WARNING:
This Digest was prepared for debate. It reflects the legislation as
introduced and does not canvass subsequent amendments. This Digest
does not have any official legal status. Other sources should be
consulted to determine the subsequent official status of the
Bill.
CONTENTS
Passage History
Purpose
Background
Main Provisions
Concluding Comments
Endnotes
Contact Officer and Copyright Details
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Heritage Protection Bill 1998
Date Introduced: 2 April 1998
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Prime Minister
Commencement: On Proclamation, or otherwise
within six months after Royal Assent
To provide for
procedures which may be used to protect indigenous areas and
objects, and to provide for accreditation procedures for State and
Territory heritage protection regimes.
History
Despite the fact that there has been cross-party
support for the principle of heritage protection legislation for
Australia's indigenous heritage, the actual legislative
implementation of this principle has not had enormous success.(1)
The support for heritage protection is summarised in the vision
statement of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, a statutory
body set up with unanimous cross-party support, which states its
hope to build:
A united Australia which respects
this land of ours; values the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
heritage; and provides justice and equity for all.(2)
The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Heritage Protection Act 1984 (Cth) ('the current
Act') was introduced in 1984 as a temporary measure, however when
the promised permanent measure did not eventuate the original
sunset clause was removed two years later.
In the wake of the Mabo decision in 1992(3) the
need for 'immediate Federal legislation ... to ensure total
security for Aboriginal sacred sites and heritage' was once again
raised.(4) As part of a negotiated settlement with indigenous
negotiators the Commonwealth agreed to the planned Native Title
Social Justice Package. The proposals developed by the Council for
Aboriginal Reconciliation, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Commission ('ATSIC'), and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Social Justice Commissioner included suggestions for
comprehensive heritage protection.(5)
In 1995 the Hon Elizabeth Evatt AC was
commissioned by the then Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Affairs to review the Act. Her report, Review of the
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act
1984 ('the Evatt Review') was presented to the subsequent
Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs, Senator
Herron, in August of 1996.
In December the Minister announced an 'overhaul'
of the Act, and ATSIC subsequently initiated consultations on the
issue of heritage protection. The Evatt Review was also the subject
of an inquiry by the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title
and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund ('the Joint
Committee') during mid-1997, whose Report, containing numerous
recommendations regarding the drafting of Commonwealth heritage
protection legislation, was tabled on the same day as the current
Bill.(6) This Report was called The Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act 1984 and was
the Joint Committee's Eleventh Report ('the 11th
Report'). The Joint Committee has subsequently issued a twelfth
report into the Bill ('the 12th Report').(7)
While there is broad-based support for the
principle that the current Act is in need of reform,(8) there has
been no consensus on the substance of this reform. The current Bill
implements neither the bulk of the Evatt Review's recommendations,
nor the recommendations of the 11th Report.
Commonwealth
Responsibility
The Commonwealth has constitutional powers and
responsibilities for indigenous heritage protection under a number
of provisions, most notably section 51(xxvi) of the Constitution
(the race power).
The Evatt Review comments that despite a
'plethora' of Commonwealth legislation and administrative
programmes there is no 'comprehensive or integrated Aboriginal
cultural heritage protection regime.'(9) The Review concluded
that:
[t]he Commonwealth has international,
moral and legislative obligations to ensure that Aboriginal
heritage in its broadest sense is nurtured and protected in a
comprehensive and consistent way.(10)
Thus, while one of the stated policy goals of
the Review was '[t]o retain the basic principles of the Act, as an
Act of last resort'(11) it envisaged a broader role for the
Commonwealth than simply having it function as a legislative
mechanism of appeal. While the Joint Committee did not develop this
theme of overall Commonwealth responsibility in either the
11th or 12th Report, it has given implicit
endorsement to the principle in its recommendation that an
independent administrative agency be created which would play a
broader role than simply determining applications for protection,
and in the recommendations regarding the Commonwealth's role in
establishing Minimum Standards.(12)
The majority reports of the Joint Committee also
recommended that a Commonwealth-enforced minimum standard for State
or Territory accreditation should include 'a blanket protection
approach.'(13) The 'blanket protection approach' involves
presumptive protection of all significant sites, with the
possibility for the protection to be removed, rather than requiring
registration before any protection is given. By putting a basic
level of responsibility on people who want to work or use the land
to make enquiries regarding the existence of significant sites
(other than the owners of the land in question), this approach
gives greater protection to indigenous heritage than if the onus is
on indigenous people to apply for protection. One of the
difficulties with the current Commonwealth regime is that the
current Act is only ever used when a potential conflict has already
arisen. This difficulty remains pronounced in the provisions of
this Bill because one of the requirements for a protection order is
that a significant site be already under threat of desecration. The
Joint Committee commented in its 12th Report that:
Most States and Territories already
provide blanket protection... Importantly, the Committee has
received no evidence arguing against blanket, or presumptive,
protection of indigenous heritage.(14)
The Commonwealth also has constitutional power
to legislate with respect to indigenous heritage protection under
the external affairs power (section 51(xxix) of the Constitution).
The international obligations which the Commonwealth is subject to
include provisions of:
- the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights(15) ('ICCPR'), which provides that persons belonging to
religious or linguistic minorities:
- ... shall not be denied the right, in community with other
members of their group, to enjoy their culture, to profess and
practice their own religion, or to use his or her own language.
(art 27)
- the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights(16) ('ECOSOC') which provides that:
- All peoples have the right to self-determination. By virtue of
that right they freely determine their political status and freely
pursue their economic, social and cultural development.
