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| please report any broken links or other errors to want to come back later? click here to add this page to your bookmarks / favourites Australia's treatment of Aborigines 'appalling' - UN issues unprecedented criticism Government's stance '30 years out of date' Survival International - Media Release September 2000 - As athletes and spectators arrive in Sydney from all over the world, Survival today condemned Australia's treatment of Aborigines as 'appalling'. Survival's Director General Stephen Corry said, 'The Australian government seems hell-bent on doing everything it can to deny Aborigines their internationally-recognised rights, especially their land rights. Its stance can only be described as racist, and seems like a throwback to attitudes 30 years ago. Recent government legislation will make it very difficult for many Aborigines to reclaim land now occupied by huge ranches.' Two UN Committees have recently condemned the Australian government's treatment of its Aboriginal population. Anger amongst Aborigines has never been as high. Typical of the government's contempt towards them is its refusal to apologise for previous policies under which tens of thousands of Aboriginal children were removed from their parents. In contrast, many other countries such as Canada and Japan have issued apologies for historical policies that would be unacceptable today. Australia recently became the first 'western' country to be subject to the UN Committee for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination's early warning procedure. The Foreign Minister Mr Alexander Downer's response to UN criticism of mandatory sentencing laws (which disproportionately affect Aborigines) was that the UN would 'end up with its nose bloodied' if it continued to scrutinise Australia's affairs. The facts speak for themselves:
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