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The Tiwi Islands are part of Australia's Northern Territory, 80 km north of Darwin There are approximately 2500 people on the islands.The Tiwi Land Council is one of four in the Northern Territory. It is a representative body with statutory authority under the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976 and has responsibilities under the Native Title Act 1993 and the Pastoral Land Act 1992.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiwi_Islands
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Women's Feature Service
India - New Delhi
By Neena Bhandari
Tiwi Islands, Australia (Women's
Feature Service) - Lynette De Santis, 45, was surprised when in October last
year, she became the first elected Mayor of the Tiwi Islands Shire Council
comprising Bathurst and Melville Islands with a largely indigenous Aboriginal
population of 1,495 and 434, respectively. She had conquered what had thus far
been a male bastion. "It had become the norm that men would be
chairperson, mayor or president so I was amazed when I was elected the first
female Mayor. I have always stood up for the interests of my people and I
suppose this resulted in my victory," says De Santis, who was born and
bred in
"It is now evident that people's
way of thinking is changing and it has made me a very proud Tiwi woman.
Including myself, there are four women in our 12-member council. My male
colleagues are supportive, respectful and easy to work with," says De
Santis, who hails from Milikapiti on Melville Island, which is separated from
Bathurst Island by the narrow
While the islands have had high
incidence of domestic violence and suicides, Tiwi women have always run
successful enterprises with printmaking and screening, dressmaking, and the
arts, in an effort to improve the lives of their families and community.
"My mother belonged to the `Stolen
Generation', but she encouraged all of her children to get an education as she
didn't have that opportunity. I have done Year 12 equivalent from
Violence has been so entrenched in some
communities here that they are simply labelled 'dysfunctional'. Indigenous
females are 35 times as likely to be hospitalised due to family
violence-related assaults as non-Indigenous females and they are 22 times more
likely as non-Indigenous women to be in prison. In 2006-07, 48 per cent of
Indigenous homicide victims were female. "We know that women are still
being bashed. We know that certain children are still being abused. It is not
part of anybody's culture. We have to work as a nation to eradicate the belief
that it is part of our (Aboriginal) culture to bash women," acknowledges
Alison Anderson, Northern Territory's Minister for Indigenous Policy.
The situation had become so bad that,
in 2007, former Prime Minister John Howard-led Liberal Government launched the
controversial Northern Territory Emergency Response (NTER) soon after a
government-commissioned inquiry concluded that child sexual abuse in remote
Aboriginal communities had become an issue of "urgent national
significance."
Commonly referred to as the government
`intervention', stringent restrictions were imposed on alcohol and pornography,
part of the welfare money was quarantined and could only be spent on family
essentials and food. Millions of dollars have since been poured into Aboriginal
communities to improve education, healthcare, housing, creating jobs and making
communities safer. The initiative cost 687 million Australian dollars ($543
million) in the 2007-08 financial year alone.
While not all were happy with these
measures and a 2008 government review of the intervention found feelings of
betrayal and resistance, Anderson, who is Aboriginal, insists that since 2007,
there is more awareness about women and child abuse and there is more safety in
the community for them.
"Incidence of domestic violence
was very high, but now women are feeling more confident to report crime. We
have had a high rate of suicide, too much consumption of gunja and alcohol,
riots, kids breaking into homes, but things are settling in. Law is coming to
our community and offenders are kept out," say Maureen Tipuamantumirri,
47, who resides in Nguiu on
De Santis agrees that restrictions on
alcohol and gunja have reduced incidence of domestic violence from
approximately 80 to 90 per cent to 60 per cent or less.
On the local school playground in
Nguiu, girls are enjoying a sack race. In 2006, 24 per cent of Indigenous
females had a non-school qualification compared with 46 per cent of
non-Indigenous females. In 2008, only 50 per cent of Indigenous females
progressed to Year 12 compared with 82 per cent non-Indigenous females.
Patrick Puruntatameri, 54, who has been
a teacher for the past 16 years and now heads the new Training Centre is
unhappy with the abolition of Tiwi language in schools. "Now there is only
English taught in schools. We would like to control our own affairs. We can do
it ourselves without the government imposing rules," he argues.
Many Aborigines felt "intense hurt
and anger at being isolated on the basis of race and subjected to collective
measures that would never be applied to other Australians."
The Training Centre runs courses in
business, office management, first aid and also imparts driving lessons.
"Of all enrollments, 40 per cent are women. In the past year, four women
have accomplished business courses," says Puruntatameri.
In 2006, only 43 per cent of Indigenous
females were employed. Tipuamantumirri is one of four full-time staff working
for Tiwi Islands Training and Employment Board's Money Business, a programme to
help Indigenous people facing financial hardships in Nguiu. Financial exclusion
is a significant problem among Indigenous communities. Tipuamantumirri says,
"We help people with budgeting, bill paying, getting loans, paying fines
and developing a savings culture. But the islands are so remote that when we
call the call centre on the mainland, they don't even know where we are."
Out of a total population of 517,000
Indigenous people in
At the nearby Women's Resource Centre,
there are posters on healthy eating and how to keep oneself clean. Seven women
are employed at the Centre under the Commonwealth Development Employment
Programme (CDEP) for fabric printing, earning an average AUD 900 a fortnight.
Therese Puruntatameri, clad in a
T-shirt and long skirt, explains that while some people may have benefited from
Government imposed income management, she would like the freedom to budget for
herself. Under the Government intervention, part of the income is quarantined
for food and essentials, which can be bought by using the Basics Card.
In this first world country, living
conditions in these islands are akin to the third world. But women here want to
usher in change, not only within their families but their communities.
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