ECOSOC also requires that all State parties to
the Covenant 'promote the realisation of the right of
self-determination ...'(17)
- the International Convention on the Elimination of all
Forms of Racial Discrimination(18)
- the Declaration Of The Principles of International Cultural
Co-operation, UNESCO, 1966, which includes the principles
that:
- Each culture has a dignity and a value which must be respected
and preserved;
- Every people has the right and the duty to develop its
culture;
- In their rich variety and diversity, and in the reciprocal
influences they exert on one another, all cultures form part of the
common heritage belonging to all mankind.(19)
- the Convention For The Protection Of The World Cultural and
Natural Heritage(20) which imposes a duty on Australia to
ensure that its cultural and natural heritage of outstanding
universal value is identified, protected, conserved, presented and
transmitted to future generations, which in turn includes a need to
integrate the protection of heritage into comprehensive planning
programmes, set up services for protecting and conserving heritage,
conduct research into the dangers that threaten heritage, do what
is necessary to identify, protect and restore heritage and foster
centres for training and research on heritage.(21)
Significant Divergences between
the Bill and the Evatt Review's Recommendations
In a sense the Evatt Review is the defining
document regarding the legal regimes for protection of indigenous
heritage protection in Australia today. Its 370 page overview of
the various heritage regimes in operation included 117
recommendations which were the product of national consultations
and 69 written submissions. Despite some gentle and not-so-gentle
criticisms,(22) the Review has found broad-based acceptance and
formed the back-drop against which suggestions for reform have been
evaluated. So, for instance, the reference to the Joint Committee
asked for the inquiry to consider 'the urgent need for
amendments...consistent with the report of the Review of [the] Act
by Justice Elizabeth Evatt,'(23) while Senator Herron advised that
the Government's proposals for reform were partly based on the
recommendations in the Evatt Review.(24) The table prepared by
ATSIC which compares the Government's proposals for amendments with
the recommendations of the Review is informative (the Table forms
an Appendix to the 11th Report).(25) Furthermore the
Review's recommendations have been widely endorsed by the
submissions to the Joint Committee's various inquiries into the
proposed Bill.(26)
The three primary areas where the Bill differs
from the Review's recommendations are in its treatment of the
concept of 'national interest,' its decision not to include any
provisions which ensure the involvement of indigenous people in the
decision-making processes of the scheme, and its treatment of the
plans for State and Territory accreditation.
The National Interest
The Bill's treatment of applications from States
and Territories with an accredited heritage regime differs to those
without such a regime. If an application for protection is received
from a State or Territory with an accredited heritage regime, then
the only way the Commonwealth can intervene is if the Minister
considers that intervention would be in the national interest. The
second reading speech explained that the Government was including
this provision because:
[t]he incentive for States and
Territories to achieve accreditation will come from the
Commonwealth absenting itself from involvement in State or
Territory decision-making once a State or Territory is
accredited.(27)
ATSIC commented that this provision
'fundamentally changes the nature of Commonwealth involvement in
indigenous heritage protection and the relationship between
Commonwealth, State and Territory regimes.'(28) Ms Evatt commented
that 'this is incompatible with maintaining the Commonwealth
procedure as a last resort mechanism' and went on to say:
The protection of Aboriginal heritage
is an important national interest in itself, and ... the
protection procedure under the Act should be available as a
mechanism of last resort in all cases...[The national
interest provisions] place a new and significant barrier in the way
of heritage protection.(29) [emphasis in the original]
Ms Evatt argued that the concern of Aboriginal
people in a particular region or locality, however deeply felt,
would not necessarily equate with a national interest.
The majority report of the Joint Committee
suggests that the Bill should be amended to ensure that the
definition of national interest itself includes the protection of
indigenous heritage.(30)
The Bill's use of the concept of the national
interest attracted emphatic opposition from ATSIC. In a press
release released the day the Bill was introduced, the Commission
commented that the Bill:
effectively allows the Commonwealth
Minister...to hand over heritage protection to the states and
territories, despite the clear constitutional responsibility that
the Australian people gave to the Commonwealth Government in
1967.(31)
Mr Djerrkura, the head of ATSIC, also commented
that the interaction of the Prime Minister's 10 Point Plan on
Native Title and the Bill would place sacred and significant sites
in 'double jeopardy.'(32) He said:
[The] Bill significantly erodes this
sole remaining option under the Howard Government's own agenda by
withdrawing Commonwealth involvement in indigenous heritage, except
in cases involving the "national interest."(33)
Accreditation procedures for State and
Territory regimes
The minimum standards for accreditation are set
out in proposed section 26 of the Bill. They are
fairly general in nature and do not contain several of the
recommended standards included in either or both the majority Joint
Committee's reports or the Evatt Review. Most notably the majority
of the Committee recommended that a 'blanket protection' scheme
should be required as a minimum standard for State or Territory
legislative regimes. This would follow the Northern Territory's
legislative approach, which has been cited as the 'best practice'
model.(34) Other differences identified by ATSIC include the need
for minimum standards to specify:
- Indigenous control over assessments
- Access rights
- Review rights
- Provision for emergency and interim protection
- Provision for early consideration of heritage issues in
planning processes and
- Resources to ensure effective access to State and Territory
remedies.(35)
Indigenous involvement in the decision
making processes governing heritage protection
There are three levels at which the Evatt
Review's recommendation of indigenous involvement have not been
taken up. At the level of the implementing agency, which was to
have had indigenous members, at the level of the advisory council,
which was to give overall policy advice to the implementing agency
and the Minister, and at the State and Territory level, where it
was recommended that local indigenous heritage bodies be
established.
The establishment of an Aboriginal Cultural
Heritage Advisory Council was recommended so that it could give
advice on issues arising under the Act to the Minister and the
independent national body with implementation responsibilities. The
recommendation was that the Advisory Council could give particular
advice 'on the procedures to be followed and the persons to be
consulted in making assessments for the purposes of the Act.'(36)
The Advisory Council was to have been constituted by Aboriginal
people, 'in such a way as to strengthen links with local Aboriginal
communities which have responsibility for heritage issues.'(37)
The Bill has not established an independent
agency to function as the implementing body or a national
co-ordinating body, although the proposed Director of Indigenous
Heritage Protection would perform some of the same functions.
Further commentary on the position of the Director is provided in
the Concluding Comments of this Digest.
