AUSTRALIA
Follow-up - State Reporting
(i) Action by Treaty Bodies
CERD, CERD/C/SR.1763 (2006)
COMMITTEE ON THE ELIMINATION OF RACIAL DISCRIMINATION
Sixty-ninth session
SUMMARY RECORD OF THE 1763rd MEETING
Held at the Palais des Nations, Geneva,
on Thursday, 3 August 2006, at 10 a.m.
...
FOLLOW-UP PROCEDURE (agenda item 7) (CERD/C/AUS/CO/14 and Add.1; CERD/C/LAO/CO/15 and Add.1; CERD/C/69/Misc.9)
38. Mr. KJAERUM (Follow-up Coordinator) recalled that five States parties had been due to submit their comments on the follow-up action they had taken in response to the Committee’s concluding observations and recommendations. They were: Australia, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, France and the Lao People’s Democratic Republic. Australia and the Lao People’s Democratic Republic had submitted their responses, and reminders had been sent to the other States parties. The response of France had just been received, but he had not yet had time to study it.
39. He had discussed the responses received from Australia and the Lao People’s Democratic Republic with the relevant country rapporteurs, and had made a number of recommendations. In respect of the comments of Australia, contained in document CERD/C/AUS/CO/14/Add.1, he recommended that the Chairperson, on behalf of the Committee, thank the Australian Government for its detailed and timely response. In respect of the Government’s remarks on the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC) (see the Committee’s concluding observations, document CERD/C/AUS/CO/14, paragraph 10), the Committee should ask to be kept informed of any changes in the mandate and structure of the Commission and emphasize the need to respect the Principles relating to the status of national institutions for the promotion and protection of human rights (the “Paris Principles”; General Assembly resolution 48/134, annex). With reference to the abolition of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC) (document CERD/C/AUS/CO/14, para. 11), the Committee should emphasize the importance of dialogue between the Government and indigenous peoples and the responsibility of the Government to provide a forum for that dialogue which involved elected indigenous representatives.
40. With regard to the Native Title system, the Committee should ask for information to be included in Australia’s next periodic report, especially concerning the reforms proposed in September 2005. Finally, the Committee should ask the Government to take into account its views on the concept of informed consent, as laid out in its general recommendation No. 23 on indigenous peoples.
...
CERD, A/61/18 (2006)
...
Chapter IV. Follow-up to the consideration of reports submitted by states parties under article 9 of the Convention
...
462. As at 18 August 2006, follow-up reports had been received from the following States parties on the implementation of the recommendations regarding which the Committee had requested information within a year: Australia (CERD/C/AUS/CO/14/Add.1), the Lao People’s Democratic Republic (CERD/C/LAO/CO/15/Add.1), and France (CERD/C/FRA/CO/16/Add.1). The Committee continued the constructive dialogue held with two of these States parties, Australia and the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, by sending them letters with comments and requests for further information...
...
CERD, A/62/18 (2007)
Annex IV
OVERVIEW OF INFORMATION PROVIDED BY STATES PARTIES ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS
Sixty-sixth session (21 February-11 March 2005) -
Follow-up reports due by 11 March 2006
State party |
Date of receipt of follow-up report |
Session at which follow-up report was discussed |
Australia |
5 April 2006 |
Sixty-ninth session |
... |
|
|
(ii) Action by State Party
CERD A/54/18 (2001)
Annex VIII
Comments of the Government of Australia on decision 2 (54)* adopted by the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination on the special report of Australia
On 11 August 1998, the Committee requested the Government of Australia to provide it with information on changes recently projected or introduced to the 1993 Native Title Act, on any changes of policy as to Aboriginal land rights, and on the functions of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner. The Committee acted under article 9, early warning measures and urgent action procedures, of the Convention.
The Committee made its views known on these matters on 18 March 1999. The Government of Australia expresses its concern with elements of those views. In doing so, the Government acknowledges the recognition by the Committee that the Government cooperated fully with the Committee, including by providing a detailed written submission and sending one of the Government's most senior legal experts on indigenous issues to appear before the Committee.
