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Native Title Report 2000: Chapter 1: Nation in dialogue

Chapter 1: Nation in dialogue

The application of
human rights principles to native title has been the subject of an ongoing
dialogue taking place both nationally and internationally in the reporting
period. This dialogue has occurred between the Australian government and
and two UN treaty committees, on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
(August 1999 and March 2000) and the Human Rights Committee (HRC) (July
2000); between Indigenous non-government organizations and UN committees
on each of these occasions; between the government and Indigenous and
non-Indigenous representatives before the Parliamentary Joint Committee
on Native Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Fund (PJC)
in February and March 2000; and, at a broader level, among Australian
citizens and a range of institutions, as part of a continuing debate about
the meaning of reconciliation.

While this discourse
has elevated the overall level of understanding within the community and
within government of the meaning of equality in relation to Indigenous
people, it has not resulted in amendments to remove the discrimination
within the NTA. The NTA continues to authorise discriminatory state legislation;
case law continues to confirm the inadequate protection extended by the
NTA to native title holders; native title agreements continue to reflect
the inadequate bargaining power offered Indigenous people under the NTA
in relation to the management of their land; and Indigenous culture continues
to be eroded throughout Australia. The inevitable consequences of the
present legislative regime governing native title throughout Australia
if left unamended are documented in Chapter 5 of this report.

Yet, despite this
persisting discrimination, it is my conviction that over time the dialogue
on equality and human rights will produce tangible results for Indigenous
people. Through this process the notion of equality is informed by a range
of views that are tested against each other. Gradually positions change
as their proponents come to understand the impact of their 'logic' on
others. Apart from these internal mechanisms for modifying and testing
ideas and opinions, the context in which the dialogue takes place can
have a significant effect on the positions adopted and the arguments put.
This contextual effect was illustrated by the striking contrast between
the arguments put to the electorate by the government in the domestic
arena to justify the proposed amendments to the NTA in 1998 and its arguments
in the international arena as to why these amendments meet international
standards of equality under the International Convention on the Elimination
of all Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) and the International Convention
on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). In the domestic arena, the notion
of equality was used to justify the winding back of procedural and substantive
protections in the NTA on the basis that other landholders were not given
these same rights. In the international arena it was accepted by the government
that, because of its unique nature, native title required particular protection.
The government conceded that the appropriate standard of equality to be
applied to the amendments was one which permitted different treatment
where the distinct characteristics of the group justified this. It then
argued that the amended NTA met this international standard of equality.

The inquiry by the
PJC into the sustainability of the CERD Committee's decision (1)
was, in effect, a re-hearing of what had already been argued before the
CERD Committee in Geneva one year earlier. The context of this re-hearing
however was a domestic one in which the politics of 'balancing' interests,
fought out during the amendment debate, were to re-emerge.

The result was an
attempt in the majority report on the inquiry (2)
to conflate these two contexts, the domestic and the international, such
that human rights standards could be seen to justify past political deeds.
The CERD Committee's decision, on the other hand, emphasised the need
to separate human rights from political imperatives, seeking instead to
distil the non-derogable principles which must proscribe political will.

It is my view that
the survival of Indigenous culture within the broader Australian society
depends, not only on maintaining this separation, but in persuading others
that such a separation is fundamental to a civil society. If the power
of interests is to determine the basis of Australian society then Indigenous
people, as a small minority group, will continue to lose their culture,
their land, and their language to the will of the non-Indigenous majority.
If however human rights are given a heightened position within civil society,
acting as a brake on any one interest dominating and destroying the interests
of others, then Indigenous people will enjoy their unique culture while
still participating in the broader society. This is where I hope the dialogue
that others and I have been engaged in over the past year will take us.
While the immediate impact has not been felt, particularly in relation
to the NTA, the longer-term goal is to bring about this shift in thinking.

The dialogue with the Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Native Title

As indicated above,
the inquiry by the PJC into the CERD Committee decision that the amended
NTA did not meet Australia's obligations under the ICERD was an opportunity
to reappraise within a domestic setting the arguments raised by both the
government and Indigenous representatives before the CERD Committee. As
in the international arena, the PJC inquiry dealt with the fundamental
assumptions underlying the amendments to the NTA and evaluated these against
the standard of equality. Such a dialogue is invaluable, particularly
at a stage where the Act has been in operation for two years and is having
an impact on Indigenous communities throughout Australia.

Placing the international
law debate within a domestic setting also served a broader purpose. It
provided an opportunity to many groups with an interest in the native
title legislation, including the National Farmers' Federation and the
Minerals Council of Australia, to participate in the process of reconciling
their position with a human rights approach. Their participation broadened
the dialogue, giving it a distinctive character, quite different to that
which took place in Geneva one year before. As indicated, this process
of maintaining a domestic dialogue around human rights assists the development
of a civil society whose fundamental assumptions extend beyond self-interest.

Some of the important
issues that arose out of the PJC inquiry are now discussed.

Treating differences differently

An acceptance in
the majority PJC report that the standard of equality at international
law incorporates substantive equality distinguished the dialogue with
the PJC from public debate during the amendments to the NTA in 1998.

Equality, as the term is now understood under customary international
law, incorporates the idea that differences in treatment are permissible,
in order to achieve real or substantive equality.(3)

What this means is
that the government, in line with international human rights definitions,
accepts that racial equality is not always achieved merely by treating
individuals or groups of particular ethnic origin the same as those who
do not originate from that background. Different treatment is permitted,
and in many circumstances required, in order to achieve equality.

Judge Tanaka of the
International Court of Justice in the South West Africa Case, stated the
principle succinctly:

The principle of equality before the law does not mean the absolute
equality, namely the equal treatment of men without regard to individual,
concrete circumstances, but it means the relative equality, namely the
principle to treat equally what are equal and unequally what are unequal...
To treat unequal matters differently according to their inequality is
not only permitted but required.(4)

Having accepted that
substantive equality is an appropriate standard at international law,
the PJC was left to grapple with the question of what differences should
be treated differently in order to achieve real or substantive equality.

In evaluating the
PJC's response to this question it is important to bear in mind that from
a human rights perspective, the fundamental concern is that individuals
or groups are not discriminated against on the basis of their race. That
is, that they do not suffer disadvantage or invidious treatment because
of their racial origin. Differential treatment that does this is a breach
of international law. No rationale can justify or excuse such treatment.

Not all differential
treatment based on race has a negative, discriminatory effect. Some differential
treatment, such as measures to redress past discrimination, or to protect
the culture and language of a particular ethnic group, is aimed at ensuring
that the recipients of this treatment enjoy their human rights to the
same extent as others. This differential treatment is not discriminatory
and is the basis of a substantive equality approach.

It is also consistent
with the Committee's General Recommendation XIV which excludes differential
treatment consistent with the objectives and purposes of the Convention
from the definition of discrimination.

A differentiation of treatment will not constitute discrimination
if the criteria for such differentiation, judged against the objectives
and purposes judged against the objectives and purposes judged against
the objectives and purposes judged against the objectives and purposes
judged against the objectives and purposes of the Convention of the Convention
of the Convention of the Convention of the Convention, are legitimate.
In seeking to determine whether an action has an effect contrary to the
Convention, it (the Committee) will look to see whether that action has
an unjustifiable disparate impact upon a group distinguished by race.(5)
(emphasis added)

Far from such treatment
being outlawed by international law, there are occasions when such differential
treatment is required by conventions such as ICERD, in order to achieve
equality. The recognition and protection of native title illustrates this
point.

The recognition of
native title in the Mabo decision (6) is a
recognition of the distinct culture of Indigenous people. It is a title
to land that only Indigenous people can enjoy.

Native title has
its origin in and is given its content by the traditional laws acknowledged
by and the traditional customs observed by the indigenous inhabitants
of a territory. The nature and incidents of native title must be ascertained
as a matter of fact by reference to those laws and customs.(7)

The failure to recognise
and protect the distinct relationship Indigenous people have with their
land is a failure to give Indigenous culture the same respect that is
given to non-Indigenous culture. The High Court made it clear in Mabo
that the failure to recognise native title was discriminatory:

The theory that the
indigenous inhabitants of a 'settled' colony had no proprietary interest
in the land thus depended on a discriminatory denigration of indigenous
inhabitants, their social organisation and customs.(8)

The obligation to
recognise and protect the Indigenous relationship to land must be understood
in terms of a substantive equality obligation to treat differences differently.
The level of protection required to ensure native title holders are given
the same security in the enjoyment of their title as non-Indigenous title
holders must also be gauged from this same understanding. Equal protection
does not mean that native title holders are treated exactly the same as
non-Indigenous title holders. The protection must be directed towards
the enjoyment of the unique character of the title. My submission to the
PJC (Appendix 1) sets out in more detail how the amendments to the NTA
fail to provide the required level of protection measured against an equality
standard.

The PJC majority report

The majority report
of the PJC concedes the relevance of substantive equality to Australia's
obligations under ICERD, and then seeks to explain what substantive equality
requires of States at international law, and how the amended NTA meets
this standard.

Its approach to
this task is to distinguish substantive equality from formal equality,
the essential distinction being the treatment of difference. Substantive
equality permits different treatment on the basis of race in order to
achieve equality whereas formal equality requires racial groups be treated
the same.(9)

The next stage is
to determine what different treatment is permitted under substantive equality.
It is at this point that some confusion arises as to what principles justify
the adoption of differential treatment. Early in the majority report the
principle is pronounced to be:

Equality, as the term is now understood under customary international
law, incorporates the idea that differences in treatment are permissible,
in order to achieve real or substantive equality. The State must be able
to show that any such difference in the treatment of groups or individuals
is not arbitrary, and can be reasonably and objectively justified by reference
to the distinctive characteristics of the group or individual. The term
'discrimination' is now understood as meaning only unjustified or invidious
distinctions.(10)

This definition is
consistent with the fundamental concern of a human rights approach that
people or groups do not suffer disadvantage or invidious treatment because
of their racial origin. It is also consistent with the obligation that
underlies the recognition of native title - to give equal respect to the
cultural identity of people or groups.

The principle, that
differential treatment must not be invidious and must be justified by
reference to the distinct characteristics of the group or individual,
is significantly modified in a restatement of the principle later in the
report:

To be justified as a substantive equality measure, the different
treatment must be based on relevant or justifiable distinctions, and must
be appropriately adapted to the distinctive characteristics of the group
or individual.(11)

Significantly the
requirement that the treatment must not be invidious is not mentioned.
The justification by reference to the distinctive characteristics of the
group is now only one arm of the test which also permits 'relevant or
justifiable distinctions', without stipulating the criteria by which relevance
or justifiability is to be measured.

This shift in the
test is important because it raises the possibility that differential
treatment that has a detrimental effect on an already disadvantaged racial
group might be permitted through the substantive equality door even though
such treatment would not be permitted under a formal equality approach.

What was only a possibility
at this stage in the report becomes reality in the third manifestation
of the principle which is applied to the four sets of provisions found
by the CERD Committee in March 1999 to be discriminatory; the validation
provisions, the confirmation provisions, the primary production upgrade
provisions and the changes to the right to negotiate provisions.(12)
In considering each of these provisions the differential treatment of
native title holders, whose interests are subordinate to the interests
of non-Indigenous title holders, is permitted under a substantive equality
test, if the objectives of the provisions are 'legitimate'. It can be
seen from an examination of the application of this test to the amendments
to the NTA that the criteria against which legitimacy is measured are
not human rights principles but political considerations.(13)

Applying the test of 'legitimacy'
to the NTA amendments

Validation provisions:
In relation to the validation provisions, the majority of the PJC argued
that the legitimate objective of the differential treatment of native
title holders whose interests are either extinguished or impaired, is
to provide certainty. It is argued that the assumption that native title
was extinguished by a pastoral leasehold prior to the Wik (14)
decision was reasonable in all the circumstances and that the validation
of acts performed as a result of this assumption is reasonable.

Thus,
the validation provisions in the 1998 amendments were enacted for the
legitimate purpose of providing certainty and to respond to an unforeseen
legal problem.(15)

The interest groups
that gain as a result of the validation provisions are expressed to be
both pastoralists:

... most of those who 'benefited' from the grant of potentially
invalid acts in the intermediate period were not governments but farmers
and pastoralists, who acted in good faith and relied on the statements
of governments.(16)

and mining interests:

The validation provisions only apply on pastoral leasehold land.
Furthermore, the most common interests granted in the intermediate period
without complying with the provisions of the Native Title Act were mining
leases, which do not extinguish native title because the non-extinguishment
principle applies. Therefore, if there has been any extinguishment of
native title as a result of the validation provisions, it is likely to
have been minimal.(17)

The identification
of winners as a result of the validation of intermediate period acts implies
that there must also be losers. Clearly, native title holders belong to
this class. Certainty has been provided to one group at the expense of
another group. The interests of pastoralists and miners have prevailed
over the interests of native title holders. The 'legitimation' of the
validation provisions by the majority of the PJC is a political justification
for discriminatory acts rather than a human rights approach to differential
treatment.