At the State and Territory level it was
recommended that minimum standards should include the establishment
of Aboriginal cultural heritage bodies with responsibility for site
evaluation and for the administration of the legislation. It was
recommended that they should:
- be independent
- be controlled by Aboriginal members representative of
Aboriginal communities
- have gender balance
- have adequate staffing, expertise and resources
- have access to independent advisers, e.g. anthropologists,
archaeologists.(38)
ATSIC have commented that there is a:
[f]ailure to adequately involve
indigenous people in the processes and procedures established under
the Bill for accreditation and assessment of significance and
threat,(39)
while Ms Evatt refers to the 'glaring omission'
regarding the recognition of Aboriginal responsibility in this
area.(40)
The majority report of the 12th
Report was 'strongly supportive of the principle of meaningful
indigenous involvement in relevant decisionmaking.'(41) Senator
Herron has given an explanation of the decision not to specify that
the Director of Indigenous Heritage should be indigenous (see the
Concluding Comments of this Digest), but apart from this comment,
the Government has yet to respond to the comments regarding
indigenous involvement in the Report of the Joint Committee.
Native Title and Heritage
Protection
ATSIC has identified this Bill as part of an
attack by Government on indigenous rights, and commented that:
[t]he proposal to remove the Right to
Negotiate from the Native Title Act is now reinforced by an
effective Commonwealth withdrawal from Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander heritage protection.(42)
During the debate on the Native Title Amendment
Bill 1997 there were several amendments moved regarding the
protection of indigenous heritage by both the ALP and the minor
parties. These were rejected by the Government, which commented in
the debate that:
The proper place to deal with
heritage issues is in heritage legislation. The proper place to
deal with native title issues is in the Native Title Act.(43)
The Evatt Review commented with respect to the
Government's plans in the area of native title:
Towards a more workable Native
Title Act: Outline of proposed amendments proposes that the
right to negotiate about exploration or prospecting activities
would be removed from the Act on the ground that heritage
legislation would continue to provide protection for sites of
significance from the impact of these activities. The right to
negotiate would remain in regard to the production stage of mining
activity. This would be an unfortunate development so far as the
protection of cultural heritage is concerned as neither
State/Territory nor Commonwealth heritage protection legislation
guarantees an adequate process of negotiation, a process which is
essential if heritage is to be given proper consideration in
decisions concerning land use. If the proposal is implemented
native title claimants and holders may make greater use of the Act
to gain protection for their areas or sites.(44)
The minority report of the 11th
Report also put the Bill in the context of the Government's
approach to native title, saying that the issue of heritage
protection could only be considered in the political, social and
legislative context of the time, including the 'lengthy and
divisive debate' on the native title amendments. The minority said
that:
In concert with the extinguishment of
native title and the erosion of indigenous rights central to the
Native Title Amendment Bill, the majority recommendations
[regarding heritage protection amendments] represent a retrograde
step in reconciliation between indigenous and non indigenous
Australians.(45)
The Human Rights and Equal Opportunity
Commission have made similar comments, saying that the Bill:
cannot be seen in isolation from
proposed amendments to the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth),
particularly those affecting the right to negotiate. The proposed
amendments to the Native Title Act significantly detract from the
already very limited ability of Aboriginal people to protect their
cultural heritage. By weakening heritage protection processes even
further, this Bill leaves the protection of Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander cultural heritage in extreme jeopardy.(46)
A brief summary of the Bill's basic schema is
provided here for the utility of Members:
The Bill sets up provisions for dealing with
applications for protection of sacred sites or objects. A
distinction between accredited and unaccredited State and Territory
regimes is created, and this impacts on how applications for
protection are dealt with. There are minimum standards which must
be complied with in order for the Minister to declare a legislative
regime accredited. In an unaccredited regime when an application
for protection is received the Minister and Director of Indigenous
Heritage Protection deal with the application on its merits. There
are various procedural provisions, including the separation of
determinations regarding the issue of a site or object's
significance, the threat against it, and the final decision as to
whether protection is appropriate. In the case of an accredited
regime the Minister may only grant a long-term protection order if
s/he is satisfied that to do so would be in the national interest.
In all cases there are provisions made for attempts to be made at
arriving at a negotiated outcome.
Part 1 - Preliminary
Proposed section 4 sets out the
main objects of the legislation. These are to establish procedures
which may be used to preserve or protect significant indigenous
areas or objects, and to provide procedures which may be used to
accredit State and Territory heritage protection regimes.(47)
Unlike the current Act which this Bill would replace, the objects
are framed in terms of providing procedures to achieve the aims,
rather than focussing on the aims themselves. The object of the
current Act is to, itself, preserve and protect significant areas
or objects, whereas this Bill's object is to provide for
procedures to preserve and protect significant areas of
objects.
Proposed section 5 provides for
various definitions. The definitions of 'Aboriginal peoples' and
'Torres Strait Islander' combine to give the definition of an
'indigenous person', a term which is central to the rest of the
proposed Act.
The definition of 'indigenous human remains' has
various exclusions, including those bodies, or remains of a body,
which are buried in accordance with the law of a State or
Territory, or which are buried in land that is, in accordance with
indigenous tradition, used or recognised as a burial ground. It
also excludes objects made from bodily material 'that is not
readily recognisable as being bodily material' and bodies or
remains of a body which fall within the laws of a State or
Territory 'relating to medical treatment or post-mortem
examinations.'
Proposed section 5 defines an
'accredited heritage protection regime' as a State or Territory
regime which the Minister has declared as accredited under
proposed section 25. The status of an accredited
heritage protection regime is important in determining the role for
the Commonwealth in heritage protection.
The acronyms used in the definition of an 'AR
application' and a 'UR application' are not explicitly spelt out,
however they are important as mnemonics to understanding the scheme
of the legislation. An application for a long-term protection order
originating in a State or Territory with an accredited regime is an
'AR application' and an application originating in a State or
Territory without an accredited regime (an 'un-accredited regime')
is a 'UR application.' There are other acronyms which it is helpful
to keep in mind. There are LPOs, IPOs and EPOs, which are
'long-term protection orders,' 'interim protection orders' and
'emergency protection orders' respectively.
