----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, September 06, 2010 7:54 PM
Subject: Not about the hung parliament
"Another invasion" -- Mick Dodson, former Australian of the Year
Dear Lyn,
It beggars belief that this is even legal in
Australia.
Aboriginal land in one of our most fragile ecosystems has
just been earmarked for compulsory acquisition by the Western Australian
Government.
The reason? Energy giants including BP, Woodside, Chevron and
Shell want to build a gas pipeline, and they don't want to wait for Indigenous
consultation. Some traditional owners are in favour of the pipeline,
others disagree. But one thing is clear: compulsory acquisition means
no
genuine consultation, and far less compensation if the project goes ahead.
We need to respond quickly and make sure Premier Barnett's announcement
is met with national outrage.
Locals are delivering a petition to the
Premier's office next week. Can you back them up by adding your name today,
and asking your friends to do the same?
http://www.getup.org.au/campaign/NoCompulsoryAcquisition
The nation is talking about hung parliament negotiations in the
marble halls of Parliament House. But far away,
in the red dirt of James
Price Point, 400km from Broome on the Dampier Peninsula, there is another power
struggle going on; pitting the profits of BP, Shell, Woodside and Chevron
against the rights of Indigenous Australians. You can help shift the
balance. There are numerous registered Aboriginal heritage sites in
the vicinity of James Price Point (Walmadan). Locals tell of Indigenous burial
sites and ancient rock art; in some areas you can actually see the footprints of
prehistoric birds, long extinct. But the Western Australian Premier wants to
bypass Aboriginal elders in what's been called "colonialism all over again" by
Wayne Bergmann, Kimberly Land Council CEO. And what's more, the project hasn't
even received environmental approvals required by State or Federal law.
This is about more than one site, or one gas pipeline.
Compulsory
acquisition in WA would put the profits of multinationals above the rights of
traditional owners -- and threatens decades of progress on land rights.
Can you stand with traditional owners behind a campaign to stop
compulsory acquisition?
http://www.getup.org.au/campaign/NoCompulsoryAcquisition
Colin Barnett's decision could set back the Indigenous Rights
movement by 30 years or more. Together we have the opportunity to ensure this
doesn't happen.
Thanks for standing up,
the GetUp team
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Authorised by Simon Sheikh,
Level 5, 116 Kippax St, Surry Hills NSW 2010