Having identified
the winners, the majority report then argues that the impact on the native
title holders, is minimal.(18) It identifies
counterveiling provisions such as, the provision for governments and native
title holders to agree to change the effect of the validation provisions;
the provisions which reinstate native title where the holders are in possession
and the land is vacant crown land; and the provision of compensation where
native title is affected by the validation of intermediate period acts.(19)

I comment upon these
countervailing provisions in my submission to the PJCt (Appendix 1).(20)
In summary, these provisions are inadequate to compensate for the discrimination
that has occurred as a result of the validation of intermediate period
acts. Their effect is to lessen the impact of the validation provisions
rather than offset their discriminatory impact. In relation to validated
mining interests, granted over pastoral leaseholds during the intermediate
period, native title holders are denied the right to negotiate. Ironically
the right to negotiate was introduced into the original NTA in order to
offset the discriminatory impact of the validation of past acts. No such
countervailing measures were provided to offset the validation provisions
of the amended NTA. Indeed the right to negotiate provisions were wound
back in the amended NTA. In contrast to the countervailing measures provided
under the original NTA to offset the discriminatory validation provisions,
the amendments, both discriminatory and countervailing, were not enacted
with the agreement of Indigenous people.

Confirmation provisions;
The justification in the majority report for the differential treatment
of native title holders which occurs through the confirmation provisions
of the amended NTA are also certainty and workability.(21)
Native title is extinguished where exclusive possession titles have been
granted. If the extinguishment of native title were to be left to the
common law to resolve, the Committee argues, this would result in time
consuming and costly litigation.(22) In the
meantime land holders would be uncertain as to whether native title coexists
on their land. For these purposes the extinguishment of native title for
the benefit of non-Indigenous title holders is a differential treatment
that is justified by reference to these purposes. Accordingly, it is argued,
it is not discriminatory.(23) In addition
it is argued that the impact of these extinguishments on native title
holders is minimal because it merely confirms the common law in relation
to extinguishment.(24) There are two responses
to these arguments.

First, there is an
inconsistency in the propositions underlying the Committee's argument
that, on the one hand, the impact of the confirmation provisions are minimal
in that they merely confirm the common law position, and on the other
hand, that the confirmation provisions are necessary to provide certainty
where the position is otherwise unclear.

Any confirmation that restricts
itself to matters upon which the existing law is utterly clear and free
from doubt will serve little useful purpose. Confirmation provisions
that go beyond this (and enact what is, in effect, no more than a best
estimate of what the law is) will result in an added measure of certainty.(25)

And two paragraphs
later, under the heading 'Limited Effect on Native Title and the Margin
of Appreciation', the Committee contradicts its previous proposition,

The Government argues that these provisions do not effect any
further extinguishment of native title rights or interests. The titles
that are confirmed to have extinguished native title, including all of
the Schedule 1 interests, were included because it was assessed that they
conferred exclusive possession and had therefore extinguished native title.(26)

It cannot be logically
argued that the confirmation provisions merely confirm the common law
if the justification for the confirmation provisions is to provide certainty
where the common law position on extinguishment is unclear. Secondly,
even if the confirmation provisions are a restatement of the common law
position, the impact of these provisions on native title holders cannot
be classified as minimal. As I argued in my submission to the PJC, the
government is not permitted to breach its international obligations because
it is 'merely' confirming the common law.(27)
Far from exonerating the legislature, where the common law has a discriminatory
operation then it is incumbent on the legislature to rectify such discrimination,
not enshrine it in legislation. The government's international obligations
in respect of the discriminatory impact of recent developments in the
common law principles of extinguishment are discussed in Chapters 2 and
3 of this report.

Certainty is provided
to non-Indigenous title holders at the expense of native title holders.
Such differential treatment is invidious and disadvantages Indigenous
people on the basis of their race. Under a human rights approach this
differential treatment cannot be justified as meeting either a formal
or a substantive equality standard.

Primary production
upgrade provisions
; The justification for the amendments that permit
pastoral leaseholders to carry out a range of activities (in addition
to those authorised by their lease) without negotiating with native title
holders whose rights might be affected by these additional activities
(28) is that the provisions strike a reasonable
balance between the competing rights of native title holders and pastoral
lessees.(29) This balance involves the subjugation
of native title interests to those of pastoral leaseholders developing
the land.

The CERD Committee
responded to a similar argument put to it by the government representatives
in March 1999 by pointing out, in paragraph 6 of its decision, that the
Convention requires that State Parties balance the rights of different
groups identifiable by race.(30) An appropriate
balance based on the notion of equality is not between miners, pastoralists,
fishing interests, governments and Indigenous people, but between the
rights - civil, political, economic, cultural and social - of Indigenous
and non-Indigenous titleholders. The CERD Committee's decision states:

While the original Native Title Act was delicately balanced
between the rights of indigenous and non-indigenous title holders, the
amended Act appears to create legal certainty for government and third
parties at the expense of indigenous title.(31)

The PJC's understanding
of substantive equality allows invidious differentiation on the basis
of race where the government is of the view that the interests of the
various stakeholders are balanced. This is not differentiation which is
justified by reference to the distinct characteristics of Indigenous people,
it is differentiation based on the political exercise of balancing interests.

The right to negotiate

There are two purposes
which the majority report cites as justifying the amendments which wind
back the right to negotiate, particularly where native title coexists
on pastoral leasehold land. First, the right to negotiate is an impediment
to resource and commercial development.(32)
Second, where native title coexists on pastoral leasehold land, native
title is of a more limited character and the right to negotiate should
be pegged back to reflect this more limited right.(33)
In any case, it is argued, the amendments cannot be discriminatory because
the right to negotiate is a special measure and limiting its operation
does not offend the principle of substantive equality.(34)

In relation to the
first basis, the amendments have the effect of realigning interests so
that commercial interests are preferred over the protection of native
title. This approach cannot be justified within a human rights framework.

In relation to the
second basis, the 'limited' nature of native title as a coexisting right
does not legitimate moderating its protection. Indeed, where native title
is vulnerable, as it is on pastoral leasehold land, a human rights approach
would require the law to provide more protection in order to ensure equal
respect for Indigenous customs and traditions.

The argument that
the right to negotiate is a special measure and therefore its removal
or amendment does not constitute discrimination, was commonly relied on
during the parliamentary debate in 1998 to justify the amendments to the
right to negotiate. The argument in the majority report is slightly different
to that of 1998 in which the government characterised special measures
as an optional extra to their formal equality obligation.(35)
In the majority report special measures are still an optional extra but
in this case they augment, not formal equality, but substantive equality.
This is a novel argument.

As stated in the
Native title report 1998, the right to negotiate is not a special measure.(36)
This follows, as discussed above, from the nature of the rights that the
right to negotiate is designed to protect, rights based on the traditions
and culture of Indigenous people, not rights bequeathed by a benevolent
government. Yet even if it were a special measure, its categorisation
as an optional extra is erroneous. As stated in the Native Title report
1998, (37) there are two categories of differential
treatment protected within a human rights framework. The first is the
right to express one's cultural identity. The second is the provision
of special measures aimed at facilitating the advancement of certain racial
groups who historically have been disadvantaged by past discriminatory
policies. Both these categories are justified by their objective of ensuring
the genuine, substantive enjoyment of human rights.

Special measures
are not in a category of their own belonging to neither a formal equality
approach or a substantive equality approach; an optional extra which government
can choose to provide or withdraw at will, without offending the concept,
either substantive or formal, of equality. This position is inconsistent
with Article 2(2) of ICERD which requires that where human rights are
not enjoyed equally, then the provision of special measures are required
to ensure equality is achieved between racial groups. In addition the
basis for withdrawing a special measure is clearly set out in Article
1(4) of ICERD

...they shall not be continued after the objectives for which
they were taken have been achieved.(38)

The justification
for the withdrawal of special measures is that they have done their job;
they have broken the cycle of discrimination and the target group is no
longer in need of special treatment; substantial equality has been achieved.
The removal of the full right to negotiate on pastoral leasehold land
cannot be justified by reference to these criteria.

The PJC's analysis
of the four sets of provisions by reference to a substantive equality
approach reveals that the majority of the PJC have sought to justify differential
treatment which prefers non-Indigenous interests over Indigenous interests,
so long as the purposes are 'legitimate'. Legitimate purposes can include
providing certainty to particular interest groups, saving the expense
of time consuming litigation, validating mistaken assumptions about future
developments in the common law, striking a balance between interest groups
and ensuring unimpeded commercial development.

The principle by
which differential treatment is found to have met a substantive equality
standard has, by the end of the majority report, degenerated from a test
which protects Indigenous people against invidious treatment but recognises
their distinct characteristics, to one which justifies invidious treatment
whose purpose can, nevertheless, be legitimated as politically reasonable.
The result is that, on the reasoning of the majority report, substantive
equality provides a lower standard than formal equality which would not
permit the discriminatory differentiation of Indigenous and non-Indigenous
title holders.

This result, that
substantive equality permits invidious differentiation on the basis of
race, is inconsistent with a human rights approach. The hallmark of substantive
equality is that it moves beyond the reductionist approach of applying
a single rule against differential treatment to a contextual approach
that recognises the historical and social determinants of discrimination.
It aims to deal with the substance of discrimination, not just its form.
It should not be used as a tool to increase the leeway that governments
have in meeting their human rights obligation to ensure equality on the
basis of race.

The dialogue with the CERD
Committee, March 2000

Arguments very similar
to those put by the government to the PJC in relation to native title
were also put to the CERD Committee when Australia's periodic report was
considered in Geneva on 21 and 22 March 2000. (39)
The reception of these arguments by the CERD Committee was quite different
to that analysed above in the majority report of the PJC. Clearly the
CERD Committee was dissatisfied with the government's response to the
CERD Committee's concerns as expressed in Decision 2(54) and to its recommendation
that the government renew negotiations with Indigenous people in order
to rectify the situation. The CERD Committee's concerns are twofold. First
the amended NTA fails to meet the standard of equality required under
the Convention. Second, the requirement under Article 5(c) of the Convention,
emphasised in Decision 2(54), that Indigenous people give their informed
consent to decisions that affect them, was disputed and ignored by the
Australian government in relation to the enactment of the amended NTA.

The standard of equality under
ICERD

In its Concluding
Observations (40) the CERD Committee reiterated
the finding that the amended NTA is discriminatory:

The Committee notes that, after the renewed examination in August
1999 of the provisions of the Native Title Act as amended in 1998, the
devolution of power to legislate over the 'future acts' regime has resulted
in the drafting of state and territory legislation to establish detained
'future acts' regimes which contain provisions reducing further the protection
of the rights of native title claimants that is available under Commonwealth
legislation. Noting that the Commonwealth Senate rejected on 31 August
1999 one such regime, the Committee recommends that similarly close scrutiny
continue to be given to any other proposed state and territory legislation
to ensure that protection of the rights of indigenous peoples will not
be reduced further.

The dialogue between
the government and the Committee about the international standard of equality
under ICERD was led by Country Rapporteur, Ms Gay McDougall. (41)

First of all, is it the view of the state party that the Convention
establishes a legal duty to ensure formal equality with respect to the
rights of historically disadvantaged racial and ethnic groups that still
suffer from those inequalities, or is it substantive equality that is
the obligation, and what are your definitions and where do you place special
measures within that framework?(42)

The Australian delegation
answered this question about their understanding of the standard of equality
established at international law in the following terms:

Australia regards its obligations under the Convention as requiring
equality between racial groups. This equality can be achieved by formal
equality and special measures, where appropriate, or by substantive equality
which recognizes that differential treatment is not necessarily discriminatory
if it is legitimate, recognizing legitimate difference or distinct rights.(43)

The Country-Rapporteur
responded:

I'm also very pleased to hear your delegation confirm that it
is the position of the state party that the Convention establishes an
obligation to ensure substantive equality, not mere formal equality, in
situations like those that prevail in Australia today.(44)

The delegation responded
further to this as follows:

Ms McDougall. made the point. that Australia had confirmed that
substantive equality is required. I just wanted to make a little comment
about that, and the issue. about whether Australia regarded formal equality
as sufficient for the purposes of the Convention. I think the Australian
Government does not argue that the Convention only requires formal equality,
and this point was certainly made to the Committee members when the Australian
delegation appeared in March last year. (45)
I suppose that the way the Australian Government would see its obligations
under the Convention is that the equality required by the Convention can
be achieved in a number of ways - that equality is equality between racial
groups - and those ways include by formal equality and special measures
where appropriate, and by substantive equality which recognises differential
treatment, that differential treatment is not necessarily discriminatory.(46)

The government has
clearly sought to keep its options open on whether its treatment of Indigenous
people has met its obligations under the Convention. It contends the Convention
can be met by a combination of measures that provide either formal equality,
substantive equality or, in a category of its own, the adoption of special
measures. It argues the arbiter of what particular standards should be
aimed for in any particular situation is the Parliament.

