birding-aus

Access to Aboriginal Land

To: "birding-aus" <>
Subject: Access to Aboriginal Land
From: "Peter Marsh" <>
Date: Mon, 30 Aug 2010 13:28:08 +1000
Dear Birders,
Having gone to Alice Springs looking for Princess Parrots unsuccessfully on 
public land last week I took the opportunity to make an appointment to see a 
senior officer of the Central Land Council to discuss the situation that had 
arisen and to seek to find a way for birders to visit the Mt Winter site while 
ensuring that the wishes of the traditional owners are respected fully. This 
discussion is ongoing and may, or may not, result in an arrangement that will 
benefit both parties - If anything comes of it you will be informed through 
Birding-Aus, please don't hassle the Land Council !

I learnt a lot about the permit system for entry onto aboriginal land that I 
was not previously aware of.  This information might be of interest to other 
birders as it highlights how careful one has to be before entering aboriginal 
land. It also throws light on some aspects of the recent controversy about 
access to Mt Winter. When a permit application is made to visit a site the land 
council asks its anthropology section to generate a list of the Traditional 
Owners for that site. That section has a data base of the owners of all lands 
under land council authority. The permit section then contacts those owners and 
ascertains their attitude. This is then conveyed to the permit applicant. It is 
ONLY the Traditional Owners (who may be one person or a number of people) FOR 
THAT SPECIFIC SITE who can grant you permission to visit the site. Thus the 
ONLY way to you can get permission is by agreement of the correct Traditional 
Owners and you can only be sure of who those people are by going through the 
land council.

It is clear that from the perspective of the rightful Traditional Owners a 
group of birders visited their land around Mt Winter without proper permission 
. The fact that some other aboriginal people had purported to give permission 
and the visitor believed that had permission is not good enough to avoid the 
unhappiness that has arisen in this case. The message is you have to go through 
the land council to be sure that the right Traditional Owners are consulted. If 
that had happened then it is possible that the present unfortunate situation 
might not have arisen.
Regards
Peter

PS Wonder if the early birds who got a permit will let the rest of us know how 
they went?
_______________________
Peter Crispin Marsh
82 Louisa Road
Birchgrove NSW 2041
+61 2 9810 4264
0414 810 426

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