'Indigenous tradition' is another significant
definition, and it is given as 'the body of traditions,
observances, customs and beliefs of indigenous persons generally or
of a particular community or group of indigenous persons.' It
includes traditions specifically relating to 'particular persons,
areas, objects or relationships.' The definition of indigenous
tradition is also used in the definitions of 'significant
indigenous area' and 'significant indigenous object', both of which
are defined as significant if they are significant to indigenous
persons, in accordance with indigenous tradition.
Proposed sub-section 5(5)
defines an 'overlapping area' as an area which falls within, or
that includes, an area to which an original application
relates.
Proposed sub-section 5(6)
defines what constitutes injury or desecration of an area or
object, and includes things done which are inconsistent with
indigenous tradition. In the case of an indigenous area this may
include things done in 'or near the area.'
Proposed section 6 extends the
scope of the legislation to encompass any waters claimed by
Australia under the Seas and Submerged Lands Act 1973,
while proposed section 8 extends the proposed Act
to have an extra-territorial operation.
Part 2-The Director of Indigenous Heritage Protection and the
Register
Proposed section 9 establishes
a Director of Indigenous Heritage Protection ('the Director').
Under proposed section 10 the functions of the
Director would include:
- advising the Minister with respect to the accreditation of
State and Territory regimes
- receiving, and accepting or rejecting, applications for
protection
- responsibility for the register of applications
- taking appropriate action under the legislation when indigenous
human remains are reported or delivered
- facilitating negotiation or mediation between applicants and
other affected persons
- assessing the significance of, or threat to, areas and objects
which indigenous people are seeking to protect, and to report to
the Minister on these assessments, as well as the effect of making
a protection order on 'other interests.'
Proposed sections 11-21 deal
with the appointment of the Director and the terms and conditions
of his or her appointment. The Director is to be appointed by the
Minister. There are no conditions laid down for the Minister's
choice of appointment and the Director may be appointed on a
full-time or part-time basis.(48) The maximum term of appointment
is 5 years, with reappointment being possible.(49) Standard
conditions apply with respect to the Director's conditions of
employment, resignation or termination of appointment.
Proposed section 16 provides for the Director to
make a disclosure to the Minister of the Director's financial
interests and the financial interests of the Director's immediate
family. Proposed section 21 would allow the
Director to employ consultants 'having suitable qualifications and
experience.'
Proposed section 22 & 23
provide for the establishment of a Register of Claims for
Protection, which must be made reasonably accessible to the
public.
Part 3-Accreditation Procedures
Proposed section 24 provides
for the relevant Minister of a State or Territory to write to the
Commonwealth Minister asking for accreditation under the proposed
Act. There are three distinct areas of accreditation, one for
areas, one for objects and one regarding the reporting of
indigenous human remains. Proposed section 25
provides that if the Minister is satisfied the State or Territory
laws comply with the minimum standards for accreditation then the
Minister must declare those laws to be an accredited heritage
protection regime with respect to whichever of the three areas have
been met. The Minister may seek further particulars and may seek
advice from the Director or anyone else s/he considers
appropriate.
Proposed section 26 sets out
the minimum standards for accreditation. These standards are very
general in nature but are crucial because the structure of the Bill
places a high degree of significance on whether there is an
accredited regime in place. The standards variously relevant to the
three areas open for accreditation include the need for the laws in
force in a State or Territory to:
- provide for the protection of areas and objects that are
significant to indigenous persons in terms of their indigenous
traditions
- recognise that indigenous persons are the primary source of
information about the significance to indigenous persons of areas
and objects
- provide an option for advance approval for an activity in an
area to be obtained
- promote negotiated outcomes
- provide protection for culturally sensitive information
disclosed in the course of administering heritage protection
legislation
- ensure that interested parties are treated fairly, including
being given an opportunity to put their views and being able to
obtain reasons for decisions
- provide effective deterrents to injury or desecration of areas
or objects through appropriate offences and penalties
- provide for the reporting of findings of indigenous human
remains.
If the Minister decides that a heritage
protection regime ceases to meet the minimum standards in one of
the three areas the Minister must notify the relevant State or
Territory Minister and if no response is received or no adequate
action taken within 90 days (or longer, as the Minister allows) the
Minister can revoke the accreditation (proposed section
28).
Part 4-Applications for Protection
Division 1-The receipt and registration of applications
The first issue dealt with in proposed
part 4 is receiving and dealing with applications at a
preliminary level. Proposed section 29 would
require that, in order for a long-term protection order (LPO) to be
made over an area or object, an application must be made in writing
to the Director by an indigenous person or their agent. The
application must contain various pieces of information, including a
description of the significance of the area or object to the
applicant, a description of the activity that threatens it and a
description of the form of protection sought. The Director is
required to enter an application on the Register and notify the
Minister (proposed section 30). The Register entry
should include the information contained in the application,
although there is a capacity to make it more general than in the
application, and to protect the identity of the applicant. If there
is confidential information included in the application the
Director may withhold the information and must state that this has
been done and the reasons for it.
An application can be rejected on a number of
grounds:
- if the applicant has not exhausted the remedies available
within the relevant State or Territory (proposed subsection
31(1))
- if the applicant fails to supply further information as
requested by the Director (and within the time frame specified by
the Director) (proposed subsections 31(2) &
(3))
- if the Minister or the Director are satisfied that the
application is vexatious or frivolous (proposed section
32).
If an application is rejected, the Minister or
Director must notify the applicant and enter the reasons on the
Register.
If an application is not rejected the Director
must publish a notice in a newspaper circulating in the region
informing the public of the application and inviting any other
indigenous person with an interest in the area to lodge an
application. If an application is not lodged within 30 days, then
any potential applicant is permanently barred from making an
application for protection for that area or an overlapping area
under the Act (proposed section 33).