However, the Government of Australia was disappointed that the written views of the Committee did not record the substance of the Government's submission and evidence on key issues reported on by the Committee. The following comments seek to redress what the Government of Australia considers to have been the unfortunate omission of relevant material from the Committee's report that, by its absence, supports a point of view on the issues before the Committee which the Government contests.
As a general point, the Government of Australia does not believe that past discrimination against Australia's indigenous peoples in relation to their rights to land has endured. Indigenous land rights legislation operates in various states and territories of Australia. The Australian High Court has recognized the native title rights of Australia's indigenous people to their lands (in the Mabo (1992) and Wik (1996) decisions), and the Australian Parliament has enacted laws to protect those rights (in the Native Title Act 1993 in response to the Mabo decision, as amended in 1998 in response to the Wik decision).
________
* See paragraph 21 of the present report.
Amendments to the Native Title Act
The Committee raised concerns about the amendments made to the Native Title Act in 1998. The
Government of Australia notes the views of the Committee, but does not agree with them. The High Court decision in Wik that native title could exist on pastoral lease land required the Government to reconsider some of the provisions of the original Act, which did not accommodate this possibility, and to deal with significant uncertainty as to the operation of the Act. This reconsideration was not arbitrary. Rather, the amendments proposed by the Government were a considered response to address specific situations, in particular where native title rights coexist with the rights of others. The Government did not accede to requests from significant sections of the community that it seek to extinguish native title rights on pastoral lease land. It rejected this option for a number of reasons, including its obligations under the Convention.
The issues raised by native title in Australia are complex. It is necessary to look at the Mabo and Wik decisions, and the overall substantive effect of the Native Title Act, and other relevant legislation and programmes, to consider the balance struck between native title rights and the rights of others. As the Committee acknowledges, the original Native Title Act balanced the rights of indigenous and non-indigenous title holders; the Government of Australia believes that the amended Act continues to maintain an appropriate balance between the rights of native title holders and the rights of others.
The Committee noted in particular four areas of concern in the 1998 Amendment Act.
The validation provisions inserted by the 1998 Amendment Act are much more limited in effect than the validation provisions in the Act passed in 1993, and in the Government's view were required by the Wik decision. The new provisions essentially allow for the validation of mining interests granted over pastoral lease land before the Wik decision, when it was assumed that native title could not exist on pastoral lease land. The validation of such mining interests does not extinguish native title. Compensation is payable for any effect on native title, and notification of the mining interests granted in the period is required to assist compensation claims.
The confirmation regime seeks to provide a much greater level of certainty in relation to the areas of land which are not subject to native title, and therefore the areas of land which can be claimed. It seeks to avoid lengthy, costly and adversarial litigation by allowing states and territories to clarify where native title has in the past been extinguished. The confirmation regime seeks to implement the common law position, expounded by the High Court in Mabo and Wik. The confirmation of extinguishment provisions only applies to about 21 per cent of Australia, leaving 79 per cent of Australia able to be claimed by native title holders.
The High Court in its decisions, the original Act, and the 1998 amendments recognized that past actions by governments could not be undone. However, the Government of Australia recognizes that present and future policies can seek to remedy the effects of such past actions, and a range of policies, including provisions of the Native Title Act, seek to do so.
Even where the confirmation provisions apply, the Amendment Act allows native title claims to be made in certain circumstances, including where other persons no longer have an interest in the land. The Parliament has established and funds the Indigenous Land Corporation and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund, which enables indigenous people, in particular those who are unable to claim native title, to purchase land by agreement with the current owner. The Land Fund will grow to a guaranteed capital base of $A 1.3 billion to enable such purchases to be made. In addition, indigenous land rights legislation exists in several states and territories of Australia, and this enables indigenous people who may not have native title rights to obtain land. These measures are designed to remedy historical dispossession and facilitate restitution.
The pastoral lease provisions seek to strike an appropriate balance between the rights of native title holders and the rights of pastoral lessees on pastoral lease land. On the basis of the Wik decision these two interests can coexist, but the rights of the pastoral lessee prevail. This is confirmed by the 1998 Amendment Act, which sets down some basic rules in relation to what things pastoralists can do, and what things pastoralists cannot do, where native title exists. The activities which pastoral lessees are able to undertake cannot extinguish native title. These amendments in fact prohibit pastoralists obtaining an upgrade of their lease to freehold or any exclusive tenure.
