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If our Native Australians could receive half the TLC and cash which is lavished on Tamils and Afghans who sneak in by boat, they would think they were in paradise. The buck passing goes on.The SA Government, Anglicare, Catholic Centacare and UnitingCare Wesley all scrambled to find clothes, food and blankets for the new arrivals and beds were in short supply.
SA Families and Communities Minister Jennifer Rankine wants other governments to share the burden.
"We're going to do our best to make sure they are safe and they are well and then we will negotiate with both the Commonwealth and the Northern Territory Government about how we move forward in relation to their wellbeing," she said.
The Minister for Central Australia, Karl Hampton, says the NT Government will not pay to house the Aboriginal people now in SA.
Australia is to contribute almost a quarter of a billion dollars to a global campaign to improve the health of women and children.
The United Nations has unveiled a $40 billion plan to improve the health of women and children around the world.
As part of that, Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd has announced $225 million in new funding.
DOZENS of asylum-seekers are cashed up after being locked up, sharing $5.4 million in compensation payouts from taxpayers for injuries they suffered while in detention.
Official figures obtained by The Sunday Telegraph reveal more than 50 immigration detainees have pocketed an average of $100,000 each over the past two years.
LABOR is facing a significant budget blowout on immigration expenses due to a surge in boat arrivals this financial year.
The government allocated $327.5 million for offshore asylum-seeker management over 2010-11 based on an estimated 2000 irregular maritime arrivals.
Since July 1, however, 45 boats carrying 2229 passengers have arrived, with no additional operational budget provisions outlined in the mid-year economic and fiscal outlook. Since January 1, 118 boats have brought in 5654 asylum-seekers.
This works out at $163,750 per arrival by boat.
The proposed referendum on whether to include a reference to indigenous Australians in the Constitution just seems like yet another 'feel good' piece of tokenism from this government.
Why do we need a referendum for this, with all the associated cost?
(Perhaps the Constitution can't be changed without a referendum? Does anyone know on this?)
Just like The Apology, some mealy mouthed words about aboriginal people in the Constitution which I doubt many ever read or refer to, will be meaningless in terms of any improvement in their day to day lives, so bereft of optimism and hope.
This government seems to be increasingly floundering, unable to find a meaningful direction, and desperately trying to cover this up with motherhood statements like recognising aborigines in the Constitution.
The proposed referendum on whether to include a reference to indigenous Australians in the Constitution just seems like yet another 'feel good' piece of tokenism from this government.
Yes, I feel that it is just another Ruddlike symbolic gesture to divert attention from the government's failures. Lke the big "sorry" and the apology to the "stolen generation" it will not do anything to improve aboriginal health, education, housing or employment.
Very good summary of the situation, IMO. This is clearly a "whatever it takes" government.
Has this government actually done anything for the good of Australia? From what I see, it's all about what's good politically and personally and, if necessary, stuff Australia. For the sake of this great nation, I sincerely hope I am wrong.
I'm slightly confused here. I don't follow the Aussie media all that often so I don't have the latest, but what do you mean by "parity" or "equality"? Are we talking cash handouts? Or confining aboriginals to detention camps before shipping them off to somewhere else?Sails, if they really wanted to do something useful, they could forget the referendum and act now. It would be a simple measure to pass a bill giving native Australians parity with native Afghans, native Sri Lankans and native Iraqis who land illegally on our shores by boat.
No political party could justify opposing the bill. After all, I am talking about people who are more disadvantaged than these new arrivals.
I'm slightly confused here. I don't follow the Aussie media all that often so I don't have the latest, but what do you mean by "parity" or "equality"? Are we talking cash handouts? Or confining aboriginals to detention camps before shipping them off to somewhere else?
Reminds me certain group of people that were most likely to have bad back problems.
We are taken for a ride and looks nothing can be done to stop it.
Shelters turning more homeless families away
Australia's homeless shelters are full to the brim and cannot meet new demand for their services.
The Institute of Health and Welfare reports that on an average day, 59 per cent of all people who make a new request for immediate accommodation at a government-funded homeless service are turned away.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-12-15/more-homeless-families-rejected-from-shelters/3732194
And yet we didn’t stop / turn away the boats, but we happily turn away people in need.
Why don’t we look after those who are here first?
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