| Australian Aborigines Get Pristine Forest Back
AUSTRALIA: August 7, 2008
CANBERRA - Australia's largest remaining tract of tropical rainforest was
handed back to traditional Aboriginal owners on Wednesday, reversing 30
years of state government opposition to indigenous control.
In the remote northeast Cape York Peninsula, the Premier of conservative
Queensland state Anna Bligh handed over 1,800 square kilometres (695 square
miles) of the sprawling McIlwraith Range to become an indigenous-owned
national park.
"Half of Australia's butterfly species are found here, so it's a jewel in
the crown of our Australian protected area estate," Australian Conservation
Foundation (ACF) spokesman Don Henry told local radio ahead of the handover
in Coen township.
Cape York, an area larger than Greece with a human population of just
18,000, is one of Australia's largest wilderness areas with sprawling cattle
stations and savannas containing carbon sinks vital to the global climate.
It also has more orchid species than any other area in Australia and is home
to endangered birds such as the cassowary, a large flightless species.
The region has, since the 1970s, been a battleground between successive
governments determined to protect farm owners, environmentalists wanting to
protect its biodiversity and Aborigines determined to reclaim traditional
lands.
The Balkanu Cape York Development Corporation, which promotes economic
development for Cape York Aborigines, said it was worried environmental
concerns could stifle economic opportunities the park could bring to
disadvantaged locals.
"Indigenous people in Cape York are deeply concerned that our desire to
build a sustainable future on traditional lands will lose out to extreme
conservationist demands," corporation executive Gerhardt Pearson wrote in
the Australian newspaper.
Aborigines have inhabited Australia for 45,000 years and have the world's
longest-living culture. But they have consistently higher rates of
unemployment, substance abuse and domestic violence than other Australians.
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd in February apologised in parliament to Aborigines
for past injustices in the 200 years since colonisation by Britain.
The McIlwraith Range land, formerly a pastoral farming lease, was to be
loaned back to the government as a national park, jointly managed by the
local Kaanju, Umpila, Lamalama and Ayapathu people and government-employed
rangers.
Aborigines have been anxious in other land agreements reached with
government or the courts to be able to use traditional lands to their own
benefit, sometimes leasing land to miners for a share of profits, or
creating parks to lure tourism dollars.
Wilderness Society spokesman Anthony Esposito and the ACF's Henry said
opportunities from ecotourism would spring up for Aborigines from the area's
"great landscapes".
"We're hoping at the end of the day that this is not only a great gift to
all Australians, but it also provides a better future to the traditional
owners," Henry said. (Editing by David Fogarty)
Story by Rob Taylor
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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