Aborigines
reclaim ownership of tribal homeland, by Kathy
Marks - 3rd Jan 2007
(Credit:
The Independent)
The Githabul, an Aboriginal tribe,
call the rainforest a "supermarket",
full of their traditional foods, such as turtles
and spiny ant-eaters known as echidnas. But when
they hunt these native creatures, they risk being
prosecuted and fined.
Not
for much longer. The Githabul are about to sign
an agreement with the New South Wales government
recognising their historic ownership of a large
parcel of the state, and giving them joint control
over 19 national parks and state forests.
The
area covers more than 6,000 sq km in northern
New South Wales, and includes World Heritage-listed
national parks with some of Australia's most picturesque
scenery, as well as rugged mountain peaks said
to be home to powerful ancestral spirits.
The
deal, biggest of its kind struck in New South
Wales, will create jobs for the 250 members of
the Githabul tribe, and give them the right to
traditional activities in the forests, including
hunting protected native animals.
Aborigines
have fought to reclaim their ancestral lands since
1992, when a landmark court decision rejected
the doctrine of terra nullius, the idea that the
continent was empty when the British arrived in
1788.
Last
year, a court in Perth ruled that the Noongar
people were the traditional owners of the city
and its surrounds, upholding a claim to a major
urban area for the first time. The state and federal
governments say it could restrict the public's
access to parks and riverbanks and are appealing
against the decision.
Native
title does not give Aborigines exclusive ownership,
but recognises their right to shared access. It
means they can look after sacred sites and care
for the land, as well as using it to hunt and
fish and camp.
Trevor
Close, who led the Githabul claim, told The Australian
that it was lodged because "our boys were
sick of being pulled up for doing what they had
always done". He said: "We are all people
of the rainforest. It is a supermarket of food."
The
agreement, to be signed next month, also opens
up the prospect of jobs - in forestry, tourism,
and land management - for people suffering from
poverty and high unemployment.
Tony
Fleming, director of the state department of environment
and conservation, said Aborigines would have "much
greater involvement" in the management of
the land. "I think for a lot of our visitors
to national parks, it adds a huge dimension to
their experience," he said.
"They'll
get access to the knowledge of the Githabul people,
the interpretation of this part of the state from
an Aboriginal perspective, and we as land managers
learn a lot from Aboriginal people about how to
look after these sorts of places."
The
area adjoins southern Queensland, and Githa-bul
elders hope to sign a similar agreement with the
state government, giving them access to land on
the other side of the border.
Warren
Mundine, chief executive of a group that funded
the New South Wales claim, described the deal
as "a watershed for the Githabul people"adding:
"The pride of that community is going to
change."
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