A similar position
was expressed by the government to the Human Rights Committee (HRC), when
Australia's periodic report under the ICCPR was considered in July 2000.
Before the HRC, the government delegation stated:

Concerning Article 26 dealing
with equality before the law and the prohibition of discrimination,
I would note first that international law admits of both a formal and
a substantive standard for assessing equality. Traditionally, racial
equality was conceived of in terms of formal equality and, in that respect,
the spirit of equality would lie in sameness and identical treatment,
however, international law recognises that in some circumstances, positive
discrimination towards certain racial groups may be necessary. This
would be the case where in instances of underlying disadvantage, temporary
affirmative action or special measures are allowed in order to hasten
equal enjoyment of rights for all racial groups.

Since that time,
the interpretation of the concept of equality has broadened to include
substantive equality in that Governments may treat like things alike
and different things differently. However, this alternative way of defining
equality does not preclude the one originally conceived of in international
law. The two approaches to the issue of equality coexist in international
law. (47)

The flaw in this
argument, that presents equality as a range of options from which a government
may choose to dispense its treatment, is demonstrated by applying it to
the obligation to recognise and protect native title. As indicated, the
recognition of native title is a recognition of the distinct culture of
Indigenous people. It is a title to land that only Indigenous people can
enjoy. A formal equality approach, treating Indigenous people exactly
the same as non-Indigenous people, would result either in the discriminatory
non-recognition of native title or inadequate protection. The High Court
made it clear in Mabo that the failure to recognise this unique relationship
to land on the basis that it does not equate to non-Indigenous property
concepts, is discriminatory.

The theory that the indigenous inhabitants of a 'settled' colony
had no proprietary interest in the land thus depended on a discriminatory
denigration of indigenous inhabitants, their social organisation and customs.
(48)

The obligation to
recognise an Indigenous relationship to land is an obligation to recognise
and give equal respect to cultural difference. There is no formal equality
option. Formal equality is a failure to recognise difference. Such a failure
is discriminatory.

Once it is accepted
that the recognition of native title relies on a substantive equality
approach it follows that the level of protection required to ensure that
native title holders are given the same security in the enjoyment of their
title as non-Indigenous title holders cannot be met by formal equality.
The measures aimed at providing this protection must be appropriate to
the unique characteristics of the title. A formal equality approach to
protection, that native title holders' rights are protected by adopting
the exact same measures used to protect non-Indigenous title holders,
would not be adequate to ensure equal enjoyment of the right and would
be contrary to Australia's international obligations under ICERD.

The requirement of effective
participation

While the CERD Committee
was concerned to ensure that Australia met the international standard
of equality, it was also concerned to ensure that Indigenous people are
equal partners in negotiating the amendments. The requirement of effective
participation is particularly important where certain amendments have
the effect of winding back previously enjoyed rights. The CERD Committee
confirmed the government's obligation to ensure that Indigenous people
give their informed consent to the NTA prior to its enactment.

The government's
position in relation to the principle of effective participation is that
Parliament is the appropriate body to decide whether particular legislation
is discriminatory of or for the benefit of Indigenous people. (49)
In reaching its decision in relation to native title legislation the government
argues that its obligation is not to negotiate an outcome with Indigenous
people but to balance the interests of all the stakeholders. This can
be achieved through consultation.

The CERD Committee's
decision in March 2000 reflects its dissatisfaction with the government's
response to Decision 2(54) which urged the government to renew its negotiations
with Indigenous people in order to rectify the erosion of rights under
the amended NTA.

Concern is expressed at the unsatisfactory response to Committee
Decisions 2(54) (March 1999) and 2(55) and at the continuing risk of further
impairment of the rights of Australia's Indigenous communities. The Committee
reaffirms all aspects of its Decision 2(54) and 2(55) and reiterates its
recommendation that the State party ensure effective participation by
indigenous communities in decisions affecting their land rights, as required
under Article 5(c) of the Convention and General Recommendation XXIII
of the Committee, which stresses the importance of the ensuring the 'informed
consent' of indigenous peoples. The Committee recommends the State party
to provide full information on this issue in the next periodic report.
(50)

In 1993 the CERD
Committee's decision to support the original NTA was largely as a result
of the consent of Indigenous representatives. In 1999 it was obvious to
the CERD Committee that this consent had been withdrawn. The Committee
reiterated this view in March 2000:

When this Committee
first looked at the Native Title Act - and I admit I was not on the Committee
then - it was not my impression from reading the record that the Committee
based its decision on an acceptance of 200 years of white settlement as
a sort of fait accompli that was then the basis for moving forward. I
don't think so. My sense was that the Committee based its decision to
accept the discriminatory aspects of the Native Title Act because there
was sufficient evidence that it was the product of genuine negotiations
with the indigenous populations, and it was on that basis, on the basis
that it was the product of genuine negotiations. Not that it wasn't discriminatory,
and not from a sort of arbitrary decision by the Committee that 200 years
must be accepted. I come back to this because I think that this question
of negotiating with the indigenous populations is central and it perhaps
is not seen so by the delegation.

I note that you have challenged our position that in situations
regarding land rights of indigenous peoples, if there is a deviation from
the rights established under the Convention, it must be with the informed
consent of the indigenous people. That is what's said in our General Recommendation.
I must admit to not being able to see that as such an extraordinary standard.
You know, if someone wants to purchase or divest me of land that I own,
they must have my informed consent.(51)
(emphasis added)

The CERD Committee's
commitment to the principle of effective participation is encapsulated
in General Recommendation XXIII, which calls on governments to:

ensure that members of Indigenous peoples have equal rights
in respect of effective participation in public life, and that no decisions
directly relating to their rights and interests are taken without their
informed consent.(52)

In finding that Australia
had not allowed effective participation by Indigenous people in the formulation
of the amendments to the NTA, the CERD Committee was concerned that the
power to approve or disapprove of the legislation was not appropriately
located with Indigenous people whose rights were directly affected by
it.

The dialogue with the Human
Rights Committee, July 2000

On 20 and 21 July
2000 the UN Human Rights Committee (HRC) met for its 69 th session to
consider Australia's third and fourth periodic reports regarding Australia's
compliance with the provisions of the International Covenant on Civil

and Political Rights
(ICCPR) (53) and "the measures [it] has adopted
which give effect to the rights recognised herein and on the progress
made in the enjoyment of those rights." (54)
The two reports submitted by Australia covered the period 1986 to 1996.
(55) Contemporary issues were also reported
upon and considered by the HRC.

The HRC is constituted
in accordance with Article 28 of the Covenant. It is made up of eighteen
members (56) who are "nationals of the State
Parties to the present Covenant who shall be persons of high moral character
and recognised competence in the field of human rights, consideration
being given to the usefulness of the participation of some persons having
legal experience.The members of the Committee shall be elected and shall
serve in their personal capacity." (57)

The purpose of the
examination is to allow the HRC and the representatives of the State Party
to enter into a constructive dialogue over the obligations which the State
has voluntarily agreed to meet, and their performance of those obligations
over the reporting period.

The procedure of studying the State reports is principally oriented
along the principle of constructive dialogue with the State Party. The
Committee has consistently stressed that it is not a court that is required
to decide on violations of the Covenant in the reporting period and before
which the State concerned must defend itself. On the contrary, it has
stated that its function is to support the States Parties in promoting
and protecting Covenant rights and thus contribute to mutual understanding
and peaceful friendly relations among States.(58)

The HRC's observations and
recommendations in relation to native title

The HRC's concerns
in relation to native title and the amendments to the NTA were based on
Australia's obligations under Articles 1 and 27 of the Covenant. Article
1 protects the right of self-determination, and provides;

  1. All people have the right
    of self-determination. By virtue of that right they freely determine
    their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and
    cultural development.
  2. All peoples may, for their
    own ends, freely dispose of their natural wealth and resources without
    prejudice to any obligations arising out of international economic co-operation,
    based on the principle of mutual benefit, and international law. In
    no case may a people be deprived of its own means of subsistence.
  3. The State Parties
    to the present Covenant, including those having responsibility for the
    administration of non-Self-Governing and Trust Territories, shall promote
    the realization of the right to self-determination, and shall respect
    that right, in conformity with the provisions of the Charter of the
    United Nations.

The HRC made it clear
that self-determination is a right to which Indigenous people are entitled.
Its observation on Australia with respect to this right was;

With respect to Article 1 of the Covenant, the Committee takes
note of the explanation given by the delegation that rather than the term
'self-determination' the Government of the State party prefers terms such
as 'self-management' and 'self-empowerment' to express domestically the
principle of indigenous peoples exercising meaningful control over their
affairs. The Committee is concerned that sufficient action has not been
taken in that regard.(59)

In relation to Article
1 the Committee recommended that:

The State party should take the necessary steps in order to
secure for the indigenous inhabitants a stronger role in decision-making
over their traditional lands and natural resources.(60)

The Committee's
concerns in relation to Article 1 of the Covenant add weight to similar
findings by the CERD Committee discussed above, that Indigenous people
have been denied effective participation in decisions which affect them,
and in particular in respect of their control over traditional lands and
resources.(61)

Also of concern
to the Human Rights Committee was Australia's failure to appreciate, with
respect to the rights of Indigenous people, its obligations under Article
27 of the Covenant. Article 27 provides;

In those States in which ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities
exist, persons belonging to such minorities shall not be denied the right,
in community with the other members of their group, to enjoy their own
culture, to profess and practice their own religion, or to use their own
language.

The Committee observed
that;

... despite positive developments towards recognising the land
rights of the Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders through judicial
decisions (Mabo 1992, Wik 1996) and enactment of the Native Title Act
of 1993, as well as actual demarcation of considerable areas of land,
that in many areas native title rights and interests remain unresolved
and that the Native Title Amendments of 1998 in some respects limits the
rights of indigenous persons and communities, in particular in the field
of effective participation in all matters affecting land ownership and
use, and affects their interests in native title lands, particularly pastoral
lands.(62)

On the basis of
this observation the Committee made the following recommendation.

... that the State party take further steps in order to secure
the rights of its indigenous population under Article 27 of the Covenant.
The high level of the exclusion and poverty facing indigenous persons
is indicative of the urgent nature of these concerns. In particular, the
Committee recommends that the necessary steps should be taken to restore
and protect the titles and interests of indigenous persons in their native
lands, including by considering amending anew the Native Title Act, taking
into account these concerns.(63)

This recommendation
is a clear indication of the Committee's concerns in relation to the amended
NTA and Australia's failure to meet its human rights obligations under
Articles 1 and 27 of ICCPR.

The dialogue between the Human
Rights Committee and the Australian government

The focus of the
dialogue on native title between the HRC members and the Australian government
delegation was the government's obligations under Article 27. Rather than
assume a responsibility to address the vulnerability, both historically
and legally, of Indigenous title to land, the government perceives its
obligations under the Covenant as conditional upon these limitations.

Extinguishment refers to
the situation when the law can no longer recognise Native Title as existing
over a particular piece of land. This recognises the historical facts
that the land was settled and that portions of it have been handed over
for residential purposes, for farms, for cities, for roads, commercial
purposes, public works, and so forth.

Recognising the
vulnerability of Native Title to extinguishment, the Government thought
it necessary to enact legislation that would ensure the protection of
native title and also its interaction into Australian law and land management.

The fundamental
goals of the Native Title Act are: to protect and recognise Native Title,
to make certain the extent to which Governments can act in relation
to Native Title rights and interests, and to provide a balance between
the rights and interests of all Australians. These goals have not been
altered by the need to reflect recent developments in the law.(64)

The 'developments
in the law' referred to relate to the extinguishment of native title.
The government is effectively arguing that it has no obligation to rectify
the historical and legal construction of native title that has made it
vulnerable to extinguishment but is entitled to 'reflect' these 'developments'
in the amendments to the NTA. The extinguishment of native title through
the confirmation provisions were sought to be justified in this way. The
common law was posited as a benchmark against which the confirmation provisions
can be evaluated.

The Government believes that
these confirmation provisions have caused no divestment of Native Title
rights. They simply represent a recognition of the historical position
that Native Title had been extinguished by grants of freehold and some
forms of leasehold in Australia over the past 200 years on approximately
20 percent of the Australian land mass.

Leaving the status
of such tenures to the Courts to confirm would have required extensive
litigation, wasted resources of both indigenous and non-indigenous parties,
and produced unsuccessful outcomes for all. The Government did not consider
such an objective to be legitimate.(65)

The justification
for the winding back of the right to negotiate provisions also relied
on accepting the vulnerable construction given to native title by the
courts.