The Act also includes significantly expanded provisions in relation to agreements between native title holders and others, including pastoralists. The Government hopes that these provisions will be used by native title holders and pastoralists to establish agreed arrangements for coexistence on pastoral lease land.
When the right to negotiate was developed, the assumption was that native title would exist principally on vacant Crown land in Australia and would therefore amount to "ownership" rights in relation to that land. On that assumption, and reflecting the special relationship of native title holders (and also claimants) to their land, the right to negotiate set out certain procedures to be followed before mining grants could be made or some compulsory acquisition of land by government undertaken. The Government's position is that the full right to negotiate is not appropriate in relation to pastoral lease land that native title holders share with pastoralists, and that there should be more parity between the rights of native title holders and the rights of pastoralists.
The 1998 Amendment Act therefore allows state and territory parliaments to put in place alternative regimes to the right to negotiate on pastoral lease land. Such regimes must meet specified criteria which recognize the particular interests of native title holders and require consultation and a right to object to the mining or acquisition. These regimes are also subject to Commonwealth parliamentary scrutiny.
In addition to these four areas, the Native Title Act, as amended in 1998:
Recognizes and protects the native title rights of Australia's indigenous people to their land;
Allows native title to be claimed over about 79 per cent of Australia's land. The Commonwealth Government provides funding for such claims. They are determined by agreement of the relevant parties, or by an independent judicial process which emphasizes mediation; and
Significantly limits any future extinguishment of native title. Generally, native title can only be extinguished in the future by agreement with the holders, or by a wholly non-discriminatory acquisition process that also applies to others with interests in the land.
Therefore, the Government of Australia believes there is no breach of the Convention by the Native Title Act.
Process of consultation
Australia cannot see any basis for the suggestion that article 5 (c) of the Convention was not complied with in relation to the 1998 Amendment Act. Indigenous Australians have the same high level of political rights as all other Australians. There were significant consultations between the Government and indigenous Australians in relation to the 1998 Act, including several with the Prime Minister, as there were with other interests. The 1998 Amendment Act was made by the democratically elected Parliament of Australia in a prolonged and open process. During detailed consideration of the 1998 amending legislation by the Parliament, significant amendments were made that addressed many indigenous concerns.
"Suspension" of the Act
The Government of Australia cannot simply suspend the implementation of the 1998 Act, as suggested by the Committee. The Act was made by the Parliament of Australia and operates as the law of Australia, to which the Government is subject. The constitutional validity of the Act can be challenged in Australian courts, though no such action has been taken yet, and its operation will be determined by those courts.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner
As the Committee was advised, Dr. William Jonas has been appointed as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner. The proposed restructuring of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, to confer the current functions of the Commissioner on the Commission as a whole, is not discriminatory in any way. The same change is proposed for all specialist commissioners. All the current functions of the Commissioner with respect to the human rights of indigenous Australians will be given to the restructured Commission. The Government believes the restructured Commission will be better able to address the full range of issues regarding indigenous Australians.
Overcoming disadvantage
The Australian Government's overall priority in indigenous affairs is to support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to overcome a history of disadvantage within Australian society, through a combination of initiatives designed to address health and welfare needs, while encouraging economic development and self-reliance.
A concerted effort is being made to pursue tangible improvements in the critical areas of indigenous health, housing, education and employment. The Government is funding strategies which encourage commercial enterprise and long-term self-reliance, rather than perpetuating welfare dependency. Australian Government spending on indigenous specific programmes is now at an historic high level in real terms.
In the area of health, the Government has centered its efforts on establishing and expanding health services in rural and remote communities. These services provide improved daily health care for indigenous people and enable indigenous communities to take control of local health outcomes. Similarly, government-funded indigenous-specific education programmes assist indigenous students to pursue higher education, thereby improving their prospects of obtaining employment in the mainstream employment market. The Government also funds numerous business development programmes for indigenous Australians to assist them to achieve lasting economic independence.
