PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Keating, Paul

Period of Service: 20/12/1991 - 11/03/1996
Release Date:
05/02/1996
Release Type:
Media Release
Transcript ID:
9934
Document:
00009934.pdf 2 Page(s)
Released by:
  • Keating, Paul John
STATEMENT BY THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON P J KEATING MP CAPE YORK AGREEMENT A TRIUMPH FOR RECONCILIATION AND THE ENVIRONMENT

STATEMENT BY THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON P J KEATING MP
CAPE YORK AGREEMENT A TRIUMPH FOR RECONCILIATION AND THE
ENVIRONMENT
Today's announcement of an historic landuse agreement on Cape York
represents a watershed in the reconciliation process and a major boost for
environmental protection of one of our most pristine regions.
It lays a foundation of consensus for the creation of one of the world's truly
great protected areas from the reef, through the rainforests of the wet
tropics to the vast wilderness of the Cape itself.
Importantly, it points the way ahead for resolving landuse issues through
negotiation and consultation, rather than by confrontation and suspicion.
It embodies within it an act of recognition by each of the parties of each
other's rights and aspirations to the land, to the environment and -to
economic security through ecologically sustainable development.
This is what the reconciliation process is all about Coming together,
recognising that beyond our differences we share a common purpose and a
common interest in a special land, a land in which all our futures are
intertwined and inseparable.
It would never have been possible without this Government's recognition of
the essential truth of the Mabo judgement, without the Native Title Act which
provides for just such negotiated settlements and the Indigenous Land Fund
and the enormous shift in attitudes that have come with these things.
When the Coalition labelled the passage of the Native Title Act " a day of
shame", they forever disqualified themselves from any constructive role in a
process that is fundamental to our future as a nation. They underestimated
the genuine goodwill and decency of the Australians.
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The rest of us have shown them that we are moving ahead and none more
so than the people of Cape York who, with a genuine sense of goodwill and
common purpose, have come together to frame this agreement.
I welcome their achievement and congratulate them on it. A Labor
Government will support the agreement including, subject to consensus
among the interested parties in the region, the establishment of a fund to
facilitate the protection of areas of high conservation value including World
Heritage. Labor's support for this agreement will bring to fruition a very longstanding
and significant commitment to the pr~ pection of the North Queensland
environmen-,. The Federal and State Labor Governments have committed $ 7.65 million
since 1990 to assess the environmental values of the Cape through the Cape
York Land Use Strategy ( CYPLUS). The agreement represents a culmination
of that work and a framework within which those values can be protected.
It also builds on other significant environmental achievements of this
Government in North Queensland including the protection of the rainforests
of the wet tropics, and the Daintree rescue package.
I look forward to meeting with the parties at the earliest opportunity to discuss
the agreement and to determine a process for co-operatively achieving their
stated aspirations including the size of any conservation fund, World Heritage
assessment and listing, traditional access rights and settlement of native title
issues, and pastoral industry security and development.
CANBERRA February 1996 ' 1559

9934