The object of these amendments therefore was to ensure that
the right available more closely reflected the nature of native title
rights that were likely to exist on pastoral leases and similar tenures.
Furthermore, practice had shown that the right to negotiate procedures
impede resource and commercial development without giving indigenous peoples
substantial benefits in return. (66)

In response to this
presentation, Mr Shinan of the Committee perceived a difficulty with this
reliance on the legal construction of native title. From the point of
view of Article 27 of the covenant, the obligation of State parties is
to secure the sustainability of indigenous economic and traditional life.

I see a certain problem here
which is that maybe the domestic discussion which concentrates around
the legal notion of native title is somewhat misleading in order to
approach the issues of rights under Article 27 because Article 27 speaks
about the rights to enjoy one's culture in community with other members
of the group.

Concentrating on
native title may lead to decades of litigation in order to clarify the
fundamental legal issues, which are at the background of course of use
of land and resources, and which are at the background also of the possibility
of Aboriginal peoples in Australia to enjoy their culture in the future.
But I would like to have more information about the current situation
and what steps are being taken to secure the sustainability, the continuance
of the way of life of Aboriginal communities today - while the long
term issue of native title is subject to legislation and re-legislation,
which continue and may continue for decades.

For instance the
committee has on other occasions identified that, in particular, in
relation to indigenous peoples, hunting and fishing and other traditional
forms of economic life do fall under the notion of culture and require
special protection. I think that concentrating on the native title issues
in the report has resulted in insufficient information as to steps taken
to secure the sustainability of forms of indigenous economic life in
relation to competing use of land and resources in relation to forms
of modernisation.(67)

The government representative
did not accept the Committee member's view that Article 27 gives rise
to a positive obligation on States to protect the right of minorities
to enjoy their culture.

The first question which
was asked by Mr Shinan and some other Committee members also, relates
to the protection of indigenous cultures and way of life. In particular,
it was asked what Australia is doing in response to Article 27 to ensure
that these cultures and ways of life were preserved.

Just at the outset,
I would like to say that Article 27 of the Covenant requires that States
not deny ethnic, religious, or linguistic minorities the right to enjoy
their own culture protect their own religion, or use their own language.
The article does not, however, require States to enact legislation to
guarantee these rights. As indicated by my colleague, Mr Campbell, States
may implement these obligations under the Covenant by legislative or
other measures.(68)

The conflict between
the government and the Committee deepened in relation to their respective
understandings of a States obligations under Article 27 of the Covenant
and its relationship to the right to equality as encapsulated in Article
26.

The government's
position, that a State will meet its international obligations in relation
to equality either by a substantive or formal equality approach is at
odds with the Committee's approach. The government's position was stated
as follows;

Concerning Article 26 dealing
with equality before the law and the prohibition of discrimination,
I would note first that international law admits of both a formal and
substantive standard for assessing equality. Traditionally, racial equality
was conceived of in terms of equality and, in that respect, the spirit
of equality would lie in sameness and identical treatment, however,
international law recognises that in some circumstances, positive discrimination
towards certain racial groups may be necessary. This would be the case
where in instances of underlying disadvantage, temporary affirmative
action or special measures are allowed in order to hasten equal enjoyment
of rights for all racial groups.

Since that time,
the interpretation of the concept of equality has broadened to include
substantive equality in that governments may treat like things alike
and different things differently. However, this alternative way of defining
equality does not preclude the one originally conceived of in international
law. The two approaches to the issue of equality coexist in international
law.(69)

As discussed above
the problem with this approach of seeing formal and substantive equality
as complementary standards that coexist at international law, is that,
at times, a substantive approach to equality does preclude a formal equality
approach. This is discussed above in relation to native title. The potential
inconsistency between these two approaches is made clear by an understanding
of the effect of Article 27 on a State's obligations in relation to equality.
This is explained by the Committee as follows.

Now, Article 27 is kind of
a unique article among the whole provisions of the Covenant. I don't
have to explain to you that the Universal Declaration adopted in 1948
was based on an assumption that if you do not discriminate among individuals,
and if you set common standard of human rights, then everybody should
be as happy as anyone else.

This assimilation
or integration assumption has come to be proven not 100 percent justified.
As a result, perhaps our Covenant has come to have Article 27 which
is the right of minorities.(70)

The right of minorities
to enjoy their culture under Article 27 has the effect that a State cannot
meet its obligation under ICCPR through a formal equality approach. To
do so would deny a minority group enjoyment of its cultural identity.

The dialogue between
the Committee members and the government representatives in relation to
Australia's obligations under the Convention has clarified the issues
on which Australia and the Committee agree and those on which they differ.
Similar issues were considered by the CERD Committee in March 2000. Subsequently,
the Committee on Economic Social and Cultural Rights has considered Australia
under its Convention. (71) Before all of
these Committees, the meaning of equality at international law and its
application to Indigenous people have been central issues. The weight
of international opinion recognises the impact that past discrimination
has had upon Indigenous people throughout the world and the urgency with
which their valuable cultures need to be protected. Australia's engagement
with this body of opinion is necessary to develop domestic policies and
legislation which are in keeping with an international perspective.

Maintaining the dialogue on
human rights

Within a week of
the CERD Committee releasing its Concluding Observations in March 2000,
the government announced a review of Australia's participation in the
treaty committee system. A press release issued by the Minister for Foreign
Affairs at the time indicated the depth of resentment felt by the government
in relation to the CERD remarks.

In this context,
the Government was appalled at the blatantly political and partisan approach
taken by the UN's Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
(CERD) when it examined Australia's periodic reports in Geneva last week.
The Committee's response was disappointing in the extreme. It largely
ignored the significant progress made in Australia across the full spectrum
of indigenous issues. The Committee's observations are little more than
a polemical attack on the Government's Indigenous policies. They are based
on an uncritical acceptance of the claims of domestic political lobbies
and take little account of the considered reports submitted by the Government
(72) .

there are serious
systemic problems in this reporting process and the resources needed for
them to play their role effectively are not allocated to the treaty bodies.
As a result, the outcomes of the system are not always fair and accurate
assessments of state's performances. This wasthe case for Australia recently
in relation to our implementation of the Convention Against Racial Discrimination.(73)

The decision to conduct
a review was based on the following concerns;

  • Burdensome reporting requirements
    under the treaties;

  • the perception of over-reliance
    on NGO submissions by the committees; and
  • the suggestion that the committees
    were running political agendas and were straying beyond their mandate under
    the Convention. (74)

    Australia requested the following
    comments be included in the annual report of the Committee to the United
    Nations General Assembly:

    The Australian Government
    has carefully considered the Committee's concluding observations on
    Australia's tenth, eleventh and twelfth periodic reports issued on 24
    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.(75)

    My concerns about the government's
    response to the Committee's concluding observations are set out in detail
    in the Social Justice Report at pages 79-83. The Human Rights and Equal
    Opportunity Commission has also expressed its concern to the Attorney-General
    about the government's response to the CERD decision.

    My perspective was
    that of a witness and participant in the dialogue that occurred on three
    separate occasions throughout 2000 before three UN human rights Committees:
    the CERD Committee, the Human Rights Committee, and the Committee on Economic
    Social and Cultural Rights.

    What I witnessed
    on those occasions was not a process that sought to judge, let alone embarrass
    Australia on the international stage. Rather I observed and participated
    in a constructive dialogue in which government representatives, non-government
    organisations and national institutions debated the human rights significance
    of a range of important issues and policies including mandatory sentencing,
    native title, Aboriginal heritage, the stolen generations, Aboriginal
    poverty and disadvantage.

    While this debate
    does occur on a domestic level, a range of other interests, especially
    economic interests, often dilutes the human rights significance of these
    issues. It is only by reference to our obligations under human rights
    treaties that the impact of particular policies on the human rights of
    Indigenous and non-Indigenous people can be separated and brought into
    sharp focus. Under this light it can be seen that human rights principles
    are often compromised for more expedient ends.

    The right of an accused
    person to be sentenced proportionally to the crime committed is a principle
    that a human rights committee does not easily overturn in order to assuage
    a popular demand for tough criminal sanctions. Such a committee cannot
    be easily persuaded that the right of Indigenous titleholders to equal
    protection of their title by the law should be compromised in order to
    achieve certainty for other stakeholders. For example, the interests of
    water skiers would never outweigh the interests of traditional owners
    to protect their sacred sites on a lake or lagoon - as has been the case
    at Boobera Lagoon in the far north of New South Wales. In fact the balance
    of interests is not the concern of a human rights dialogue. Rather it
    is whether there is sufficient value placed upon fundamental and universal
    human rights despite the economic or political expediencies.

    The CERD Committee
    made this point to the government in relation to native title issues in
    1999. In that context, the government had argued that it had struck an
    appropriate balance between the interests of miners, pastoralists, and
    Indigenous people in the native title amendments. The Committee responded
    that the balance is not between domestic political interests but between
    the enjoyment of rights by different racial groups in society. The native
    title amendments did not provide an appropriate balance in this regard.
    (76)

    Australia has voluntarily
    applied the standards set by human rights treaties to the policies and
    legislation that govern our domestic arena. Our obligations under these
    treaties represent an undertaking on behalf of the government to its citizens
    that the tools of government will be exercised fairly and in accordance
    with universal human rights principles.

    All parties to human
    rights treaties are brought to account by the UN committee system. What
    is important in this system is that a dialogue is established between
    those who draft and apply policies and legislation and those whose human
    rights are affected by such policies and legislation. The involvement
    of NGOs in the Committee's consideration of the periodic reports of member
    States is instrumental in ensuring that those whose human rights are affected
    by domestic policies and legislation are involved in the dialogue. Mr
    Henkin, a member of the Human Rights Committee, explained the Committee's
    role to Australia when it was before it in July, as follows:

    Most of us have seen the
    reports in the newspapers that the Australian Cabinet has had some unhappiness
    with the work of treaty bodies. They didn't make any exception for this
    particular treaty body, although I don't suppose they should have too
    much trouble with this treaty body since they haven't appeared before
    us as now in some 14 years.

    I would like to
    suggest that perhaps the Government of Australia, like the Governments
    of other countries, ought to see this Committee as it sees itself. We
    see our work as an important contribution to your compliance with the
    obligations which you voluntarily assumed; in fact, eagerly assumed.
    And that is true not only about the protocol, but also about the Covenant
    itself.

    So we don't see
    ourselves really, despite the tone of some of our questions, as sitting
    in judgment but as helping State Parties carry out the obligations which
    you voluntarily assumed, and wish to assume. Of course, that requires
    cooperation by the States Parties. It does not help to read, therefore,
    questions about the work of the treaty bodies, and even on communications
    it does not help to see Governments - and I don't refer only to Australia
    - somehow resist the judgments or the final views of this Committee.

    Therefore, I can
    only close by saying that we cannot help Governments comply with the
    obligations which you voluntarily assumed unless there is cooperation
    between your Government and the Committees, both in regard to the reports
    which you filed and we hope you will file more frequently, and the response
    to our views.(77)

    The dialogue around reconciliation

    The international
    and domestic dialogue discussed thus far has put Indigenous people as
    its object. In the process of reconciliation however Indigenous people
    should be equal partners in an extensive dialogue that has taken place
    and will continue to occur over many years. The overriding purpose of
    this process is to resolve the many conflicts between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
    people in colonial and post colonial Australia so that a more equitable
    relationship based on mutual respect can develop in the future. The Council
    for Aboriginal Reconciliation (CAR) describes the process in this way.

    Reconciliation between Australia's Indigenous peoples and all
    other Australians is about building bridges. It is about respecting our
    differences. It is about giving everybody a fair go. It is about building
    on the strengths of common ground.(78)

    CAR also recognises
    that an important step towards reconciliation is an acknowledgement and
    understanding of the past and its impact on the present relationship between
    Indigenous and non-Indigenous people today.

    Our nation must have the courage to own the truth, to heal the
    wounds of its past so that we can move on together at peace with ourselves.(79)

    In this section
    I will discuss the effect of the Mabo decision of the High Court in 1992
    on the way in which important conflicts between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
    people in the colonial and post-colonial period have been perceived and
    thus the way in which they might be resolved. I will also discuss how
    the court's inability to resolve the fundamental contradictions in our
    nation's history has affected judicial and legislative developments in
    native title.

    'Our nation must have the
    courage to own the truth' (80)

    The recognition
    of native title came from acknowledgement of important truths about our
    past and seeking to reconcile these truths with contemporary notions of
    justice. Mabo brought to the fore a fundamental conflict arising at the
    time of the establishment of Australia as a colony and remaining unresolved
    today. That is the conflict between the assertion on the one hand that
    the settlement of Australia gave rise to exclusive territorial jurisdiction
    by the colonial power and, on the other hand, the denial that this claim
    to exclusive jurisdiction has ever been conceded to or surrendered by
    Indigenous people who coexist on the same territory. CAR also recognizes
    in the Declaration Towards Reconciliation the significance of this absence
    of consent to the establishment of the colony.

