As Victoria negotiates on a Treaty with its Aboriginal people, an elder has presented a list of 10 demands, which the premier says will be considered.
Victorian Indigenous elder and former Treaty Advancement Commissioner Aunty Jill Gallagher has presented a list of 10 demands which she said âmust be part of a statewide treaty.â
The Treaty negotiation processâcommitted to by the state Labor government in 2018âofficially commenced in 2022, with the introduction of empowering legislation in the Victorian Parliament following an agreement with the âFirst Peoplesâ Assembly of Victoria.â
Ms. Gallagherâs list includes exempting Aboriginal people from land taxâincluding stamp duty and council rates; providing Aboriginal People with interest-free loans to purchase homes; and creating âdesignated seatsâ on local councils.
Under the proposal, traditional owners would be âfully resourcedâ to maintain languages and cultures at a local level; a âperpetual infrastructure fundâ would be created; and all Aboriginal students in the State would receive free tertiary education.
âAboriginal historyâthe true history of this countryâmust be taught in all Victorian and Australian schools,â another demand read.
Local cultural learning places would be established to âensure our mobs are culturally strongâ and to help educate the wider non-Aboriginal community. Further, an Aboriginal-specific Productivity Commission would be established in Victoria to hold the government to account.
Ms. Gallagher said a treaty between the government and the stateâs Indigenous peoples would âsecure the future for the next generation.â
âTreaty has been a long time coming, and the work of many, many generations has gone into getting us to where we are today. Make no mistake, the possibilities and potential Treaty brings are monumental for our communities.â
She described improving the visibility of Aboriginal culture as âthe big oneâ.
âIf thereâs one thing that frustrates me more than anything else, itâs the lack of visibility of Aboriginal cultures in this state, and in this country and in the world,â Ms. Gallagher said.
Premier Says Everything is on the Table
Premier Jacinta Allan said she had not seen Ms. Gallagherâs list, but she was sure it would be âon the tableâ when Treaty negotiations commenced later this year.
âThis and a whole range of other matters will be put on the table for negotiation,â she said.
âWe are going through a treaty process and out of respect to the negotiations ⊠Iâm not going to engage in a separate negotiation through the media with treaty representatives. So Iâm not in a position today to rule anything in or out about what might be considered through those treaty negotiations. That would be highly inappropriate and disrespectful to the treaty process,â the premier said.
âWe have established, through legislation, the framework for those negotiations to be undertaken.
âThe First Peoples Assembly [are] doing their work at the moment in how they establish their part of the negotiations. The government is also doing its work on how we come to the table.