The results of these policies are clearly evident in basic socio economic data showing improvements in indigenous health, stronger educational outcomes, better housing and greater home ownership, and increasing numbers of indigenous people in skilled and professional occupations.
The Government recognizes the importance of land in providing opportunities for greater social and economic development, as well as for fostering the maintenance and development of culture. In addition to the recognition of common law native title rights since 1992, many Australian jurisdictions have enacted legislation over the last three decades (as noted above) which provides for land claims and, in many instances, enables indigenous people to be involved in decision-making about land management and heritage protection. As already noted, there is also (and has been for the past 25 years) a programme of government-funded land purchases principally for the benefit of those indigenous people unable to avail themselves of native title or statutory claims processes. Fifteen per cent of the continent is currently owned or controlled by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.
National reconciliation is also at the forefront of Australia's indigenous affairs agenda.
The Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation coordinates strategies to enhance the relationship between indigenous people and the wider Australian community, with the aim of achieving a formal statement of reconciliation by 2001. The Council has recently released a draft declaration, and four proposed strategies to advance reconciliation, as a basis for public discussion. The Government has launched a national campaign through which community organizations will develop projects to promote harmony between people and groups of different cultural backgrounds.
In summary, the Government's approach in indigenous affairs seeks to overcome disadvantage and support the genuine aspirations of indigenous people to achieve greater self-sufficiency. It aims to ensure that all Australians share equally in a common future which will form the basis of a lasting reconciliation.
CERD A/55/18 (2000)
Annex X
Comments of the Government of Australia on the concluding observationsa adopted by the committee on the elimination of racial discrimination on the tenth, eleventh and twelfth periodic reports of Australia
The Australian Government has carefully considered the Committee’s concluding observations on Australia’s tenth, eleventh and twelfth periodic reports issued on March 2000. While noting some positive commentary, the overall thrust is unduly negative. The Australian Government rejects these comments. It approached the CERD meeting in good faith and sent a high-level delegation, led by the Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs and Minister Assisting the Prime Minister for Reconciliation, the Hon. Phillip Ruddock MP. Australia provided extensive written and oral information in order to engage constructively with the Committee.
The Australian Government is very disappointed that the Committee’s concluding observations ignored the progress Australia has made in addressing indigenous issues, gave undue weight to NGO submissions, and strayed from its legitimate mandate. The Australian Government is also deeply concerned about the lack of consideration the Committee accorded to its views, and to its outstanding record of commitment to international human rights obligations.
Following the issue of the Committee’s concluding observations, the Government in March 2000 initiated a review of its engagement with United Nations treaty bodies, which will involve, inter alia, consideration of the working procedures of CERD. The Government will announce the conclusions of the review in due course.
a See paragraphs 24-43 of the present report.
CERD/C/AUS/CO/14/Add.1 (2006)
Comments by the Government of Australia on the concluding observations of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
[5 April 2006]
Additional report of Australia
1. In this document, the Government of Australia submits its additional report pursuant to rule 65, paragraph 1, of the rules of procedure of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination in response to the request by the Committee, expressed in the concluding observations (CERD/C/AUS/CO/14) adopted on 10 March 2005 following the consideration of the fourteenth periodic report of Australia during the Committee’s sixty-seventh session, to forward information within one year on the implementation of the recommendations contained in paragraphs 10, 11, 16 and 17 of the concluding observations.
2. Paragraph 10 of the concluding observations reads as follows:
“The Committee notes that the Australian Human Rights Commission Legislation Bill 2003 reforming the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC) has lapsed in Parliament, but that the State party remains committed to pursuing the reform of the Commission. It notes the concerns expressed by the HREOC that some aspects of the reform could significantly undermine its integrity, independence and efficiency (art. 2).”
“The Committee notes the importance given by the State party to the HREOC in monitoring Australia’s compliance with the provisions of the Convention and recommends that it take fully into account the comments expressed by the HREOC on the proposed reform, and that the integrity, independence and efficiency of the Commission be fully preserved and respected.”
