PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
08/02/1998
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
10975
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
8 February 1998 TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP REGIONAL MESSAGE

E&OE........................................................................................................

Hello. Next month when Parliament meets again, the Parliament will

resubmit its Native Title Amendment Bill. We have to do this because

last year, the Senate put some amendments in it which are quite unacceptable.

I hope that on this occasion we can get the Bill through and we can

do what I think most Australians want and put this difficult issue

behind us.

Amending the Native Title Act is very important to regional and rural

Australia. What we have proposed is a fair balance respecting the

rights of Aboriginal people, farmers, miners and the rest of the community.

The Senate has insisted on some amendments which are quite unreasonable

and the worst of the amendments insisted on by the Senate relates

to the so-called rights to negotiate. You see, what the Senate is

doing is saying that one section of the community, one group of Australians,

namely the Aboriginal native title claimants, should have superior

rights to other Australians, namely the pastoralists.

The right to negotiate is not a common law right. It was a special

right given to native title claimants under Mr Keating's Native

Title Act and all we are doing is saying that procedures should be

established whereby native title claimants are given no greater rights

than other Australians.

What the Senate is saying is that you could have a situation where

in relation to a claim over a pastoral leasehold, the native title

claimant could insist on a right to negotiate but that would not be

available to a pastoral leaseholder who may, through his family, have

occupied that land for 50 or 100 years.

We haven't given in fully to any side of this argument. We have

tried to strike a fair balance and under our changes it will still

be possible for native title claimants in theory to make claims over

79 percent of the land mass of Australia.

You all remember that when the original Act was passed in 1993 the

Keating Government virtually guaranteed that there couldn't be

native title claim under pastoral leases. That was overturned in the

Wik decision and what we have done with our changes is to make sure

that farmers and pastoralists can carry on their normal activities

without interference and that they can make reasonable extensions

to those activities without running into road blocks and running into

difficulties.

We need to put this issue behind us. We need to focus on the future.

We need to focus on constructive gestures of reconciliation between

Aboriginal people and other Australians. We can't afford as a

nation for the debate to go on indefinitely and I therefore hope that

when the Bill is presented again in March of this year the Senate

will understand the fairness and let the Bill go through in the form

that we propose.

Thank you for listening.

10975