Canning Stock Route.d
11 August 2010

AN exhibition of artworks and multi-media displays detailing the Aboriginal experience of the world’s longest stock route has opened in Canberra. The art and objects were produced for the Canning Stock Route Project, a four-year program developed by FORM, an independent arts organisation based in Perth, which involved artists, traditional custodians and emerging Aboriginal curators and film-makers. The result of their work is Yiwarra Kuju: The Canning Stock Route, which is now on display at the National Museum of Australia.
 

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Death money paid


A protest in Perth last month calling for charges to be laid in relation to the death of Mr Ward.
11 August 2010

THE West Australian government has approved one of the largest ex-gratia payments ever made in Australia to the family of an Aboriginal Elder who died of heatstroke in the back of a prison van two years ago. The State’s Attorney-General Christian Porter announced the $3.2 million payment to the family of the man known as Mr Ward in Perth on 29 July.

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WA Aboriginal candidates make history


Political aspirants Glenice Smith (Greens), Dot Henry (First Nations) and Ken Wyatt (Liberals) have made political history by all contesting the one seat in the upcoming Federal election.
28 July 2010

THREE Indigenous candidates in Western Australia are contesting the same Lower House seat for the upcoming Federal election.The contest centres on the seat of Hasluck covering large parts of the Eastern and Hills suburbs of Perth, held by Labor’s Sharryn Jackson by just one per cent. Ms Jackson’s competitors include high-profile Nyoongar health professional Ken Wyatt, who is representing the Liberal Party, Yamatji Glenice Smith for the Greens and Nyoongar Elder Dot Henry for the newly formed First Nations Political Party.

 

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Our man in Canberra?


Ken Wyatt, tipped at the weekend to become the first Indigenous member of the House of Representatives. Newspix Image.
25 August 2010 | by KIRSTIE PARKER

In one of four knife-edge contests around the country, Liberal candidate and Noongar man Ken Wyatt is strongly expected to wrest the metropolitan seat of Hasluck from the Labor incumbent Sharryn Jackson by a slim margin. The 55-year-old senior Aboriginal education and health advisor said he would be elated to become the first Indigenous person in the House of Representatives, and would use his position to help close the gap on Indigenous health.  

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