Site navigation

Change font size: SmallerLargerReload

About the Australian Human Rights Commission navigation

11 December 2006


End national scandal in Indigenous health, urges open letter to Prime Minister, State Premiers, parliamentarians as well as the public in The Australian newspaper

Open Letter Signatures

 

Australia"s leading health, human rights, aid and development organisations publish a full-page open letter to Prime Minister John Howard, State Premiers and Territory Chief Ministers, parliamentarians as well as the general public in today"s (December 11) The Australian urging them to commit to a plan to achieve health equality for Indigenous peoples within 25 years.

"It is a national scandal that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people live 17 years less than other Australians and that their babies die at almost three times the rate of non-Indigenous children," said Tom Calma, Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Social Justice Commissioner, a spokesperson for the group.

"In the country of "the fair go" addressing the status of Indigenous health is one of the greatest challenges to this nation"s sense of decency and fairness."

The group is so concerned about the deepening health crisis in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities that they took the unusual step of placing an advertisement in the nation"s national newspaper. This has enabled the group to speak with one unified voice, as well as send a powerful message to all Australians that Indigenous Australians continue to needlessly suffer and die early - not from a lack of solutions or government commitments but from a lack of political will and action.

"It is not acceptable for governments to continually state the situation is tragic and ought to be treated with urgency and then fail to put in place targets, funding and timeframes to address the issue," said Mr Calma.
Addressing inequality in health status can be overcome. But it will require long-term action and a focused commitment. All around Australia, Indigenous communities and organisations are taking action to improve the health of their people. Their successes show that with a concerted national effort we can end Australia"s Indigenous health crisis within a generation.

"Rapid improvements can be achieved in the health of Indigenous peoples by comprehensive, targeted and well resourced government action as well as through partnerships with Indigenous peoples."

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health equality within 25 years will require at a minimum:

"Addressing Australia"s Indigenous health crisis should be a commitment shared by all sides of politics and all sections of Australian society. Make no mistake,
the health of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples is a national shame and we stand diminished as a nation as well as individuals by ignoring the
plight of our fellow Australians," said Mr Calma.

The list of agencies signed up to the campaign include:

National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation

Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission

Congress of Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Nurses

Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory

Australian Indigenous Doctors Association

Amnesty International Australia

Australian College of Rural and Remote Medicine

Australian Council of Social Service

Australian Council for International Development

Australian General Practice Network

Australian Nursing Federation

Australian Red Cross

Australians for Native Title and Reconciliation

Caritas Australia

Cooperative Research Centre for Aboriginal Health

Diplomacy Training Program

Fred Hollows Foundation

Gnibi the College of Indigenous Australian Peoples, Southern Cross University

Human Rights Law Resource Centre

Ian Thorpe"s Fountain for Youth

Indigenous Law Centre

Make Indigenous Poverty History campaign

National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Ecumenical Council

National Association of Community Legal Centres

National Children"s and Youth Law Centre

National Rural Health Alliance

Oxfam Australia

Professor Daniel Tarantola, Chair of Health and Human Rights, University of New South

Public Health Association of Australia

Quaker Services Australia

Royal Australasian College of Physicians

Royal Australian College of General Practitioners

Rural Doctors Association of Australia

Save the Children Australia

Telethon Institute for Child Health Research

UNICEF Australia

Uniya Jesuit Social Justice Centre


 

 

Last updated January 31, 2008