See today’s story and Op-ed below
A 36-year-old man has burst into flames after being shot by a police Taser in Western Australia.
Police say they were trying to arrest the Aboriginal man for petrol sniffing at the Goldfields Aboriginal community of Warburton yesterday when he turned violent.
To view on a PC/Mac please use this link
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/07/21/2631566.htm
To view on a mobile please use this link
http://m.abc.net.au/browse?page=11144&articleid=2631566&cat=Justin
from @perthtones’ iPhone

- Image via Wikipedia

- Image via Wikipedia
Op-ed – tony serve
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Police and Justice authorities in remote parts of Western Australia have a tough job dealing with violence and substance abuse in Aboriginal and mixed communities – no doubt about it.
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The tragedy is that Aboriginal people too often die because authorities like police and justice staff are clearly not trained and equipped to deal with the issues in a humane and effective way.
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In the case above, which follows the “cooking” death of an elder in a prison van during a desert journey, it’s clear that the officer involved couldn’t put 2 and 2 together. That is; petrol + spark = fire.
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Systemic racism has a long history here, and that plays a part, but it really is about the comfortable white folk in Perth not being moved to provide even BASIC health resources to deal with substance abuse and violence.
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Authorities can’t even provide proper health care to all here in the city – so imagine, just imagine, what it’s like in the remote desert communities where quick fix politicians visit in the wake of endless tragedies, and leave with empty promises still drying on their lips.
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A half-baked call for input on the next ten years of mental health policy is a start, but efforts to reach out and listen to traumatised Aboriginal communities are notably absent.
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If I were a Yamatji man instead of a white boy born on their land, I would have been dead 16 years ago – life expectancy for Aboriginal males is 37!
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Meanwhile 68% of juvenile prisoners in our jails are Aboriginal yet they make up less than 10% of the population.
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Let me draw a long bow now as the Uranium industry meets tomorrow in Fremantle to plan new mines and even nuclear power stations on land owned by Aborigines.
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Is the lack of political will to deliver even the most basic health services linked to the powerful mining lobby’s ongoing efforts to override the wishes and needs of traditional land owners in their quest for profit.
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See here for the most recent example of miners running roughshod over taditional landowners
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There’s no point in blaming the coppers, the miners or the state and federal Governments – it’s about our cosy apathy and on the “turning away.”
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