    We recognize this land and its waters were settled as colonies
    without treaty or consent.(81)

    Indigenous people
    in Australia continue to assert that their deep spiritual economic and
    social connection to the land is inconsistent with that same land being
    under the sole political control of non-Indigenous people. James Tully
    describes the contradiction at the heart of the establishment of colonial
    power as follows:

    The problematic, unresolved contradiction and constant provocation
    at the foundation of internal colonization, therefore, is that the dominant
    society coexists on and exercises exclusive jurisdiction over the territories
    and jurisdiction that the indigenous peoples refuse to surrender.(82)

    Because of the link
    between the recognition of Indigenous land rights and the foundations
    of Australia as a nation both within and beyond the colonial era, the
    Mabo decision brings to the fore this fundamental contradiction.

    Enlarged notion of terra nullius

    Mabo is not
    only a case about whether the common law recognises Indigenous people's
    relationship to their land. It is also a case about the legal foundations
    of Australia as a nation. Indeed its significance lies in the link between
    the domestic law on Indigenous land rights and the way in which sovereignty
    was acquired by the colonial power. In order to recognise native title,
    the High Court had to review the juridical tools used to justify the acquisition
    of sovereignty over the colony of New South Wales by Britain over two
    hundred years ago. This link between the recognition of native title and
    the overturning of terra nullius is fundamental to the way in which native
    title has developed through the common law. It is also fundamental to
    the resolution of the conflict referred to above between Indigenous and
    non-Indigenous people at the establishment of the colony.

    According to Blackstone,
    the juridical tools that were available under international law to colonial
    powers seeking to acquire sovereignty over foreign lands in the 18 th
    Century were threefold; conquest or treaty (cession) where the land was
    occupied; or occupation where the land was uninhabited.

    Plantations or colonies, in distant countries, are either such
    where the lands are claimed by right of occupancy only, by finding them
    desert and uncultivated, and peopling them from the mother-country; or
    where, when already cultivated, they have been either gained by conquest,
    or ceded to us by treaties.(83)

    The juridical tools
    used to justify the acquisition of sovereignty were important because
    the way in which sovereignty was acquired determined the laws that applied
    within the colony:

    Although the question of whether a territory has been acquired
    by the Crown is not justiciable before municipal courts, those courts
    have jurisdiction to determine the consequences of an acquisition under
    municipal law. Accordingly, the municipal courts must determine the body
    of law which is in force in the new territory. By the common law, the
    law in force in a newly acquired territory depends on the manner of its
    acquisition by the Crown. Although the manner in which a sovereign state
    might acquire new territory is a matter for international law, the common
    law has had to march in step with international law in order to provide
    the body of law to apply in a territory newly acquired by the Crown.(84)

    In summary, if a
    territory is acquired through occupation of uninhabited land then, so
    long as it is applicable to the colony, English law is in force, while
    in the case of acquisition through treaty or conquest, the 'ancient' laws
    remain until they are changed.

    The armory of juridical
    tools used to justify the colonial ambition was supplemented by a theory
    that enabled already inhabited land to be annexed through occupation alone.
    No treaty was required. The 'enlarged notion of terra nullius' was applied
    to 'backward peoples' where 'the indigenous inhabitants were not organized
    in a society that was united permanently for political action'.(85)

    The view was taken that, when sovereignty of a territory could
    be acquired under the enlarged notion of terra nullius, for the purposes
    of the municipal law that territory (though inhabited) could be treated
    as a 'desert uninhabited' country. The hypothesis being that there was
    no local law already in existence in the territory, the law of England
    became the law of the territory (and not merely the personal law of the
    colonists). Colonies of this kind were called 'settled colonies'. Ex hypothesi,
    the indigenous people of a settled colony had no recognized sovereign,
    else the territory could have been acquired only by conquest or cession.
    The indigenous people of a settled colony were thus taken to be without
    laws, without a sovereign and primitive in their social organization.(86)

    To these territories,
    'without settled inhabitants or settled law',(87)
    the laws of England applied without the consent of the Indigenous inhabitants.

    Overturning terra nullius

    There are many reasons
    why the notion of terra nullius no longer holds legitimacy as a basis
    for the establishment of a colony already inhabited by Indigenous people.
    The High Court canvassed some of these. The International Court of Justice
    has also discarded terra nullius as a legitimate means of acquiring sovereignty.(88)
    Recent reports from the UN have provided further analysis which leads
    to a rejection of terra nullius as a legitimate basis for the acquisition
    of territory.(89)

    In Mabo the High
    Court rejected terra nullius as a basis for colonisation in Australia
    on three grounds;

    • Terra nullius no longer
      accords with 'present knowledge and appreciation of the facts' (90)
      with regard to Aboriginal society. The proposition that Aboriginal
      people were 'without laws, without sovereign and primitive in their
      social organisation' (91) can not be sustained
      in the light of present knowledge about the complex and elaborate system
      by which Indigenous society was governed at the time of colonisation.
    • Terra nullius
      no longer accords with the values of contemporary society. In particular
      terra nullius is a discriminatory denigration of Indigenous society
      which was considered 'so low in the scale of social organisation that
      their usages and conceptions of rights and duties are not to be reconciled
      with the institutions
      or the legal ideas of civilized society.' (92)
      The notion of equality relied on by the Court to reject terra nullius
      was one that recognised and gave equal respect to the distinctive characteristics
      of Indigenous society. This aspect of the High Court's decision is discussed
      in Chapter 2 of this report at pp65-67.
    • Terra nullius
      is out of step with modern international law, particularly in relation
      to the human rights of equality and self-determination. This aspect
      of the decision is also discussed further at Chapter 2 pages 70-73.

    Finally the Court
    was influenced by the decision of the International Court of Justice in
    its Advisory Opinion of Western Sahara (1975) ICJR that rejected terra
    nullius as the basis for Spanish sovereignty in Western Sahara.

    Two United Nations'
    reports that support and expand upon the reasoning of the High Court in
    rejecting terra nullius have recently been tabled at the United Nations.
    The first report, Study on treaties, agreements and other constructive
    arrangements between States and indigenous populations
    , (93)
    prepared by the Special Rapporteur, Miguel Alfonso Martinez, came out
    of a recommendation of the monumental Study of the Problem of Discrimination
    against Indigenous Populations
    , (94)
    produced by Martinez Cobo in 1986. The second report that critically appraises
    terra nullius as a discriminatory instrument of colonization is the final
    working paper prepared by the Special Rapporteur, Erica-Irene A. Daes
    entitled, Indigenous peoples and their relationship to land. (95)
    Both these reports have been produced as a result of resolutions of
    the Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights.(96)

    While reinforcing
    the reasoning of the High Court, the UN reports add a further basis on
    which to discard terra nullius, namely, that terra nullius removed Indigenous
    people from the sphere of international law and into the sphere of the
    domestic law of the colonial power.

    Martinez' rejection
    of terra nullius stems from an overriding objection to the ambitions of
    colonialism generally. He sums up his objections as follows:

    Despite the surfeit of pious
    excuses that has been found to justify ethically the launching of this
    overseas colonial enterprise, and the pseudo-juridical (sometimes even
    openly anti-juridical) reasoning which has attempted to defend it 'legally'
    there is irrefutable evidence that its clearly defined goals had nothing
    either 'humanitarian' or 'civilising' about them. Its first raison d'etre
    was to guarantee a permanent presence of the overseas power, either
    settler population or mere trading posts, in territories inhabited by
    other people. Secondly, the overseas power sought to acquire the rights
    to exploit the natural resources existing there and to secure these
    new markets for the import and export needs. Thirdly, it coveted those
    new strongholds to strengthen its position in the struggle with other
    European powers. Finally, it sought to safeguard what had been acquired
    by imposing its political, social and economic institutions and modalities
    on the peoples inhabiting the lands.

    Those goals were
    to be accomplished at any cost, even - should it be necessary and possible
    - that of the destruction of often highly advanced cultures, socio-political
    institutions and traditional economic models developed over centuries
    by the indigenous peoples.(97)

    International law
    legitimised the colonial ambition of annexing land in the new world. Erica-Irene
    Daes notes

    The doctrines of dispossession which emerged in the subsequent
    development of modern international law, particularly 'terra nullius'
    and 'discovery', have had well known adverse effects on indigenous peoples.
    The doctrine of terra nullius as it is applied to indigenous peoples holds
    that indigenous lands are legally unoccupied until the arrival of a colonial
    presence, and can therefore become the property of the colonizing power
    through effective occupation. Strictly speaking, in the seventeenth, eighteenth,
    and nineteenth centuries, the doctrine of 'discovery' gave to a discovering
    State of lands previously unknown to it, an inchoate title that could
    be perfected through effective occupation within a reasonable time. The
    doctrine, as it has come to be applied by States with little or no support
    in international law, gives to the 'discovering' colonial power free title
    to indigenous land subject only to indigenous use and occupancy, sometimes
    referred to as aboriginal title. Only recently has the international community
    begun to understand that such doctrines are illegitimate and racist.(98)

    One of the intended
    effects of colonial domination was to deny Indigenous people their status
    as subjects of international law. Referring to a second phase of the colonisation
    process Martinez reports;

    Thus began the process that the Special Rapporteur has preferred
    to call (without any claim to originality) the 'domestication' of the
    'indigenous question', that is to say, the process by which the entire
    problematique was removed from the sphere of international law and placed
    squarely under the exclusive competence of the internal jurisdiction of
    the non-indigenous States. In particular, although not exclusively, this
    applied to everything related to juridical documents already agreed to
    (or negotiated later) by the original colonizer States and/or their successors
    and indigenous peoples.(99)

    The 'domestication
    of the Indigenous question' is certainly inherent in the notion of terra
    nullius. Whereas the premise of a treaty was that the Indigenous people
    already had sovereignty in the territory sought to be acquired, terra
    nullius contained no such assumption. As indicated by the High Court,
    terra nullius was a denial of the sovereignty of Indigenous people.(100)
    Following from this, Indigenous people colonised through terra nullius
    were, from the outset, denied any status as subjects of international
    law.

    Filling the Gap

    The High Court's
    decision to overturn terra nullius brought Australia in line with an international
    rejection of the discriminatory methods by which colonialism performed
    its task of annexing other people's territory. Yet many questions remain
    to be answered. What will fill the gap, at the foundations of our nation,
    created by the overturning of terra nullius? What has replaced terra nullius
    as a legitimate explanation for the establishment of what is now the Australian
    nation? What impact does the rejection of terra nullius have on the relationship
    between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people? Does this rejection offer
    new solutions to the fundamental conflict between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
    people stated above as the assertion of exclusive jurisdiction by non-Indigenous
    people over traditional lands that have never been surrendered?

  • A common law basis
  • Having rejected the
    distinction between inhabited territories that were considered terra nullius
    and those that were not considered terra nullius based on the customs
    of their Indigenous inhabitants, the common law was liberated to recognise
    and give protection to the relationship that Indigenous people continue
    to have with their land through the concept of native title.

    It was only by fastening on the notion that a settled colony
    was terra nullius that it was possible to predicate of the Crown the acquisition
    of ownership of land in a colony already occupied by indigenous inhabitants.
    It was only on the hypothesis that there was nobody in occupation that
    it could be said that the Crown was the owner because there was no other.
    If that hypothesis be rejected, the notion that sovereignty carried ownership
    in its wake must be rejected too. Though the rejection of the notion of
    terra nullius clears away the fictional impediment to the recognition
    of indigenous rights and interests in colonial land, it would be impossible
    for the common law to recognize such rights and interests if the basic
    doctrines of the common law are inconsistent with their recognition.(101)

    The rejection of
    terra nullius was a rejection of the assertion that Indigenous people
    were not socially or politically constituted. The promise of native title
    was that terra nullius would be replaced, not by another value judgment
    by the non-Indigenous legal system about what Aboriginal society was thought
    to be, but rather by the laws acknowledged and the customs observed by
    the Indigenous people reclaiming their land.

    Native title has its origins in and is given its content by
    the traditional laws acknowledged by and the traditional customs observed
    by the indigenous inhabitants of a territory. The nature and incidents
    of native title must be ascertained as a matter of fact by reference to
    those laws and customs. The ascertainment may present a problem of considerable
    difficulty. It is a problem that did not arise in the case of a settled
    colony so long as the fictions were maintained that customary rights could
    not be reconciled 'with the institutions or the legal ideas of civilized
    society' that there was no law before the arrival of the British colonists
    in a settled colony and that there was no sovereign law-maker in the territory
    of a settled colony before sovereignty was acquired by the Crown.(102)

    This shift in thinking
    was important because it heralded a new approach to redressing historical
    dispossession based, not on the belated generosity of the State that had
    benefited from it, but rather as a matter of right, based on the distinct
    identity of Indigenous people, their laws and customs. Yet the promise
    that, with the overturning of terra nullius the common law might form
    the basis of a new relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
    people has not been fulfilled. The fundamental conflict about the assertion
    of exclusive jurisdiction by non-Indigenous people over traditional Aboriginal
    lands is not solved by the recognition of native title.

