Aboriginal-led inquiry says genocide happened in Australia

An investigation led by Achorijin found that British colonists were doing genocide against the indigenous population of Australia in Victoria.
In the early 1830s, the Yoorrook Justice Commission reduced the local domestic population by three quarters in 20 years after the state colonized.
The report contained 100 suggestions to “damage” caused by “invasion and profession”, but many of the authors did not agree with the “basic findings” that were not specified.
The Commission was founded in 2021 as the first official “Truth Narration” investigation of Australia, and was assigned to examine the past and ongoing “systemic injustices” in which the indigenous people in the state were exposed.
The fact that community leaders enter the history of the country, the construction of an agreement and those who say that those who say greater political to the first nations should enter into a reconciliation process with the people of Aboriginal and Torres Strait island.
The Yoorrook Justice Commission, which has been organized for more than four years, gave the people of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Adalı the opportunity to officially share their stories and experiences.
The summary of the Commission discussed a wide range of issues such as land and water rights, cultural violations, killing and genocide, health, education and housing.
The report found that since 1834, mass murders, illness, sexual violence, exclusion, Lingudecide, cultural wiping, environmental deterioration, the elimination of the child “and assimilation contributed to the” almost completely physical destruction of Victoria’s domestic community.
The population fell from 60,000 to 15,000 by 1851.
“This was genocide,” the report said.
The report, which has passed a public trial and more than 1,300 applications for more than two months, called for “compensation” to accept a number of human rights violations that may include compensation.
Other proposals include an important revision of the education system that includes more inputs than the indigenous people and a government apology for soldiers, excluding a plan with a plan that served during the world wars and returned from the battlefields.
In the state’s health system, the report requested more financing for policies that racism is “endemic” and to get more Aboriginal personnel in domestic health services and the system.
Three of the five commission members – Sue -Anne Hunter, Maggie Walter and Anthony North – “did not approve of the involvement of important findings in the last report”, but no more details were given.
In response to the report, Victoria said that Premier Jacinta Allan “shed light on harsh facts”, said Victoria would “carefully handle” findings.
Victoria’s Aboriginal President Jill Gallagher, for health and prosperity, said the genocide finding was “indisputable”.
“Today we don’t blame anyone in life for these savages,” he said to ABC, “But today is the responsibility of the alive – and today all Victoria should accept, recognize and reconcile these real findings.”
The report of the Commission is the first example of the species in Australia, but similar investigations are carried out by different degrees of progress, depending on which party is in the government.
For example, in Queensland, an investigation describing the truth was canceled after receiving a new liberal-national government.
In recent years, national dialogue on how to recognize the traditional owners of Australia at all government levels has led to heated discussions.
In October 2023, the Australians voted against a historical referendum, and in the Constitution, the indigenous people in the Constitution rejected a change that would create a change that would create a sound of Achorijin and Torres Strait Islander, a national organ for advice on the laws.




