Senate debates
Friday, 12 June 2020
Adjournment
Indigenous Australians
Pauline Hanson (Queensland, Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party) Share this | Hansard source
): It was quite interesting to listen to Senator Siewert's comments in saying that they weren't paid the wages. It was an understanding there at the time that a lot of the Aboriginals went to the properties and were given food and shelter and looked after, and they were happy. When they brought in wages, those Aboriginals then moved on. They didn't have shelter. They had nothing done for them. They didn't know how to. So it's a two-way street here.
I'm not denying what has happened in the past, and it is a crying shame. That will never happen again. But to keep dragging it up and making Australians feel that they aren't welcome in this country, that we stole their country—what has happened in the past can never change. We are all Australians together to enjoy this beautiful country together, united, but I'm sick of the division that's happening and that was quite evident last Saturday with the placards out there reading 'Black Lives Matter'.
I've raised on the floor of parliament this week that 'all lives matter', but that's of no interest to the other members on the floor of this chamber—other than one other Senator: Senator Malcolm Roberts. That is a crying shame because you're letting a lot of Australians down by not supporting 'all lives matter'. What does it matter if you actually say that? What is the problem? Are you too scared to understand that you are appealing to these lefties like the Greens pushing their agenda—these elitists who are allowing the whole system of victimisation? Didn't Rudd say sorry? Hasn't there been compensation? How much longer has this got to go on?
I just want to ask some questions here. Who's an Aboriginal? I'll tell you what: since 1971, at the first census, there were about 116,000. Now we've increased 459 per cent to 798,400. Why? I'll tell you why. The definition of 'Aboriginal' continues to be contentious and unclear in many cases. The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies provides an outline of a three-step working criteria for confirming Aboriginality, and this is usually accepted by government agencies and community organisations. The three points are: being of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent, identifying as an Aboriginal or Torres Straight Islander person or being accepted as such by a community in which you live or formerly lived. So we're getting people out there, possibly as white as me, claiming to be Aboriginal. We're basing our laws and funding on the fact that you're claiming to be Aboriginal. That's why there has been the increase of 459 per cent. It's a bandwagon. It's an industry. That's what we've created.
We're not looking at people on an individual needs basis. I've got people who are white who are sleeping in cars with their children. They can't get housing. They are disadvantaged. So jobs, health, education—everyone should be treated equally. But, because you ticked the box that says you're Aboriginal, you can have the benefits, like ABSTUDY. That's quite interesting: school term allowances of around $500 a year to pay for school supplies, away-from-base payments and reimbursement costs. ABSTUDY payments are also available to those serving jail sentences. You've got a fortnightly living allowance of $1,074 for those studying for their master's or doctorate. You've got the master's and doctorate relocation allowance of approximately $1,500, along with away-from-base travel allowance of up to $2,080 annually. These are all things in education. Then you go into legal services, home loans, health, royalties and mining. In the Northern Territory, the Aboriginal Benefit Account has $426 million.
Today Malcolm Roberts put up a notice of motion that was based on facts. He notes the 2020 Australian Institute of Criminology report Deaths in custody in Australia 2017-18 but was denied leave in the parliament here to state the facts. It says that in 2017-18 total deaths in police custody and custody-related operations were three Indigenous persons and 14 non-Indigenous persons. So the facts that they're out there advocating aren't the truth, but you won't allow the truth to be told here, because it doesn't suit your agenda. There are a lot more things that I wanted to say, but I will continue to raise this— (Time expired)
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