Government of Australia response in relation to paragraph 10
3. The Government of Australia is committed to reform of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986 in order to improve the structure and processes of the Commission. The Government welcomes comment and discussion about its proposed reform. Consistent with its usual approach, the Government will consider possible improvements to the bill that was previously introduced, including the comments expressed by the HREOC on the proposed reform. The content of the bill is a matter for the Government.
4. Paragraph 11 of the concluding observations reads as follows:
“The Committee is concerned about the abolition of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC), the main policy-making body in Aboriginal affairs consisting of elected indigenous representatives. It is concerned that the establishment of a board of appointed experts to advise the Government on indigenous peoples’ issues, as well as the transfer of most programmes previously provided by the ATSIC and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Service to government departments, will reduce the participation of indigenous peoples in decision-making and thus alter the State party’s capacity to address the full range of issues relating to indigenous peoples (arts. 2 and 5).”
“The Committee recommends that the State party take decisions directly relating to the rights and interests of indigenous peoples with their informed consent, as stated in its general recommendation XXIII. The Committee recommends that the State party reconsider the withdrawal of existing guarantees for the effective representative participation of indigenous peoples in the conduct of public affairs as well as in decision- and policy-making relating to their rights and interests.”
Government of Australia response in relation to paragraph 11
Abolition of ATSIC
5. In 2004, the Government of Australia implemented reforms to the administration of Indigenous affairs to improve outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and to provide better coordinated services across government. These arrangements included the decision to abolish the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC).
6. ATSIC was established in 1990 as a Commonwealth statutory authority to represent and advocate on behalf of Indigenous people, advise government on Indigenous policy issues, and deliver a range of services to Indigenous people.
7. An independent review of ATSIC, completed in November 2003, found that ATSIC had lost touch with the concerns of Indigenous people and no longer had the confidence of the Indigenous community. ATSIC was an elected body. However, despite the efforts to make it work, its election arrangements created internal tensions, and apparent conflicts of interests eroded public confidence in its funding decisions. Only one in five Indigenous Australians eligible to vote in ATSIC elections did so.
8. The Government of Australia has determined that ATSIC did not provide for the effective representative participation of Indigenous Australians in the conduct of public affairs or in decision- and policy-making relating to their rights and interests, as indicated by the independent review. The decision to abolish ATSIC did not remove any guarantees for effective representative participation of Indigenous Australians. Those guarantees are entrenched in Australia’s representative system of government, its system of compulsory voting, and legislation that prohibits racial discrimination.
New forms of consultation
9. The Government of Australia continues to consult Indigenous Australians in a number of ways.
Indigenous Coordination Centres
10. The Government has established the Office of Indigenous Policy Coordination, which includes a network of 30 regionally based Indigenous Coordination Centres (ICC), each with staff from a range of government agencies, to coordinate service delivery to Indigenous Australians. Staff from the ICCs interact directly with community members who have direct input into matters that affect them. The ICCs, in turn, respond to the priorities and needs of Indigenous communities and seek to develop suitable service responses.
National Indigenous Council
11. The Government of Australia has also established a National Indigenous Council (NIC), which held its inaugural meeting in December 2004. The NIC is not a representative body and is not intended to be a replacement for ATSIC. Whilst it is a key source of advice to Government, the NIC will not be the Government’s sole source of advice regarding Indigenous Affairs. Advice will not be sought from the NIC on specific funding proposals or specific planning or programme matters related to individual communities or regions.
12. Fourteen original members of the all-Indigenous NIC (currently 11) were appointed by the Government of Australia on the basis of their expertise in areas of importance to improving the lives of Australia’s Indigenous people, including health, education and business. The NIC is chaired by Dr. Sue Gordon AM, the first full-time and first Aboriginal Magistrate appointed in the Children’s Court of Western Australia (WA).
