Add The Wire As Your Trusted Source
HomePoliticsEconomyWorldSecurityLawScienceSocietyCultureEditors-PickVideo
Advertisement

Thousands Protest Australia Day in Support of Native Aborigines

For many Aborigines, January 26 is 'Invasion Day' as it celebrates the arrival of white settlement and beginning of colonial subjugation.
Reuters
Jan 27 2017
  • whatsapp
  • fb
  • twitter
For many Aborigines, January 26 is 'Invasion Day' as it celebrates the arrival of white settlement and beginning of colonial subjugation.
Advertisement

Aboriginal protesters hold signs as they demonstrate outside the Victorian State Parliament on Australia Day in Melbourne. Credit: AAP/Alex Murray/Reuters

Sydney: Thousands of Australians staged protest marches on Thursday demanding the date of Australia Day, January 26, be changed as it celebrates the arrival of white settlement and the beginning of injustices suffered by the country's disadvantaged Aborigines.

Tens of thousands of people – many wearing the black, yellow and red colours of the aboriginal flag – gathered in Melbourne, The Age newspaper reported, while thousands more took to the streets of Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth.

Advertisement

For many Aborigines, who trace their lineage on the island continent back 50,000 years, January 26 is "Invasion Day", the anniversary of the beginning of British colonisation of their lands and their brutal subjugation.

"I'm here to commemorate all the aboriginal people who were murdered during the first stage of settlement," protester Neville Scarlett told The Age.

Advertisement

While the rallies were mostly peaceful, in Sydney a 20-year-old man was arrested, a police officer and protester were injured, New South Wales state police said.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said he did not support changing the date of Australia Day, which is celebrated as a public holiday with festivities from fireworks over Sydney Harbour and citizenship events to ancient aboriginal ceremonies.

"Everyone is entitled to a point of view but I think most Australians accept January 26 as AustraliaDay,” Turnbull told reporters in the national capital Canberra.

The protests come at a time when right-wing nationalist politics is on the rise in Australia, similar to the US and Europe, and there is little political appetite to tackle aboriginal rights issue.

Aborigines only gained citizenship in 1967 and a vote on whether to recognise Aborigines in the constitution as the country's first people has been on hold for years.

Australia's 700,000 or so indigenous Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people still struggle with the impacts of colonisation and track near the bottom of the country's 23 million citizens in almost every economic and social indicator.

Aborigines face a 10-year gap in life expectancy compared with other Australians and make up 27% of the prison population but are just three% of the population.

This article went live on January twenty-seventh, two thousand seventeen, at forty-five minutes past one in the afternoon.

The Wire is now on WhatsApp. Follow our channel for sharp analysis and opinions on the latest developments.

Advertisement
Make a contribution to Independent Journalism
Advertisement
View in Desktop Mode