Division 2-Dealing with UR applications
The next issue dealt with in this Part deals
with UR applications (i.e. applications originating from an
un-accredited State or Territory). There is a central requirement
that the Director works with the parties concerned in an
application to reach 'an agreed outcome' (proposed section
34). This is to be done through the use of negotiation or
mediation processes. If the Director decides that negotiation and
mediation process have become unworkable the Director must then
make a report to the Minister which contains a finding as to
whether a site is a significant indigenous area or object for the
applicant and whether it is in danger of injury or desecration. It
must also explain the proprietary and pecuniary effects (on anyone
other than the applicant) of making a protection order and must
contain an account of how the information in the Report was
collected (proposed section 35). The Report may
include any other matter that the Director considers relevant.
Proposed section 36 enables the Minister to
appoint an independent reviewer to make another report if the
Minister is not satisfied the process was adequate or if new
information has become available. While the Minister is bound to
accept the findings in the Director's report or the independent
reviewer's report regarding the question of whether an area or
object is significant and under threat of injury or desecration
(proposed section 37), the Minister has an
unfettered discretion as to whether to make a protection order and
can take into account any matter that s/he thinks relevant
(proposed section 38).
Division 3-Dealing with AR applications
In the case of applications from an accredited
State or Territory (an 'AR application') the Director must refer
the application to the Minister who must decide whether to make a
protection order on the basis of the 'national interest.' The
Minister may be satisfied that the area or object is a significant
indigenous area or object under threat of injury or desecration but
that, on the face of the application, there is no indication that
such an order would be in the national interest. In this case the
application would be rejected (proposed subsection
39(2)). The Minister may not make a protection order
unless s/he has consulted with the relevant State or Territory
Minister regarding the finding of whether an object is significant,
whether it is under threat and how these findings were arrived at,
as well as information regarding the proprietary or pecuniary
interests likely to be affected and the views of the State or
Territory on the consequences of a protection order. Once these
consultations have occurred it is open for the Minister to treat
the findings of the State or Territory regarding the existence of
an object or area significant to indigenous persons and under
threat of injury or desecration as binding (proposed
section 40). Alternatively the Minister may require the
Director to make a report concerning one or more of the questions
of:
- the significance of an area or object to an indigenous
applicant
- whether or not the area or object is threatened by injury or
desecration
- the effect of a protection order on any proprietary or
pecuniary interests in the area or object concerned.
Under proposed subsection 41(2)
the Minister must request such a report unless s/he has opted to be
bound by the State or Territory finding on the issue of
significance and threat.
Once again the Director may attempt to
facilitate an agreed outcome if the Minister asks him or her to do
so (proposed section 42), and the Minister may
seek a further report from an independent reviewer. The Minister is
then bound by either the Director's report or the report of the
independent reviewer (proposed section 44).
If the Minister is bound by a report that an
object is significant to indigenous persons and that it is under
threat of injury or desecration the Ministers can make a long-term
protection order provided 'the Minister is satisfied that the
making of such an order is in the national interest'
(proposed section 45). In making such an order the
Minister may take into account the views of the State or Territory,
the report of the Director or the report of the independent
reviewer and any other matters that the Minister considers
relevant.
Division 4-Content, notification and effect of long-term
protection orders
The length of a long-term protection order ('an
LPO') is not specified in the Bill, rather it 'has effect for such
period as is specified in the order.' Proposed section
46 specifies that an LPO must describe the area or object
with enough detail to enable identification and must contain
provisions relating to the protection and preservation of the area
or object. If an LPO is made about indigenous human remains it can
include provisions requiring their delivery to appropriate
indigenous persons who can accept possession, custody or control or
who can give directions about how the remains should be dealt with.
If there is no appropriate indigenous person or persons they should
be transferred to a 'prescribed authority' for safekeeping
(proposed subsection 46(4)). Once a decision about
an LPO has been made the Minister must notify the Director, who
must enter the details of the decision on the Register and ensure
interested parties are notified. An LPO must also be published in
the Gazette and in a local newspaper (although failure to
do so does not make the order invalid).
Division 5-Negotiation and mediation
The negotiation and mediation processes are
important for the operation of the Bill's scheme. The overall
scheme provides that agreements arrived at between 'core parties'
can be registered and attain the status of a binding contract,
thereby excluding further applications under the proposed Act,
unless a new threat arises, or a signatory to the agreement
breaches it (proposed section 52). If a new
application is allowed because of a breach of the agreement the
proposed Act would allow the applicant to sue for a breach of
contract. Core parties are identified by the Director and include
the applicant and any other persons with a direct proprietary or
pecuniary interest in the area or object (proposed section
48). When attempting a negotiation or mediation the
Director may also involve other parties in the processes as s/he
sees fit. The actual process of negotiation and mediation is left
for the Director to determine, including the possible appointment
of a mediator and the possible need to ensure confidential
information is not disclosed inappropriately (proposed
subsection 49). If the parties come to an agreement
outside of the formal negotiation or mediation process this can be
registered too, as long as the Director is satisfied that the core
parties s/he would have identified have entered into the agreement
(proposed section 54).
The time frame for negotiation or mediation is
limited to three months, with the possibility for an extension of
another month (the period of time runs from the end of the thirty
day period set aside to advertise the initial existence of the
application and allow additional applications to be made). In the
case of an AR application the Minister can determine a time period
for negotiations of less than 3 months (proposed section
50).
During the negotiating period any of the core
parties can declare that they will not participate, or
alternatively the Director can come to the conclusion that the
processes of negotiation and mediation have no prospect of success.
In either case the process of negotiation and mediation can be
brought to a halt short of the three month period. (In the case of
an AR application the Minister makes this decision, and in the case
of a UR application the Director makes the decision;
proposed section 53).
