Freedom and Rights report

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On behalf of Britain, Captain James Cook claimed Australia’s east coast in the year 1770. He declared that Australia was Terra Nullius — meaning ‘the land belonging to no one.’ According to the eighteenth-century law, people of another land could legally take over a land that had no owner. British colonisation commenced with the arrival of the First Fleet to establish a penal colony at what became Sydney in January 1788. However, prior to British colonisation, it is estimated that there were at least 300,000 Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders in Australia and over 500 different clan groups or 'nations' around the continent, many with distinctive cultures and beliefs. Consequently, the event of British colonisation, is described by many historians as the European invasion of Australia.

Following the year 1788, the British continued seizing land and gave little thought into compensating the Indigenous Australians of which they displaced. The Aboriginal population lost access to sources of food and water which they had once been able to use freely, as well as their various sacred sites. The Aboriginal community found themselves living in a world ruled by inhabitants who believed that people with white skin were superior to those of other races.

From mid nineteenth century onwards, the Australian governments began implementing various policies of ‘protection’ which in reality segregated the Aboriginal people from the Australian society, consuming their everyday lives. These laws restricted the areas of which Aboriginals could live and work, limiting their access to wages, forbidding the practise of Aboriginal traditions, limiting admittance to education, proceeding with the removal of Aboriginal children from families and denyi...

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