    The State as supreme sovereign
    power

    The direction in
    which the concept of native title has developed within the common law
    is shaped by the distinction that the court makes between terra nullius
    as a means of acquiring sovereignty and the fact of sovereignty itself.
    The review of terra nullius was not directed towards the fact of sovereignty,
    but only to the means by which sovereignty was acquired. The supreme power
    of the sovereign state is an uncontested and uncontestable premise of
    the court's decision to recognise native title. Relying on the principle
    that '[T]he acquisition of territory by a sovereign state for the first
    time is an act of state which cannot be challenged controlled or interfered
    with by the Courts of that state' (103)
    Justice Brennan went on to state in Mabo:

    Although the question whether a territory has been acquired
    by the Crown is not justiciable before municipal courts, those courts
    have jurisdiction to determine the consequences of an acquisition under
    municipal law. Accordingly, the municipal courts, must determine the body
    of law which is in force in the new territory. By the common law, the
    law in force in a newly-acquired territory depends on the manner of its
    acquisition by the Crown. Although the manner in which a sovereign state
    might acquire new territory is a matter for international law, the common
    law has had to march in step with international law in order to provide
    the body of law to apply in a territory newly acquired by the Crown.(104)

    While sovereignty
    is uncontestable at law, as a result of the overturning of terra nullius,
    it is also without justification or legitimacy. Its assertion is simply
    an act of power.

    The assertion in
    Mabo of sovereign power has determined the development of native title
    in three significant ways. First the recognition of native title at common
    law fails to identify Indigenous people as subjects of international law.
    The determination of Indigenous rights to land takes place squarely within
    the frame of domestic law. Second it results in an acceptance of and a
    basis for the state's power to extinguish native title. Third, it has
    resulted in the development of a construction of native title in which
    the characteristics of Indigenous sovereignty have been erased. Reference
    to native title as a bundle of rights rather than a system of laws can
    be seen as exemplifying this construction.

    Indigenous people as subjects
    of domestic, not international law

    In overturning terra
    nullius the High Court has not overturned the effect terra nullius had
    of denying Indigenous people their status as subjects of international
    law. Indeed it has reinforced and entrenched this denial. Even though
    terra nullius is an international law concept which had to be overturned
    in order to recognize Indigenous people's relationship to land, native
    title is a common law concept belonging squarely within municipal or domestic
    law. What the court has recognised through native title is the proprietary
    title of Indigenous people to their land not the jurisdiction of Indigenous
    people over their territory.

    There is a distinction between the Crown's title to a colony
    and the Crown's ownership of land in the colony.The acquisition of territory
    is chiefly the province of international law; the acquisition of property
    is chiefly the province of the common law. The distinction between the
    Crown's title to territory and the Crown's ownership of land within a
    territory is made as well by the common law as by international law..The
    general rule of the common law was that ownership could not be acquired
    by occupying land that was already occupied by another.(105)

    The absence, at
    the establishment of colonial power in Australia, of any recognition of
    the pre-existing sovereignty of Indigenous people over the same territory
    is not overcome by a concept which belongs solely to the common law of
    the colonial power.

    Extinguishment

    The power of the
    state to extinguish native title and the continuing exercise of this sovereign
    power underlies the development of native title at common law. First,
    in the recognition stage of a native title determination, the court will
    only recognise claims where there has been an ongoing connection between
    the claimants and the land.

    Where a clan or group has continued to acknowledge the laws
    and (so far as practicable) to observe the customs based on the traditions
    of that clan or group, whereby their traditional connexion with the land
    has been substantially maintained, the traditional community title of
    that clan or group can be said to remain in existence. The common law
    can, by reference protect the native rights and interests to which they
    give rise. However, when the tide of history has washed away any real
    acknowledgement of traditional law and any real observance of traditional
    customs, the foundation of native title has disappeared. A native title
    which has ceased with the abandoning of laws and customs based on tradition
    cannot be revived for contemporary recognition. Australian law can protect
    the interests of members of an Indigenous clan or group, whether communally
    or individually, only in conformity with the traditional laws and customs
    of the people to whom the clan or group belongs and only where members
    of the clan or group acknowledge those customs (so far as it is practicable
    to do so). Once traditional native title expires, the Crown's radical
    title expands to a full beneficial title, for then there is no other proprietor
    than the Crown.(106)

    Thus, legislative
    or executive acts, or other unauthorised (including illegal) acts that
    dispossessed Aboriginal people of their land and conferred a concomitant
    benefit to non-Indigenous people using and exploiting the same lands,
    will be confirmed in the native title process.

    Second, even if the
    claimants' relationship to their land withstands this historical dispossession,
    the court will, as a matter of law, determine whether the title has in
    any case been extinguished by the creation of non-Indigenous interests
    (whether current or expired) over the same land. Thus the creation of
    a mining lease or a national park on the same land may, as a matter of
    law, extinguish native title.

    Sovereignty carries the power to create and to extinguish private
    rights and interests in land within the Sovereign's territory. It follows
    that, on a change of sovereignty, rights and interests in land that may
    have been indefeasible under the old regime become liable to extinction
    by exercise of the new sovereign power. (107)

    The common law test
    for extinguishment is discussed at Chapter 2 of this report. The court's
    approach to the extinguishment of native title has not been finally determined
    by the court. In general there is agreement by the High Court judges that
    native title will be extinguished where the legislation evinces a clear
    and plain intention to do so. While the statutes which create non-Indigenous
    interests, such as mining leases or pastoral leases, do not expressly
    extinguish Indigenous interests in land, there being no recognition that
    Indigenous interests existed at that time, the courts are willing to infer
    such extinguishment where an inconsistency exists between the statute
    creating the new non-Indigenous interest and the exercise of the pre-existing
    Indigenous interest. What the High Court has not not not not not decided
    is whether, in some cases an inconsistency between the Indigenous interest
    and the non-Indigenous interest amounts to a suspension rather than an
    extinguishment of the Indigenous interest. In either case non-Indigenous
    interests will always prevail over the pre-existing Indigenous interests.

    At Chapter 2 the
    discriminatory effect of recognising non-Indigenous interests over Indigenous
    interests so as to extinguish forever the Indigenous interest is discussed.
    Earlier in this chapter the criticism by international human rights committees
    of the extinguishment of Indigenous interests in land for the benefit
    of non-Indigenous people was discussed. Special Rapporteur Erica-Irene
    Daes also recognizes that the Courts have failed to accord appropriate
    protection to native title (or 'aboriginal title') compared with that
    accorded to non-Indigenous interests in land.

    Where aboriginal title is
    recognized, indigenous peoples have at least some legal right that can
    be asserted in the domestic legal system. However, aboriginal title
    is often subject to the illegitimate assumption of State power to extinguish
    such title, in contrast to the legal protection and rights that, in
    most countries, protect the land and property of non-Indigenous citizens,
    other individuals and corporations. This single fact probably accounts
    for the overwhelming majority of human rights problems affecting indigenous
    peoples.

    In many of the
    countries that do recognize aboriginal title, it is more limited in
    its legal character and the rights that appertain to it, and more limited
    in the legal protection accorded to it, that other land titles.(108)

    The common law's
    capacity to review acts of state which extinguish native title is limited,
    particularly where such an intention is expressly stated in the legislation.
    So long as the exercise of the state's power to extinguish Indigenous
    interests in land is constitutionally authorised then the court is powerless
    to contain it. Where the intention of the legislature is not expressly
    stated the court plays a greater role in interpreting the legislation
    so as to give effect to its purpose. Ambiguity in the legislation may
    be resolved consistently with international law standards. In general
    however, the court's influence over the question of extinguishment is
    limited.

    Thus the development
    of the common law of native title is framed by the incontestability of
    the power of the sovereign state. Recognising native title has not established
    a relationship of equality between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people.
    The non-Indigenous state still maintains exclusive jurisdiction over traditional
    Aboriginal land. The decision of the state to extinguish native title
    is incontestable by a court despite its discriminatory character.

    Bundle of Rights

    In rejecting terra
    nullius the High Court rejected the discriminatory denigration of Indigenous
    people as having no social organization, laws or recognised sovereign.
    The promise of native title was that the traditional systems underlying
    Indigenous society could be recognized by the common law. Yet recent developments
    in the common law notion of native title indicate the reluctance of the
    court to recognise Indigenous laws and governance structures. The extent
    to which the common law recognises the system of laws on which Indigenous
    peoples' relationship to their land is built, will be determined by the
    High Court this year in the Miriuwung Gagerrong and Croker Island
    appeals.(109)

    In Chapters 2 and
    3 of this report I outline how the main issue before the court in these
    cases is whether native title is conceived as a bundle of individuated
    rights which entitle native title holders to carry out specified activities
    on their land or whether it is based on a more fundamental relationship
    between Indigenous people and their ancestral land originating from the
    traditional system of law and custom. It can be seen, in view of the above
    discussion, that the characterisation of native title as a bundle of rights,
    dissociated from the laws which give rise to these rights does not fill
    the gap created by the court's rejection of terra nullius. Indeed native
    title as a bundle of rights reinforces terra nullius's depiction of Indigenous
    people as being 'without laws, without a sovereign and primitive in their
    social organisation'. (110) It denies the
    generality and systematisation of rights which characterise all legal
    systems including traditional Indigenous laws. Constructing native title
    as atomised and particularised practices denies their origin in a system
    of laws and customs which underlie Indigenous culture and society.

  • A Legislative basis
  • The response of the
    international community over the last few years to the legislation which
    currently controls the recognition and protection of native title in Australia
    (111) makes it clear that this legislation
    provides an unacceptable basis for the relationship between Indigenous
    and non-Indigenous people. As noted before both the CERD Committee and
    the Human Rights Committee made it clear that the current native title
    legislation is a breach of Australia's human rights obligations to deal
    with Indigenous people equally,(112) to
    protect Indigenous culture (113) and to
    the right of Indigenous people to self-determination.(114)
    The extinguishment of Indigenous land in the amended NTA constitutes a
    breach of all three of these human rights obligations.

    An important message
    to Australia from the UN committees was that where legislation is proposed
    which affects Indigenous people, it should only be enacted with the informed
    consent of the Indigenous people affected. This requirement arises out
    of Article 5 of ICERD and from the principle of self-determination under
    Article 1 of ICCPR. In fact the CERD Committee, meeting in March 1998
    to consider the amended NTA under its urgent action procedure, contrasted
    the process by which the amendments were implemented without the consent
    of Indigenous people with the process by which the original NTA was implemented
    with Indigenous consent. It is this process of negotiation and consent
    that enables Aboriginal people to gain effective control over their ancestral
    lands.

    The comparison made
    by the CERD Committee between the two approaches taken to legislating
    on native title also shows the inherent weakness of defining/ building
    the relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people on legislation
    alone. That is, as a result of the sovereignty of parliament, legislation
    can always be amended or repealed by subsequent governments without the
    consent of Indigenous people.

    • A human rights basis

    The overturning of
    terra nullius and the consequent absence of any legitimate basis for the
    establishment of non-Indigenous sovereignty over previously occupied territory
    can be addressed by ensuring that the establishment of a new relationship
    between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people is based on human rights
    principles.

    The international
    law principle most relevant to providing the basis for negotiation between
    Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in relation to the control of traditional
    Indigenous land is that of self-determination. Article 1 of ICCPR and
    ICESCR provide;

    1. All peoples have the right
      of self-determination. By virtue of that right they freely determine
      their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and
      cultural development.
    2. All peoples may,
      for their own ends, freely dispose of their natural wealth and resources.
      In no case may a people be deprived of its own means of subsistence.
    3. The State parties
      to the present Covenant. shall promote the realization of the right
      of self-determination, and shall respect that right, in conformity with
      the Charter of the United Nations.

    There is little doubt
    based on the Concluding Observations of the Human Rights Committee and
    the Committee on Economic Social and Cultural Rights on Australia in July
    and August 2000 respectively (see: Appendices 3 and 4) that Indigenous
    people are entitled to enjoy the right of self-determination. Special
    Rapporteur Miguel Alfonso Martinez also has no doubt in this regard:

    The Special Rapporteur also harbors no doubts concerning the
    much debated issue of the right to self-determination. Indigenous peoples,
    like all peoples on Earth, are entitled to that inalienable right. (115)

    Both the Human Rights
    Committee and the Economic Social and Cultural Rights Committee directed
    their observations in relation to the amendments to the NTA to the rights
    of Indigenous people under the principle of self-determination to control
    their land and their resources. Both these Committees and the CERD Committee
    urged Australia to ensure greater participation by Indigenous people in
    decisions that affect them.