13. The Terms of Reference of the NIC are to:
(a) Provide expert advice to the Government of Australia on how to improve outcomes for Indigenous Australians in the development and implementation of policy affecting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people;
(b) Provide expert advice to the Government on how to improve programme and service delivery outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, including maximizing the effective interaction of mainstream and Indigenous-specific programmes and services;
(c) Provide advice on Indigenous Australians’ views on the acceptance and effectiveness of Government of Australia and state and territory government programmes;
(d) Provide advice on the appropriateness of policy and programme options being considered to address identified needs;
(e) Provide advice to the Government on national funding priorities;
(f) Alert the Government to current and emerging policy, programme and service delivery issues;
(g) Promote constructive dialogue and engagement between the Government and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, communities and organizations;
(h) Provide advice on specific matters referred to it by the Minister; and
(i) Report to the Minister as appropriate on the NIC’s activities and achievements.
Representative networks
14. The Government of Australia has supported Indigenous people to develop representative networks through regional consultation processes. The consultations were held in most places before the abolition of ATSIC and were designed to facilitate the development of appropriate mechanisms for ongoing communication between Indigenous people and governments. The consultation time frames were set by the different Indigenous communities. The new networks will help articulate and draw together community views across a whole region, several communities or single community, and provide a means for contributing to the design and delivery of services or initiatives in that community or region.
Involvement in agreements
15. Regional Partnership Agreements and Shared Responsibility Agreements are two mechanisms through which governments and Indigenous communities work in partnership to achieve regional and local priorities. They are both key mechanisms to ensure effective representative participation of Indigenous peoples in decision- and policy-making relating to their rights and interests.
16. Regional Partnership Agreements (RPA) are agreements negotiated between Indigenous communities and governments (including federal, state and territory and local) to provide a coherent government intervention strategy across a region that addresses the priorities of Indigenous people. Two RPAs have been signed to date with many more being developed: one in the remote Ngaanyatjarra Lands in Western Australia and the other in western New South Wales.
17. At the local level, Shared Responsibility Agreements are agreements between communities or families and governments to work together and share responsibility for achieving community and family goals. These agreements challenge governments to craft appropriate service delivery responses, rather than standard responses, and challenge communities to actively contribute to the achievement of their goals.
18. The Government also notes that:
- Majority Indigenous boards govern a number of bodies such as the Indigenous Land Corporation and Indigenous Business Australia;
- There are a number of Indigenous advisers who are consulted by government agencies on a range of matters; and
- Indigenous Australians have a considerable degree of autonomy over land management and community governance.
Free, prior and informed consent
19. Under international law, citizens have the right to take part in public affairs and political processes (i.e. under art. 25 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and art. 5 of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination). However, individuals and peoples do not have a right to participate in a State’s political process in a specific way. ATSIC was a special measure which achieved little for Indigenous Australians, and there is no obligation on States to maintain a particular special measure in perpetuity.
20. The Government of Australia also does not accept that it cannot, or should not, make any decisions directly relating to the rights and interests of Indigenous Australians without their “informed consent”, and is of the view that general recommendation XXIII is not binding. Although there have been some claims that Indigenous peoples have a right of “free, prior informed consent”, recent international discussions indicate that this remains a highly contentious issue amongst many States, and there is much objection to such a broad, unqualified right. Indeed, there was much dissent on the issue in relation to the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination’s general recommendation XXIII. In some situations, Governments must make decisions or take action that may not allow for prior informed consent procedures, or decisions may need to be made or action taken even if consent is refused (for example, because of public policy considerations or third party rights). It would be inconsistent with Australia’s democratic system if Parliament’s ability to enact and amend legislation was subject to the consent of a particular subgroup of the population.
21. Paragraph 16 of the concluding observations reads as follows:
“The Committee notes with concern the persistence of diverging perceptions between governmental authorities and indigenous peoples and others on the compatibility of the 1998 amendments to the Native Title Act with the Convention. The Committee reiterates its view that the Mabo case and the 1993 Native Title Act constituted a significant development in the recognition of indigenous peoples’ rights, but that the 1998 amendments roll back some of the protections previously offered to indigenous peoples and provide legal certainty for Government and third parties at the expense of indigenous title. The Committee stresses in this regard that the use by the State party of a margin of appreciation in order to strike a balance between existing interests is limited by its obligations under the Convention (art. 5).”
“The Committee recommends that the State party refrain from adopting measures that withdraw existing guarantees of indigenous rights and that it make every effort to seek the informed consent of indigenous peoples before adopting decisions relating to their rights to land. It further recommends that the State party reopen discussions with indigenous peoples with a view to discussing possible amendments to the Native Title Act and finding solutions acceptable to all.”
