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Central Land Council

CLC Press Releases

14 Augyust 2008 2008
Communities have their say on intervention  ›› more
31 July 2008 2008
Fairfax news in bad taste  ›› more
24 July 2008 2008
election: accountability needed  ›› more
17 July 2008 2008
Royal commission needed into NT funding ›› more
11 July 2008 2008
Simpson Desert: the last land rights claim under the Aboriginal Land Rights Act  ›› more
8 July 2008 2008
Sacred site damage at Wilora  ›› more
30 May 2008
Seal the Mereenie Loop Road Now  ›› more
27 May 2008
Angela Pamela Negotiations  ›› more
9 May 2008
Angela Pamela and the native title process  ›› more
18 February 2008
Coalition should support permit system  ›› more
15 February 2008
Politicians threaten to derail fresh start  ›› more
22 January 2008
Police ignorance upsets Lajamanu community  ›› more
26 November 2007
Optimism for a fresh consensual approach on Aboriginal affairs  ›› more
21 November 2007
Concerns over Central Petroleum tactics  ›› more
 
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Permits need to stay says CLC

Calls for the permit system to be abolished on Aboriginal land are motivated purely by self interest the Central Land Council said today.

“It's amazing that 30 years on people still see Aboriginal freehold land as some public space which they can exploit for commercial and recreational purposes without regard for the traditional land owners,” CLC Director David Ross said.

“Claims the permit system slows down economic development for remote Indigenous people are a bizarre twist of logic.

“Unfortunately, economic development faces real barriers in remote communities like illiteracy, poor health and hygiene, a lack of housing, sewerage, bad roads and communications infrastructure, and the inevitable social dysfunction that results.

“The community has no problem with local pastoralists using whatever means of control at their disposal to prevent people accessing their leases without permission but when Aboriginal people similarly control entry to Aboriginal land there are all sorts of objections from the public,” he said.

“The permit system is an essential mechanism to help Aboriginal people protect their sacred sites. It also enables Aboriginal people to have some control over who is able to work on or enter Aboriginal land.

“On a number of occasions the Land Council has been asked by communities to withdraw permits for corrupt or unscrupulous people employed on Aboriginal land.

Mr Ross said that the Land Council does not have a problem with journalists attending Court hearings in communities.

The Central Land Council wrote to the Northern Territory Government in February outlining its view that the justice system must be open to public scrutiny and public access to court proceedings is an essential part of the accountability of the system.

It said that any person who applied for a permit to attend a court hearing would be granted one. However, the CLC has never had an application for a permit to attend a Court hearing and subsequently the CLC has no record of one ever being refused for these purposes.

Last year the Central Land Council issued more than 4000 permits to travel or work on Aboriginal land.

contact: Jane Hodson 0417877579 0889516217 June 1 2006