    The evolution of
    the principle of self-determination at international law challenges the
    notion that the non-Indigenous state has exclusive jurisdiction over traditional
    land, not by replacing it with exclusive Indigenous jurisdiction, but
    by challenging the foundations on which the assertion of paramount control
    by one group to the exclusion of all others rests. James Anaya criticizes
    the theories articulated by Vattel and Hobbes that acknowledge and assign
    rights to only two entities, the state and the individual. (116)
    The foundation of international law in the nation state whose social
    organisations are characterised by exclusive territory and centralised
    and hierarchical authority, meant that Indigenous people, organised through
    tribal or kinship ties, decentralised political structures and overlapping
    territorial spheres, would never benefit from the international law of
    nations. The characterisation of states as 'free, independent and equal'
    provides the basis of modern international law:

    Vattel thus articulated the foundation for the doctrine of state
    sovereignty, which, with its corollaries of exclusive jurisdiction, territorial
    integrity, and non-intervention in domestic affairs, developed into a
    central precept of international law.(117)

    Theorists of international
    law adopted an approach that legitimised the subjugation of Indigenous
    people. As Erica-Irene Daes notes

    ...it is of critical importance to underscore the cultural biases
    that contributed to the conceptual framework constructed to legitimize
    colonization and the various methods used to dispossess indigenous people
    and expropriate their lands, territories and resources. It is safe to
    say that the attitudes, doctrines and policies developed to justify the
    taking of lands from indigenous peoples were and continue to be largely
    driven by the economic agendas of States.(118)

    And later:

    International law remains primarily concerned with the rights
    and duties of European and similarly 'civilised' States and has its source
    principally in the positive, consensual acts of those States.(119)

    The principle of
    self-determination challenges the assumptions of an international law
    based on exclusive territorial jurisdiction. The assertion by Indigenous
    people of this right as a collective right also challenges the notion
    that the only recognisable entities at international law are the state
    and the individual.

    Any conception of self-determination that does not take into
    account the multiple patterns of human association and interdependency
    is at best incomplete and more likely distorted. The values of freedom
    and equality implicit in the concept of self-determination have meaning
    for the multiple and overlapping spheres of human association and political
    ordering that characterize humanity. Properly understood, the principle
    of self-determination, commensurate in the values it incorporates, benefits
    groups - that is, 'peoples' in the ordinary sense of the term - throughout
    the spectrum of humanity's complex web of interrelationships and loyalties,
    and not just peoples defined by existing or perceived sovereign boundaries.(120)

    Not only does the
    principle of self-determination challenge the assumptions on which the
    sovereign state relies, it is particularly confronting to those states
    whose assumptions depend on the annexation of Indigenous people's territory
    without their consent. Thus in the Western Sahara case,(121)
    the International Court of Justice refused to give weight to the legal
    theory on which the land was acquired and preferred instead to 'give precedence
    to the present-day aspirations of aggrieved peoples over historical institutions'.(122)

    Acknowledging the
    challenge that self-determination poses to the sovereign state as the
    foundation of international law assists in understanding the response
    of governments to international criticism over their failure to accord
    this right to Indigenous people. The present government's recent review
    of international treaties discussed at pages 26-27 above can be understood
    as a response to the challenge that human rights obligations, and in particular
    the right to self-determination poses to State power. It also casts light
    on the change in government policy on Indigenous matters which resulted
    in the withdrawal of the term 'self-determination' in relation to Indigenous
    policy. In its place the government prefers to use a more individualistic
    notion such as self-empowerment or self-management. These terms do not
    challenge the state/ individual dichotomy on which state power is based.

    The right to self-determination
    forms the basis on which Indigenous people may share power within the
    existing state. It gives Aboriginal people the right to choose how they
    will be governed. Yet the obligation placed on Australia at international
    law to accord this right to Indigenous people has not been effective in
    ensuring Indigenous people have control over their land, their resources
    and the form of governance which determines the nature of this control.

    The problem with
    relying solely on the international human rights system as a basis for
    the establishment of a new relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
    people is not due to the inadequacy of the principles it espouses but
    rather, the reluctance of states to implement or enforce them. This is
    despite the requirement at international law that international human
    rights obligations be performed in good faith.

    In Australia the
    implementation of human rights obligations relies on the enactment of
    domestic legislation . There is no automatic mechanism by which human
    rights obligations are incorporated into the domestic law. Even where
    legislation is enacted, there may still be no provision for enforcement
    within domestic courts. Certainly, in relation to the right of Indigenous
    people to self-determination there is no domestic implementation or enforcement
    in Australia.

    While an international
    law process for hearing complaints about treaty breaches exists,(123)
    there are serious limitations on the effectiveness of this process. Firstly,
    the findings of the international committee hearing the complaint are
    not enforceable in the domestic sphere. It is only through indirect international
    pressure or through a willingness on the state to adhere to the committee's
    findings that action will be taken to rectify the breach. In addition,
    communications under the Optional Protocol to the ICCPR provides that
    only individuals can lodge a complaint against a state. Individuals lodging
    complaints in relation to a collective right to self-determination have
    no standing to take a representative action on behalf of their people.
    Consequently, there is no effective remedy for Indigenous people whose
    right to self-determination has been denied. Antonio Cassese comments
    on the limitations which deny Indigenous people a means of enforcing their
    right to self-determination at international law as follows:

    The Human Rights Committee
    has chosen a strict interpretation whereby the 'collective right' set
    our in Article 1 cannot be indicated by individuals. Under this interpretation
    only 'individual rights' can be invoked before the Committee.

    It follows from
    this that ultimately, under the Covenants, peoples do not actually possess
    a veritable right to self-determination. To assert that peoples possess
    a legal right would be tantamount to asserting the existence of a right
    that exists in theory only. It is the Contracting States which hold
    the rights conferred by the Covenants. Peoples are simply the 'beneficiaries'
    of these State rights and of the corresponding duties incumbent upon
    each Contracting State.(124)

    Thus, while international
    human rights norms provide a set of principles for establishing a new
    relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in Australia
    these principles must be adopted and incorporated domestically as a result
    of negotiations in which both Indigenous and non-Indigenous representatives
    enter freely, willingly and in good faith.

  • A Reconciliation Basis
  • The reconciliation
    process has made clear the pressing need for Aboriginal peoples to negotiate
    freely the terms of their continuing relationship with Australia. The
    above analysis shows that there is also a pressing need for non-Indigenous
    people to re-establish the foundations of a nation which can no longer
    justify the means by which its sovereignty was first acquired. This analysis
    also shows that the recognition of Indigenous people's right to their
    land and the origins of a nation are inextricably related and that changes
    to one part of the relationship infer and require changes to the other.
    Developments in native title law reflect upon the ethical foundations
    of the nation.

    Various avenues
    by which a new relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people
    can be established have been discussed. Human rights principles provide
    a set of norms on which to rebuild this relationship which is so fundamental
    to the nation. The application of these principles must be negotiated
    and agreed upon by both parties before a new relationship can emerge.
    A process must be put in place for continuing negotiations along these
    lines.

    The Council for Reconciliation
    (CAR) included in its report to Parliament (125)
    a draft Bill which forms a framework for the ongoing negotiation of
    unresolved issues between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people. The objects
    of the draft legislation include;

    • To acknowledge the progress
      towards reconciliation and establish a process for reporting on the
      nation's future progress;
    • To establish processes to
      identify and resolve the outstanding issues between Indigenous peoples
      and the Australian community;
    • To initiate a
      negotiation process to resolve reconciliation issues between Indigenous
      peoples, and the wider community through the Commonwealth government
      that will result in a Treaty or Agreement.

    The underlying assumption
    of the draft Bill is that reconciliation is an ongoing process in which
    unresolved issues are squarely raised and processes put in place for their
    resolution based on the informed consent of both sides. It has been argued
    in this chapter that an unresolved issue that needs to be negotiated and
    agreed upon before reconciliation can be achieved is the recognition of
    Indigenous people's right to land. The resolution of this issue with the
    informed consent of Indigenous people would exclude the extinguishment
    of native title. As was stated by the Canadian Royal Commission on Aboriginal
    Peoples,

    [N]othing is more important
    to treaty nations than their connection with their traditional lands
    and territories, nothing is more fundamental to their cultures, their
    identities and their economies. We were told by many witnesses at our
    hearings that extinguishment is literally inconceivable in treaty nations
    cultures.

    The treaty nations
    maintain with virtual unanimity that they did not agree to extinguish
    their rights to their traditional lands and territories but agreed instead
    to share them in some equitable fashion with the newcomers.(126)

    Special Rapporteur
    Miguel Alfonso Martinez also considers the issue of 'recognition of indigenous
    peoples' right to their lands and their resources, and to continue engaging,
    unmolested, in their traditional economic activities on those lands' (127)
    to be of central importance in establishing a renewed relationship between
    Indigenous and non-Indigenous people.

    This is the paramount problem to be addressed in any effort
    to establish a more solid, equitable and durable relationship between
    the indigenous and non-indigenous sectors in multi-national societies.
    Owing to their special relationship, spiritual and material, with their
    lands, the Special Rapporteur believes that very little or no progress
    can be made in this regard without tackling, solving and redressing -
    in a way acceptable to the indigenous peoples concerned - the question
    of their uninterrupted dispossession of this unique resource, vital to
    their lives and survival. (128)

    Martinez, in the
    conclusions and recommendations of his report supports the process adopted
    in the draft Bill:

    Finally, the Special Rapporteur is strongly convinced that the
    process of negotiation and seeking consent inherent in treaty-making (in
    the broadest sense) is the most suitable way not only of securing an effective
    indigenous contribution to any effort towards the eventual recognition
    or restitution of their rights and freedoms, but also of establishing
    much needed practical mechanisms to facilitate the realization and implementation
    of their ancestral rights and those enshrined in national and international
    texts. It is thus the most appropriate way to approach conflict resolution
    of indigenous issues at all levels with indigenous free and educated consent.(129)

    Martinez also recommends
    that agreements negotiated in a treaty-making process such as that envisaged
    by the draft Bill should maintain their character as 'instruments with
    international status'.(130) In this way
    the agreement process is consistent with the human rights principle of
    self-determination that recognises Indigenous people as a separate and
    distinct people, capable of negotiating with nations on an equal footing.
    Yet it is a notion of self-determination that does not seek to replace
    exclusive jurisdiction by a non-Indigenous state with exclusive Indigenous
    jurisdiction or sovereignty. Rather the process emphasises the real nature
    of treaty relationships, sharing and mutual benefit. The mutual benefit
    to be gained from negotiation based on consent and equality is that what
    was a contradiction at the foundation of our nation between the conflicting
    claims of Indigenous and non-Indigenous people to the jurisdiction of
    traditional lands, becomes an agreement as to the basis of our coexistence.


    Footnotes

    1.
    On 9 December 2000 the Senate referred to the PJC for inquiry and report;
    (a) whether the finding of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial
    Discrimination (CERD) that the Native Title Amendment Act 1998 is consistent
    with Australia's international legal obligations, in particular, the Convention
    on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, is sustainable
    on the weight of informed opinion; (b) what the amendments are required
    to the Act, and what processes of consultation must be followed in effecting
    those amendments, to ensure that Australia's international obligations
    are complied with; and (c) whether dialogue with the CERD on the Act would
    assist in establishing a better informed basis for amendment to the Act.

    2.
    Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia, Sixteenth Report of the Parliamentary
    Joint Committee on Native Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
    Land Fund: CERD and the Native Title Amendment Act 1999, June 2000 (PJC
    Report).

    3.
    PJC Report, op cit,, Executive Summary, pix.

    4.
    South West Africa Case (Second Phase) {1966} ICJ Rep 6, pp303-304, p305.

    5.
    Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD), General
    Recommendation XIV - Definition of discrimination, 19/03/93, para 2.

    6.
    Mabo v Queensland (No.2) (1992) 175 CLR 1(the Mabo decision).

    7.
    ibid, p58.

    8.
    ibid, p40.

    9.
    PJC Report, op cit, p10.

    10.
    ibid, Executive Summary, pix.

    11.
    ibid, p10.

    12.
    Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. Decision (2)54
    on Australia, 18 March 1999, UN Doc CERD/C/54/Misc.40/Rev.2. (CERD Decision
    2(54)).

    13.
    The four sets of provisions are considered in the Majority Report of the
    PJC Report at pp37- 58.

    14.
    Wik v Queensland (1996) 187 CLR 1 (the Wik decision).

    15.
    PJC Report, op cit, p42.

    16.
    ibid, p43.

    17.
    ibid, p43.

    18.
    ibid, p45.

    19
    .ibid, p44.