Government of Australia response in relation to paragraph 16
22. The original concerns raised by the Committee regarding the 1998 amendments were the subject of an extensive inquiry by the Government of Australia Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund (PJC). In June 2000, the PJC issued a majority report in which it found that “the amended Act is consistent with Australia’s obligations under the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination”. The Government of Australia’s position on the 1998 amendments to the Native Title Act was clearly explained in Australia’s thirteenth and fourteenth reports to the Committee, and the Government of Australia’s view has not changed.
23. The Government of Australia does not consider that Australia has an international obligation to obtain the “informed consent” of a particular group in order to exercise executive or legislative power. The United Nations Human Rights Committee has accepted that the political rights in human rights treaties do not give rise to a right to participate in the political process in a specific fashion. For example, they do not permit an individual to demand specific representation in an assembly or as an individual or as part of a group. Nor do they require a Government to undertake a particular form of consultation in relation to legislative initiatives.
24. However, the Government of Australia has consulted and will continue to consult extensively with all stakeholders, including Indigenous groups, about proposed reforms to the native title system and reforms to the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976 (ALRA).
25. In September 2005, the Government of Australia announced proposed reforms to the native title system to ensure native title processes work more effectively and efficiently. These reforms will not fundamentally alter the native title system, but are designed to promote resolution of native title issues through agreement making, wherever possible, in preference to litigation. As part of the consultation process for these reforms, the Government of Australia has undertaken extensive consultation with Indigenous people directly and through peak representative bodies. Officers from relevant government departments have also discussed the proposed reforms with the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner.
26. The Government of Australia has also recently announced that it would be reforming the ALRA. To date, around 45 per cent of land in the Northern Territory has been granted to Aboriginal traditional owners under ALRA. The reforms are aimed at allowing Aboriginal people to realize the long-term economic potential of their land, while maintaining fundamental features of inalienability, communal title and the traditional owner veto rights over development. Over the past eight years, there have been three public reviews of the ALRA and Land Councils, and Aboriginal people put forward their views in these processes. Many of the proposed changes were agreed by the Land Councils as part of joint proposals with the Northern Territory Government.
27. The proposed reforms to the native title system and the ALRA are consistent with the Government of Australia’s commitment to preserving native title and land rights. As the Australian Prime Minister made clear in his address to the National Reconciliation Planning Workshop on 30 May 2005, the Government of Australia is not seeking to wind back or undermine native title or land rights.
28. Through the consultation process for both of these reforms, Indigenous people have been afforded the right of effective participation in developing the amendments, and it is expected this will have a significant contribution to the outcome.
29. Paragraph 17 of the concluding observations reads as follows:
“The Committee is concerned about information according to which proof of continuous observance and acknowledgement of the laws and customs of indigenous peoples since the British acquisition of sovereignty over Australia is required to establish elements in the statutory definition of native title under the Native Title Act. The high standard of proof required is reported to have the consequence that many indigenous peoples are unable to obtain recognition of their relationship with their traditional lands (art. 5).”
“The Committee wishes to receive more information on this issue, including on the number of claims that have been rejected because of the requirement of this high standard of proof. It recommends that the State party review the requirement of such a high standard of proof, bearing in mind the nature of the relationship of indigenous peoples to their land.”
Government of Australia response in relation to paragraph 17
30. The Government of Australia understands that the reports to which the Committee refers relate to the implications of the decision of the High Court in Members of the Yorta Yorta Aboriginal Community v. Victoria [2002] HCA 58 (Yorta Yorta). The native title application covered 1,860 square kilometres of land and water in Victoria and New South Wales. In Yorta Yorta, the High Court upheld the Full Federal Court’s decision that the appellants did not hold native title rights and interests in the claimed land.
31. The High Court’s decision clarified fundamental principles of evidence of connection to land. In particular, it emphasized that for claimants to establish native title, they must be able to demonstrate that the native title they claim derives from their traditional laws and customs observed since sovereignty. The High Court noted that, while demonstrating the content of traditional laws and customs may present difficult problems of proof, it is open to a court to infer the content of traditional laws and customs in earlier times from the evidence.
