Archive for the ‘Housing’ category

What Thorpe said about Australian indigenous peoples

July 30th, 2009
Ian Thorpe
Image via Wikipedia

Ian Thorpe, the Australian swimming hero, addressed the Beyond Sport London conference with the following:

“I realised my value to organisations trying to bring positive change lent enormous weight to these causes. I must say though this should be an outrage, because as an athlete I am not as qualified to comment on health or education as the health professionals and educators who daily tackle the big issues. In fact, it is a bit disappointing that a teenager’s opinion garnered more attention than those who had been working on their chosen causes before I was even born …

“I started to think of what impact my effort could have in places like Africa or South East Asia. I then visited some of the world’s neediest communities, places without access to planes and cars that seemed to be a world away … but now they were truly at my back door [in Australia].”

Thorpe went on to cite some of the problems confronting the indigenous communities with which his organization works: 93 percent of residents are illiterate; 80 percent of children have hearing impairments from curable infections; malnourished mothers give birth to seriously underweight babies; diabetes affects half of all adults; and kidney disease is at epidemic proportions.

“Rheumatic heart disease among the children in these places,” Thorpe continued, “is higher than in most of the developing world. But I was not visiting communities in the developing world, I was in the middle of Australia. Remote, yes, but this is Australia, a country that can boast some of the highest standards of living of any nation in the world …

“Australia’s grim record on health care for Indigenous people is by far the worst of any developed nation. Developed? How can a country be ‘developed’ when it leaves so many of its children behind? Australia has not provided its citizens with an equal opportunity for primary health care, education, housing, employment, let alone recognition and a life of dignity.”

Thorpe told the Beyond Sport summit he once believed that sufficient government finance was provided to its indigenous citizens.

“Like many people in Australia, I was completely unaware of the huge gap in health and education outcomes, let alone the differences of life expectancy. I, as many had, made an assumption; Australia is a rich country, don’t we throw a lot of money at that problem? It disgusts me to speak those words now, but that was what I thought,” he said.

Thorpe voiced the naïve hope that pledges by “all sides of government” to “close the gap” between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians, were “not another hollow promise that falls short”. He noted, however, “The truth is that none of the problems I have mentioned can truly be rectified until our government and my fellow Australians recognise the injustice faced by Aboriginal Australians and how they are denied so many human rights.”

The Olympic gold medalist then went on to direct his fire against the Northern Territory “intervention”, the program initiated in June 2007 by the former Howard government, with Labor Party support, under the false claims that it was aimed at protecting Aboriginal children in the Northern Territory from child abuse. The raft of punitive measures that have since been introduced include compulsory income management of all Aboriginal welfare and pension recipients, suspension of the Racial Discrimination Act (1975) and the seizure of Aboriginal controlled land. Elected to power in November 2008, the Rudd Labor government has maintained these retrogressive social policies in the face of growing Aboriginal opposition.

“The intervention,” Thorpe said, “was constructed by the previous government and has since been reported to have been assembled in the space of just one day. The irony is that Aboriginal people had been campaigning for decades about the living conditions and the neglect of their children within their communities.

“The programs to protect and nurture the children had been grossly neglected and underfunded by government over the last decade. What appears to be a political stunt and a grab for government control over Aboriginal people continues to this day under the new government.

“Once more an Australian government has claimed it is doing its best for Aboriginal Australians by taking over their communities, appointing white managers, more government bureaucrats, promising all kinds of things, if Aboriginal people will just sign over their communities under forty-year leases to the Federal Government. And politicians wonder why Aboriginal people do not trust them. The truth is for over 200 years Australian governments have neglected and patronized Aboriginal people.

“The intervention is unlikely to provide any lasting benefit to Aboriginal people because it tries to push and punish them, to take over their lives, rather than work with them.”

None of this was published by any Australian media until July 24. Thorpe made the speech on July 9, 2009.

Good on ya, Thorpie is all I can say.

Source:  www.wsws.org

Author: Richard Phillips

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Homelessness, 2001 census figures, Australia

July 18th, 2009

Of 100,000 homeless people in Australia on census night in 2001

  • 54% were Male.
  • 36% were between the age of 12-24.
  • 10% were under the age of 12.
  • 8.5% were Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders.
  • 23% were staying in boarding houses.
  • 49% were staying with friends and relatives.
  • 14% were sleeping rough.
  • 14% were staying in services funded through the SAAP.

Causes according to census

  • Domestic and family violence (22%)
  • Eviction/previous accommodation ended (11%)
  • Relationship/family breakdown (11%)
  • Usual accommodation unavailable (11%)
  • Financial Difficulty (10%)

The Australian Bureau of Statistics breaks the homeless numbers into 5 groups

  • ‘Rough sleepers’ – people who are living on the streets, with no formal shelter at all.
  • People with a space inside an Emergency shelter.
  • Those temporarily residing with friends.
  • Those living in Boarding houses.
  • Those living in caravan parks.

The 2001 census found that there were 99,900 homeless persons on census night.

The 2006 census found that there were 104,676 homeless persons on census night.

The depth of homelessness would be far greater now especially since the GFC

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Mansions vacant

July 16th, 2009
Four wheel drives line the streets of Toorak.
Image via Wikipedia

The other day I saw in the paper that 3 of many mansions in Toorak (the richest suburb in Melbourne) were vacant. Some had been vacant for decades. The owners had never rented then out, so rich are they.
Down the road from me too there’s a house which is vacant. It’s pretty basic and under executor’s orders, so I don’t know why that is. But there could be a good reason there, something legal perhaps.

These vacant homes with so many homeless about is wrong. As the financial global crisis hits deeper the homeless are the result of mortgage payment failure, or the rents are out of their range. My own son is forced to live at home again as he has no means of support, not even the dole or austudy. His course takes up so much time he finds it difficult to fit in working as well.

There is government subsidised housing in Australia, some of which are homes in suburbs, but most of which are tall skyscraper groups of buildings, like you see in English films. These become ghettos. The Labor government has promised some 20,000 new public houses but that falls far short of the number required.

» Read more: Mansions vacant

  • Share/Save/Bookmark