Division 6-The making of reports
The procedures to be followed by the Director or
independent reviewer in preparing reports are laid out in some
detail. The Director may choose to adopt a report, or parts of a
report, prepared at the State or Territory level when there is an
un-accredited regime in place. The Director may accept either the
finding regarding the existence of a significant area or object
and/or the existence of a threat against it. The Director must then
advertise the existence of the application and the likely impact of
a protection order, and can ask for input from the community on one
of the two issues (of whether there is a significant area or object
and the existence of a threat against it), depending on whether the
State or Territory report was adopted, and in all cases should ask
for representations on the effect of making a long-term protection
order on the proprietary or pecuniary interests of people other
than the applicants. The Director has a discretion not to advertise
the application if s/he thinks it would not be appropriate
(proposed subsection 55(3)). In the case of an
accredited regime the Director has no discretion regarding
advertising the application. An independent reviewer can also
advertise inviting representations, or can ask a specified person
to put in a submission. The independent reviewer has access to the
information collected by the Director and when soliciting
submissions should make this clear to people who might make a
submission (proposed section 58).
Proposed section 57 recognises
that indigenous persons are the primary source of information
regarding the significance of areas or objects in terms of
indigenous traditions. When making a representation regarding an
application people are not entitled to see the application or other
representations regarding the application (proposed section
59). The reports by either the Director or the independent
reviewer need to include not just information regarding the
significance of an area or object and the potential threat, but
also the process followed in, and general reasons for, reaching the
conclusions. Similarly a finding regarding the proprietary and
pecuniary interests of people potentially affected by a protection
order needs to have background documentation (proposed
section 61).
There are time limits set on the preparation of
reports by the Director or the independent reviewer. In the case of
reports on UR applications by the Director the period is three
months, otherwise the time frame is in the discretion of the
Minister (including a capacity to extend the reporting period).
Late reports are not rendered invalid (proposed section
60).
Division 7-Emergency protection orders and interim protection
orders
The Minister has the capacity to issue emergency
protection or interim protection orders ('EPOs' and 'IPOs'
respectively). EPOs can be issued on the Minister's initiative or
if an application for a long-term protection order has been refused
because the applicant has not exhausted the State or Territory
remedies (proposed section 62). Before issuing an
EPO the Minister must be satisfied that there is a significant
indigenous area or object concerned and that it is 'under serious
and immediate threat of injury or desecration.' In the case of a
State or Territory with an accredited regime there is an additional
requirement that the Minister considers that protection of the area
may be in the 'national interest.' Similarly the Minister can issue
an IPO if an application for a long-term protection order has been
made but proceedings have not been completed. Similarly the
Minister must be satisfied that the application establishes that
there is a significant indigenous area or object concerned and it
is under serious threat of injury or desecration, and, in the case
of an accredited regime, it must be in the national interest.
If the Minister has given notice that the State
or Territory regime no longer satisfy the minimum requirements for
an accredited regime then, in the case of an EPO or an IPO, the
restriction on granting the orders to cases where the national
interest might be at stake is lifted (proposed subsections
62(4) & 63(3)).
An EPO can be issued for 7 days, a period which
can be renewed for another 7 days as often as the Minister thinks
appropriate. In the case of an EPO where the State or Territory
remedies have not been exhausted, the Minister can make a
determination as to how long the EPO is to function for, and can
extend this period if s/he is satisfied that the remedies have
still not been exhausted.
An IPO can be issued for an initial period
specified in the order, although there is a limit of four months.
This can be extended first for an additional three months, and
after that for on-going periods of one month at a time.
Both an EPO and an IPO must specify the area or
object sufficiently for identification purposes and must have
provisions relating to the protection and preservation of the area
or object.
Proposed section 64 requires
the Minister to give notice of the order to people affected by it,
including publishing an IPO in the Gazette and in a local
newspaper.
Division 8-Multiple applications
There are provisions made for dealing with a
number of applications over a particular area or object. In the
case of negotiation and mediation processes the applications are
treated as one application, and all applicants become core parties
(proposed section 65). If the applications are for
overlapping areas, the areas are amalgamated and considered as
one.
If a negotiated outcome fails and the Minister
must consider making an order then, when there is more than one
application, s/he is required to make one single order over the
area or object, despite the fact that different reports are to be
prepared in relation to each application.
Part 5-Miscellaneous provisions
Division 1-Indigenous human remains
When there is no accredited regime in place
regarding indigenous human remains proposed section
67 imposes a strict liability offence for a failure to
report the discovery of such remains. There is an exception if it
would be contrary to a person's indigenous traditions to report the
remains. When indigenous human remains are delivered to the
Director, s/he must give them to appropriate indigenous persons, or
a 'prescribed authority' (proposed section
68).
Division 2-Offences
There is a penalty of up to five years for
violating a protection order over an area, and two years for an
object. In the case of these penalties there is no liability if
there is evidence the person violating the protection order did not
know there was a protection order in force. This is an unusual
provision in that, generally speaking, ignorance of the law is not
accepted as a defence to a criminal charge.
Division 3-Administrative review of certain decisions
There is provision made for the administrative
review of decisions to reject applications on the grounds that they
are vexatious or frivolous.
Division 4-Power of courts and of the Administrative Appeals
Tribunal etc
There are various provisions designed to give
some measure of protection to the confidentiality of indigenous
information in court proceedings under the proposed Act. In making
decisions on confidentiality the court or Tribunal must take into
account not only the interests of indigenous traditions but also
'any relevant commercial interests' (proposed section
73). An immunity from a requirement to disclose
information can be granted to the person holding the information,
although if, on balance, there is a public interest in the
'administration of justice' favouring disclosure which outweighs
the public interest in protecting the information, disclosure can
still be ordered. The Commonwealth Minister can apply for an
injunction if there is a danger that a protection order may be
violated (proposed section 75).
Division 5-Other matters
Long-term protection orders and declarations
about the status of a State or Territory as an accredited regime
(or not) are disallowable instruments under proposed
section 77. There are also provisions which will prevent
them from being treated as legislative instruments.