    20.
    Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner, Submission
    to the Inquiry of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title and
    the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund into CERD and the
    Native Title Amendment Act 1998, May 2000, pp14-17. ATSISJ Commissioner's
    Submission to the PJC Inquiry into CERD. See: Appendix 1. The submission
    is also available on the HREOC website: www.hreoc.gov.au.

    21.
    PJC Report, op cit, p45.

    22.
    ibid, p48.

    23.
    ibid, p37. This argument is put generally in relation to the four sets
    of provisions.

    24.
    ibid, p46.

    25.
    ibid. The majority of the PJC are here quoting from their Tenth Report
    where they found it appropriate that the Parliament intervene to resolve
    extinguishment where this is unclear at common law.

    26.
    ibid.

    27.
    ATSISJ Commissioner's Submission to the Inquiry into CERD, op cit, p17.

    28.
    NTA, Division 3, Subdivision G, Part 2, deals with the validation of primary
    production activities listed under s24GA, including cultivating land;
    maintaining, breeding or agisting animals; taking or catching fish or
    shellfish; forest operations; horticultural activities; aquacultural activities;
    and leaving fallow or de-stocking any land in connection with the doing
    of any thing that is a primary production activity. NTA s24GE also authorises
    the taking of natural resources from pastoral leases without negotiating
    with Indigenous people.

    29.
    PJC Report, op cit, p49.

    30.
    CERD decision 2(54), op cit, para 6. Committee member Mr. Aboul-Nasr discusses
    this issue when examining Australia. See: Transcript of Australia's Hearing
    before the CERD Committee, Summary of Record of the 1323 rd meeting, Committee
    on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, p44.

    31.
    ibid.

    32.
    PJC Report, op cit, p52.

    33.
    ibid, pp52-54.

    34.
    ibid, pp53-54.

    35.
    See: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner,
    Native title report 1998, pp73-116 for the Commissioner's response to
    these arguments.

    36.
    ibid, pp100-105.

    37.
    ibid, p96.

    38.
    ICERD, Article 1(4)

    39.
    The oral appearance of the Australian government delegation before the
    CERD Committee is documented in two ways: (i) the unofficial, complete
    transcript of the dialogue by Foundation for Islander Research Action
    (FAIRA), Transcript of Australia's hearing before the CERD Committee -
    1393 rd , 1394 th and 1395 th meetings, 21-22 March 2000, FAIRA, Brisbane
    2000, ( FAIRA, CERD Transcript,- 21-22 March 2000), see also www.faira.org.au/cerd/;
    and (ii) the official United Nations summary records: Committee on the
    Elimination of Racial Discrimination, Summary record - 1393 rd meeting,
    UN Doc CERD/C/SR.1393; Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination,
    Summary record - 1394 th meeting, UN Doc CERD/C/SR.1394 (Transcript only
    available in French); Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination,
    Summary record - 1395th meeting, UN Doc CERD/C/SR.1395; Committee on the
    Elimination of Racial Discrimination, Summary record - 1398 th meeting,
    UN Doc CERD/C/SR.1398. (Transcript only available in French). Reference
    is also made to the written answers provided by the Australian delegation
    to the Committee. Copies of the written answers supplied by the government
    are available from the Secretariat of the CERD or by contacting the office
    of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner,
    HREOC.

    40.
    Committee on the Elimination of Racial discrimination, Concluding Observations
    by the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination: Australia,
    UN Doc CERD/C/304/Add.101, 19/04/2000, at para 8.

    41.
    Ms McDougall is the Country Rapporteur for Australia. She is also the
    expert nominated for election to the CERD Committee by the United States
    of America. The country rapporteur leads the Committee in its consideration
    and questioning of the State Party.

    42.
    l FAIRA, CERD Transcript, 21-22 March 2000, 1394 th meeting, Part III,
    pp2-3.

    43.
    Commonwealth of Australia, Written answers to the Committee on the Elimination
    of Racial Discrimination. Issue: Does Australia regard the Convention
    as requiring formal or substantive equality. See: n42.

    44.
    FAIRA, CERD Transcript, 21-22 March 2000, 1394 th meeting, Part III, p12.

    45.
    Australia's appearance in March 1999 was in relation to the early warning
    procedure and the native title amendments. For an analysis of the government's
    explanation of how it believed the native title amendments to be consistent
    with the Convention see: Native title report 1999, op cit, Chapter 2;
    Dick, D. and Donaldson, M., The compatibility of the amended Native Title
    Act 1993 (Cth) with the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of
    All Forms of Racial Discrimination, Issues Paper 29: Land, rights, laws:
    Issues of native title, Native Titles Research Unit, AIATSIS Canberra
    1999.

    46.
    FAIRA, CERD Transcript, 21-22 March 2000, 1395 th meeting p2.

    47.
    Ms Leon, Foundation for Aboriginal Islander Action (FAIRA), Transcript
    of Australia's appearance before the Human Rights Committee, 20-21 July
    2000, 21 July 2000, FAIRA Brisbane 2000, p19, ( FAIRA, Human Rights Committee
    Transcript). See: www.faira.org.au/hrc/. See also Human Rights Committee,
    Summary record of the 1856 th meeting: Australia, UN Doc CCPR/C/SR.1856,
    28/07/2000; Human Rights Committee, Summary record of the 1858 th meeting:
    Australia, UN Doc CCPR/C/SR.1858, 28/07/2000.

    48.
    Mabo, op cit, p40.

    49.
    Robert Orr, Q.C. Hansard, Joint Committee on Native Title and the Aboriginal
    and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund, 23 February 2000, p146.

    50.
    Concluding Observations by the Committee on the Elimination of Racial
    Discrimination: Australia op cit, para 9.

    51.
    Ms McDougall, Concluding Remarks, FAIRA, CERD Transcript, 21-22 March
    2000, 1395 th meeting, Part I, p6.

    52.
    Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, General Recommendation
    on Indigenous Peoples, UN Doc CERD/C/51/Misc 13/Rev 4 (1997) para 4(c).

    53.
    The hearing of Australia before the Human Rights Committee is documented
    in Foundation for Islander Research Action (FAIRA), Transcript of Australia's
    hearing before Human Rights Committee - 69 th session, 20 and 21 July
    2000, FAIRA, Brisbane 2000, ( FAIRA, HRC Transcript, 20-21 July 2000).
    See: www.faira.org.au/hrc.

    54.
    ICCPR, Article 40.

    55.
    UN Doc CCPR/C/AUS/99/3 and 4.

    56.
    ICCPR, Article 28.1.

    57.
    ibid, Article 28.2.

    58.
    Manfred Nowak UN Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ICCPR Commentary
    562.

    59.
    UN Doc CCPR/CO/69/AUS, para 9.

    60.
    ibid.

    61.
    See: p19.

    62.
    UN Doc CCPR/CO/69/AUS, op cit, para 10.

    63.
    ibid.

    64.
    FAIRA, HRC Transcript, 20-21 July 2000, 20 July, op cit, p18 of 46.

    65.
    ibid, p20 of 46.

    66.
    ibid, p21 of 46.

    67.
    ibid, pp38-39 of 46

    68.
    ibid, p9 of 51.

    69.
    ibid, p19 of 51.

    70.
    ibid, pp43-44 of 46.

    71.
    Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Concluding Observations
    of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights; Australia, E/C.12/1/Add.50,
    1 September 2000.

    72.
    The Hon A. Downer, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Government to review
    UN treaty Committees, Press Release, 30 March 2000.

    73.
    The Hon A. Downer, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Australia's hope for
    the United Nations in the twenty-first century, Speech - 2000 National
    Youth Conference of the United Nations Youth Association, Melbourne, 3
    July 2000.

    74.
    Minister for Foreign Affairs, Government to review UN treaty Committees,
    Press Release, 30 March 2000.

    75.
    Commonwealth of Australia, Comments of the government of Australia on
    the concluding observations adopted by the Committee on the Elimination
    of Racial Discrimination on the tenth, eleventh and twelfth periodic reports
    of Australia, Annex X in Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination,
    Report of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, UN
    Doc: A/55/18. (Sessional/Annual Report of Committee), 17/10/2000.

    76.
    This point is discussed at length in Chapter 2 of the Native title report
    1999 and the ATSISJ Commissioner's Submission to the PJC Inquiry into
    CERD, op cit.

    77.
    Mr Henkin, FAIRA, HRC Transcript, 20-21 July 2000, op cit, 20 July, pp42-43
    of 46.

    78.
    Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, Corroboree 2000: Towards Reconciliation,
    Canberra 2000. See: www.reconciliation.org.au/towards/index.

    79.
    Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, Australian Declaration Towards
    Reconciliation, Canberra 2000.

    80.
    ibid.

    81.
    ibid.

    82.Tully,
    J., "The Struggles For and Of Freedom", in Political Theory and the Rights
    of Indigenous Peoples, Duncan I., Patton P. and Sanders W., eds, Cambridge
    University Press, 2000, pp39-40.

    83.
    Commentaries, Bk1, ch.4, pp106-108, referred to in Mabo. op cit, p34.

    84.
    Mabo, op cit, p32.

    85.
    ibid, relying on Lindley, The Acquisition and Government of Backward Territory
    in International Law, (1926) Chapters III and IV.

    86.
    ibid, p36.

    87.
    Cooper v Stuart (1889) 14 App Cases 286, p291.

    88.
    Advisory Opinion on Western Sahara [Western Sahara Case] [1975 ] ICJR.
    12.

    89.
    Martinez, M., Study on treaties, agreements and other constructive arrangements
    between States and Indigenous populations, Commission on Human Rights,
    Sub-Commission on the Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities,
    UN Doc E/CN.4/Sub.2/1999/20, 22 June 1999; and Cobo, M., Study of the
    Problem of Discrimination against Indigenous Populations, E/CN.4/Sub.2/1986/7/Add.4.

    90.
    Mabo, op cit, p38.

    91.
    ibid, p36.

    92.
    In re Southern Rhodesia (60) (1919) AC 211, pp233-234, per Lord Sumner,
    quoted in Mabo p39.

    93.
    Martinez, op cit.

    94.
    Cobo, M., Study of the Problem of Discrimination against Indigenous Populations,
    E/CN.4/ Sub. 2/1986/7/Add.4.

    95.
    Daes, Erica-Irene, Final Report Indigenous Peoples and Their Relationship
    to Land, UN Doc E/ CN.4/Sub.2/2000/25.

    96.
    The Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights is
    under the Commission on Human Rights. It is out of this Sub-Commission
    that the Working Group on Indigenous Populations is convened.

    97.
    Martinez, op cit, paras 172-174.

    98.
    Daes, op cit, para 30.

    99.
    Martinez, op cit, para 192.

    100.
    Mabo, op cit p36.

    101.
    ibid, p45.

    102.
    ibid, p58.

    103.
    New South Wales v Commonwealth (The Sea and Submerged Lands Case) (1975)
    135 CLR, p338.

    104.
    Mabo, op cit, p32.

    105.
    ibid, pp44-45.

    106.
    ibid, pp59-60.

    107.
    ibid, p63.

    108.
    Daes, op cit, paras 37-38.

    109.
    Western Australian v Ward (2000) 170 ALR 159; and Commonwealth of Australia
    v Yarmirr (1999) 168 ALR 426.

    110.
    Mabo, op cit, p36.

    111.
    The Native Title Act 1993 as amended by the Native Title Amendment Act
    1998.

    112.
    ICERD, Articles 2 and 5.

    113.
    ICCPR, Article 27.

    114.
    ICCPR, Article 1.

    115.
    Martinez, op cit, para 256.

    116.
    Anaya, S.J. Indigenous Peoples in International Law, Oxford University
    Press, New York, 1996, p13.

    117.
    ibid, p15.

    118.
    Daes, op cit, para 21.

    119.
    Daes, op cit, para 26.

    120.
    Anaya, op cit, p79.

    121.
    Advisory Opinion on Western Sahara [Western Sahara Case] [1975 ] ICJR
    p12.

    122.
    Anaya, op cit, p84.

    123.
    The Optional Protocol to the ICCPR, to which Australia is a signatory,
    provides a complaint mechanism by which the Human Rights Committee hears
    complaints in respect of breaches of ICCPR. Only individuals or other
    Contracting States can submit communications about the actions of the
    State. A Committee will not hear a complaint unless all domestic remedies
    have been exhausted.

    124.
    Cassese, A., Self Determination of Peoples, A legal Appraisal, Cambridge
    University Press 1995, p143.

    125.
    Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, Reconciliation, Australia'a challenge:
    final report of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation to the Prime
    Minister and the Commonwealth Parliament. December 2000.See: www.reconciliation.org.au/finalreport.

    126.
    Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples 1996, Vol 2, Part
    1, p44.

    127.
    Martinez, op cit, para 252.

    128.
    ibid, para 252.

    129.
    ibid, para 263.

    130.
    ibid, paras 270 and 271.