32. Native title in Australia was first recognized through the common law (in the decision of Mabo v. Queensland (No. 2) (1992) 175 CLR 1 (Mabo)). Whilst the Native Title Act provides a statutory framework to facilitate the recognition and protection of native title, the substance and level of native title rights and interests are subject to common law recognition, and will develop as the common law evolves.
33. As the High Court noted in Western Australia v. Ward (2002) 191 ALR 1 (Ward), the requirements in the Native Title Act that relate to connection are based on Justice Brennan’s judgement in Mabo. The requirements to establish native title that the Yorta Yorta decision clarifies, namely that native title rights be sourced in pre-sovereignty laws and customs, can also be seen to be requirements of Mabo and the general law applying to native title.
Native title claims rejected on the basis of insufficient evidence
34. A native title determination is a decision about whether native title exists in the claimed area. Determinations of native title are made by either the Federal Court or the High Court. Native title applications can either be determined by consent (including unopposed applications) or through litigation.
35. As at 20 February 2006, there were 81 determinations made in relation to native title in Australia. Of these, 56 involved determinations in which native title was found to exist in the entire determination area or in parts of the area. Four of the 25 determinations in which native title was found not to exist were determined through litigation.
36. Yorta Yorta was the only fully litigated determination in which a determination of no native title was due to the claimants being unable to provide sufficient evidence of continuous observance and acknowledgement of traditional laws and customs.
37. In the Darug Peoples claim (Gale v. Minister for Land and Water Conservation for the State of New South Wales [2004] FCA 374), the Federal Court found that there was no native title in respect of a claim over 10 hectares of land on the basis that there was insufficient evidence of continuous connection with the land by the claimants. However, this finding followed the withdrawal of the native title claimants from the proceedings. The Court proceeded with the determination on the basis of preliminary evidence filed by the claimants and evidence presented by the other parties to the claim. Although no native title rights were found to exist in the claim area, the Court recognized that the relevant land had previously been granted to an Indigenous body under New South Wales land rights legislation.
38. In the remaining two litigated determinations in which native title was found not to exist, the finding of no native title was based on other reasons, such as extinguishment.
39. Of the remaining 21 determinations where native title was found not to exist, 17 were the result of applications made by non-native titleholders seeking a determination that native title did not exist over a particular area of land or waters. These applications generally cover discrete small areas, and many were made by Aboriginal groups in New South Wales who have been granted statutory rights over the land by the New South Wales government, but cannot deal with the land until native title is finally determined. Sixteen of these applications were not opposed by the traditional owners, and the remaining application was settled by consent.
40. The four remaining determinations that native title does not exist were settled with the consent of the native title claimants (consent determinations). There were two claims in Wotjobaluk (both in Clarke on behalf of the Wotjobaluk, Jaadwa, Jadawadjali, Wergaia and Jupagulk Peoples v. State of Victoria [2005] FCA 1795) and the Ward decision. In each of these three cases, the consent determination was also accompanied by a separate determination in which native title was recognized over particular areas. The remaining determination was made in Kelly v. NSW Aboriginal Land Council [2001] FCA 1479. In that case the native title claimants entered into an Indigenous Land Use Agreement (ILUA) surrendering their native title to the State of New South Wales and subsequently consenting to the determination that native title does not exist.
41. It should also be recognized that the existence of evidentiary difficulties in particular cases does not necessarily prevent native title claimants from reaching outcomes which enable them to maintain a relationship with their traditional lands. For example, in June 2004, notwithstanding the determination of no native title, the Victorian government concluded a joint management agreement with the Yorta Yorta people. The agreement creates a forum for including the Yorta Yorta people in the management of major public lands within their traditional country.
Review of the standard of proof
42. The High Court decisions in Yorta Yorta and Ward clarified important principles about native title, including fundamental principles concerning evidence of connection to land and what is required to establish native title. It would not be appropriate for the Government of Australia to significantly alter these principles, which have been articulated through judicial determination of native title matters.
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