Proposed section 78 would
prevent the proposed Act from breaching the Constitutional
requirement for just terms for an acquisition of property. A person
who has had, in effect, their property acquired can apply to the
Federal Court for the recovery of compensation.
Provision is also made for applicants, or for
anyone affected by a decision under the proposed Act, including
anyone who may be the subject of an injunction to prevent them from
violating a protection order, to apply to the Attorney-General for
legal or financial assistance.
Schedule 1-Repeal of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Heritage Protection Act 1984, and related saving and
transitional provisions
Rather than simply repealing the whole of the
current Act, in item 2 the Bill saves the
provisions regarding Victoria, which has a particular Part of the
current Act devoted to it. (The Commonwealth passed this
Victorian-specific addition to its own legislation when the then
State Opposition blocked the Victorian Government's legislation in
the upper house in 1984.)
Items 3 & 4 in this
schedule deal with declarations or applications that may have
already been made under the current Act. These will continue to
function as if the current Act continued in force unless
convenience dictates otherwise in the case of recent
applications.
Schedule 2-Amendment of the Archives Act 1983 and the Freedom of
Information Act 1982
This schedule is designed to ensure the
confidentiality of documents generated under the proposed Act.
Items 1 & 2 make amendments to the
Archives Act 1983 ('the Archives Act') which would ensure
that such documents which may be archived are exempt from various
requirements in the Archives Act, such as the right of
public access to Commonwealth records in Part V. Items
3-9 are consequential amendments. Similarly, item
10 would exempt documents generated under the proposed Act
from the operation of the Freedom of Information Act 1982
and items 11-19 are consequential amendments.
Apart from the
general differences between the recommendations of the Evatt Review
and the provisions of the Bill mentioned in the Background of this
Digest there are a few other specific issues which have been
commented upon.
The decision to give the Minister an unfettered
discretion when appointing the Director of Indigenous Heritage
Protection is likely to be the subject of some controversy. Similar
appointments in comparable legislation are usually made through the
Governor-General, giving the appointments a degree of significance,
and possibly a degree of distance from the immediacy of appointment
through the Minister. Thus the Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Social Justice Commissioner and other human rights
commissioners are appointed by the Governor-General, as are
appointments to comparable positions under the:
- Australian Law Reform Commission Act 1973(50)
- Australian War Memorial Act 1980(51)
- War Graves Act 1980(52)
- Australian National Maritime Museum Act 1990(53)
- National Gallery Act 1975(54)
- National Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act 1975(55)
and
- the National Museum of Australia Act 1980(56)
The decision to give no legislative indication
regarding the desirable qualifications or experience of a potential
Director has been the subject of some criticism. The Director of
the Indigenous Law Centre, Mr Mick Dodson, has already suggested
that the position should be made subject to the same sort of
considerations that the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Social Justice Commissioner's appointment was subject to. While
that position did not require the occupant to be indigenous, it did
require that:
[a] person is not qualified to be
appointed unless the Governor-General is satisfied that the person
has significant experience in community life of Aboriginal persons
or Torres Strait Islanders.(57)
In evidence to the Joint Committee Senator
Herron said that:
we did not think the bill should
specify narrow, mandatory qualifications, because it remains to be
seen who is available and what their expertise is, et cetera. It is
in everyone's interests for the government to appoint an
appropriately qualified person as director, but we do not know who
is available. We feel that, because of that, we should not specify
mandatory requirements-whether they should have a degree in
anthropology, for example, or whether they should be indigenous or
not. It may well be that they are not indigenous but, of course,
the director will need to have an appropriate understanding of the
cultural requirements and be culturally sensitive in relation to
indigenous affairs.(58)
The majority report of the Joint Committee
endorsed Mr Dodson's suggestion.(59)
The question of what constitutes 'tradition' has
also been the subject of some comment. Indigenous organisations
have pointed out that the definition used in the Bill (in part
indigenous tradition is defined as 'the body of traditions,
observances, customs and beliefs of indigenous persons generally or
of a particular community or group of indigenous persons...')(60)
does not conform fully with the Evatt Review's recommendations. The
Review says that:
[the] definition should extend to
areas and objects of significance to Aboriginal people in
accordance with tradition, including traditions which have evolved
from past traditions. It should also extend expressly to historic
and archaeological sites.
The Bill does not make explicit reference to
historic or archaeological sites, and the Indigenous Land
Corporation have commented that:
There is no requirement for the
accredited regimes to recognise the evolution of tradition. ...
There is clearly a need for this in the light of the narrow
interpretations that have been given to "tradition" in the recent
past.(61)
The National Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Catholic Council picked up the same point, commenting that
the Bill does not allow 'for the continuing evolving nature of our
culture.'(62) ATSIC recommend that the definition of indigenous
tradition be extended to explicitly state that tradition is dynamic
and evolves over time.(63)
A procedural issue that has been raised
regarding the Bill is that it would only allow applications for
protection orders to be made orally in the case of emergency
protection orders.(64) In other instances the application must be
in writing. This contravenes the Evatt Review's recommendation
that:
Applications should be able to be
made easily. A valid application is one that is 'made orally or in
writing by or on behalf of an Aboriginal or a group of Aboriginals
seeking the preservation or protection of a specified area from
injury or desecration'.(65)
Another procedural issue regards reasons for
decisions. Both Ms Evatt's submission to the Joint Committee and
its 12th Report make the point that the Bill does not
clearly require written reasons to be given by the Minister when
s/he makes a decision under the proposed Act regarding protection
orders. Given that proposed section 77 would make
these declarations disallowable instruments it is important that
reasons be supplied in order for the Parliament to be able to give
the issues appropriate consideration. This principle is outlined in
the 11th Report, which recommended that:
Where the Commonwealth Minister takes
decisions under the last resort function, the reasons for the
decision be required to be published at the same time that the
actual determination is tabled.(66)
- During the debate on the Native Title Amendment Bill 1997
Senator Minchin, the Minister Assisting the Prime Minister,
commented that: 'We obviously support heritage protection. Many
Liberal governments have enacted heritage legislation.' Hansard, 3
December 1997, p. 10222. Members of the ALP, minority parties, and
independents have made numerous statements in support of heritage
protection, both during the Native Title debates and, for instance,
in the dissenting reports of the Joint Committee on Native
Title.
