I wrote my PhD on sexual abuse of Indigenous children – Dutton never asked me for advice
dutton #dutton
Like many Aboriginal people across the country, I work in my community every day for change. We want our children safe and protected, our language and culture alive, our relationship with our lands, with which we have a sacred connection, respected. For too long governments have made our people invisible, much like our grandparents before us who were denied equal rights and relegated to the reserves on the outskirts of town. Too often today our voices are not respected.
Over a decade ago, I published my PhD on Aboriginal child sexual assault and the justice system, highlighting a decade of inquiries across Australia led by Aboriginal women whose recommendations were largely ignored by governments.
Dr Hannah McGlade is from the Kurin Minang people and is an international human rights law expert.Credit:Tony McDonough
Aboriginal women and children have never been protected by the settler state. Our women and children were violently targeted, experiencing widespread rape, sexual violence and murder while white men were protected and acted with impunity. This is still a “taboo” issue – the shocking violence of white men towards Indigenous women and children sanctioned by the law. Even today, Aboriginal women, raped and murdered, are routinely denied justice and the “rule of law”, and while perpetrators are both Indigenous and non-Indigenous, we know justice is stacked against Aboriginal women.
For many years we have called on government to address violence against women, consistent with our UN obligations. We called for a national Council of Indigenous women, a separate national action plan to address violence, and a taskforce of Indigenous women leaders and experts. I’ve also appeared before the Human Rights Council and at least five UN bodies arguing why Australia must increase efforts to address violence against Indigenous women and girls. Recent federal commitments are the result of the voices of Indigenous women over many years – but for most of that time, it seemed government would not hear us, as if we were invisible and our women’s lives didn’t matter.
On January 26, it is time to reflect on the silence that has met our pleas for change.
Loading
I have never felt as though Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has shown meaningful interest in the lives of Indigenous women and children. His claim to be concerned about sexual abuse of children in Aboriginal communities seems self-serving, deflecting attention away from Indigenous femicide and the denial of our rights to self-determination through the Voice to parliament.
However, Dutton uses the horrific issue of child sexual abuse to justify his scepticism about an Indigenous Voice to parliament.
A Voice to parliament protected by the Constitution can’t be abolished at the whim of conservative governments who may think they “know best”. It’s a solid proposal for reform. That’s why we are witnessing a vocal No campaign, with Dutton demanding details of the Voice which he already has. He claims he wants to address issues such as sexual abuse of Aboriginal children. If he cared so much, surely he would have spoken with Aboriginal women who have been working so long to stop this abuse.