- See, for instance, the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation's
home page at
http://www.austlii.edu.au/car/
- Mabo v State of Queensland [No 2] (1992) 175 CLR
1.
- The Aboriginal Peace Plan presented to Prime Minister Keating
on 27 April 1993
- See Recognition, Rights and Reform, Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander Commission, Going Forward, Council
for Aboriginal Reconciliation and Towards Social Justice?
From the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, the Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander Commission and the Office of the Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commission, 1994. See
generally Noble Salvage: Aboriginal Heritage Protection and the
Evatt Review, by Russell Goldflam, Aboriginal Law Bulletin vol
3, No 88, January 1997.
- Eleventh Report of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native
Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund:
The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection
Act 1984, April 1998 (hereafter the 11th
Report).
- Twelfth Report of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native
Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund:
The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection
Act 1984, May 1998 (hereafter the 12th
Report).
- As the second reading speech puts it: 'There is common
agreement on the need for reform.' House of Representatives,
Official Hansard, 2 April 1998, 2416.
- Evatt, E, Review of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Heritage Protection Act 1984, 1996, p. 36 (hereafter
'the Evatt Review'). The legislative framework includes both the
State and Territory legislation in the area and, to varying
degrees, The Australian Heritage Commission Act
1975 (Cth), The World Heritage Properties Conservation
Act 1983 (Cth), The Native Title Act 1993 (Cth), The
Protection of Movable Cultural Heritage Act 1986 (Cth),
The Environment Protection (Impact of Proposals) Act 1974
(Cth) and The National Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act,
1975 (Cth).
- Evatt Review, 42.
- Evatt Review, xv.
- Recommendation 5 and Recommendations 2 and 9,
respectively.
- 11th Report, Recommendation 9, pp. X and 104 and
12th Report, p. 16 and 17, and p. 24.
- 12th Report, 16 and 17.
- UN General Assembly 16 December 1966, ratified by Australia on
13 August 1980.
- UN General Assembly 16 December 1966, ratified by Australia in
1975.
- Articles 1(1) and (3). See also ICCPR article 1.
- UN General Assembly, 19 December 1966; ratified by Australia on
30 September 1975.
- Article 1.
- Ratified by Australia in 1974.
- Another international document which could be relevant is the
Working Group on Indigenous Peoples' Rights Draft Declaration on
the Rights of Indigenous People (UN E/CN.4/Sub.2/1994/2/Add.1
(1994).
- See for example Goldflam, R. Noble Salvage: Aboriginal
Heritage Protection and the Evatt Review, Aboriginal Law
Bulletin vol 3, No 88, January 1997, p. 4, and the Submission to
the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title and the
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund by Mr Steve Palyga,
the solicitor for the developer in the Hindmarsh Island affair,
Submission No HA1.
- 11th Report, 5.
- In correspondence to the Joint Committee, 11th
Report, 3.
- Appendix 7 of the 11th Report.
- See for instance...ATSIC Submission No HA11(a), Indigenous Law
Centre oral advice to the Committee from Prof Garth Nettheim and Mr
Mick Dodson, Indigenous Land Corporation, South Australia, Mr David
Ross, Submission No HA6(a).
- House of Representatives, Official Hansard, 2 April
1998, 2419.
- ATSIC submission to the Joint Committee, No HA11(a), 15.
- Submission No HA38 to the Joint Committee, 5.
- 12th Report, 18.
- 'Heritage Protection Bill another attack on existing rights,'
Media Release, 2 April 1998.
- Reported in the Sydney Morning Herald, 7th
May, 1998.
- ibid.
- 12th Report, p. 104.
- ATSIC Submission No HA11(a), 21.
- Evatt Review, Recommendation 11.16.
- ibid.
- Evatt Review, Recommendation 6.3.
- ATSIC Submission No HA11(a), 15.
- Submission to the Joint Committee, No HA38, 10.
- 12th Report, p. 19.
- ATSIC 'Heritage Protection Bill another attack on existing
rights,' Media Release, 2 April 1998.
- Senator Nick Minchin, Senate, Official Hansard, 3
December 1997, 10221.
- Evatt Review, 26 and 27.
- 11th Report, Minority Report, 1.
- Submission No. HA25(a), by Ms Zita Antonios, Acting Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner, Human
Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, 8.
- It should be noted that the Bill confines itself to
self-governing Territories when referring to a Territory. For ease
of reference this Bills Digest refers to self-governing Territories
simply as a Territory. Jervis Bay Territory and external
Territories are not to be regarded as having an accredited
protection regime according to proposed section
28.
- Proposed section 11.
- Proposed section 12.
- Section 7.
- Sections 10 and 20.
- Section 5.
- Section 30.
- Section 24.
- Section 22.
- Section 13. It should be noted that not all legislative schemes
are comparable and certainly not all comparable appointments are
made through the Governor-General. The Australian Trade
Commission Act 1985 has the Minister appoint the Managing
Director (on the recommendation of the Board), the Australian
Institute of Health and Welfare's Director is also appointed by the
relevant Minister on the recommendation of the Institute, while the
Endangered Species Protection Act 1992 has an advisory
committee, the Chairperson of which is appointed by the
Minister.
- man Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986,
section 46B.
- Evidence, NT134.
- 12th Report, 20.
- Proposed section 5.
- Submission to the Joint Committee, No. HA6(a) by Mr David Ross,
Chairman, Indigenous Land Corporation, 6.
- Submission No. HA37, 1.
- ATSIC Submission No HA11(a), 33.
- Mr Mick Dodson, oral evidence to the Joint Committee,
NT202.
- Recommendation 10.23.
- 11th Report, x.
Kirsty Magarey
4 June 1998
Bills Digest Service
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