E.E sur les aborigènes, anglais
Cours : E.E sur les aborigènes, anglais. Recherche parmi 300 000+ dissertationsPar inconi • 29 Janvier 2017 • Cours • 371 Mots (2 Pages) • 674 Vues
Hello my numerous readers,
Welcome to in THE FREEDOM OF COLORS
Today we are to speak to you of the general atmosphere of the “Australia Day” for the Australian and the “Survival Day” for the aborigines.
The aborigines are original inhabitants of the country. During this demonstration the aborigines express their dissatisfaction to the colonizers and the Australian state. During this demonstration they call on to numerous associations, the black, yellow and red aboriginal flags flag which his creator conceived as a symbol which bloomed by thousands in the streets of the Australian cities. They are approximately 18,1 % of the population aborigines in the unemployment while it is not aboriginal 5,5 % of the population. At the origin of this anger, besides the conclusions of the annual report on the disparities between the Aborigines and the rest of the population, there is a plan presented in November by the authorities of Australia-Westerner. This one plans the closure of 150 smaller communities of the territory, judged "unsustainably" by Prime Minister of the State, who considers himself incapable to supply them the "essential services", worth knowing the electricity, the gas, the water, the accommodation, the transport, the health and the education. "We cannot eternally subsidize life choices if these life choices do not allow [to their beneficiaries] to participate completely in the Australian company", justified Prime Minister. This contempt found itself on the signs of the demonstrators, in the form of Tom Dystra's quotation, representative of the community: "we cultivate our earth, but in a different way of the white man. We try hard to live with the earth, whereas he makes every effort to live on her". This report in the earth is moreover registered within the laws of "Native Title Act", which govern since 1993 the rights of the Aborigines in Australia.
"If they are forced to leave their village, they risk to lose their right to be a member of the community", warns Tammy Solonec. Even the councillor in the native affairs of Tony Abbott, Warren Mundine, itself Aborigine, had asserted in November which to close communities meant establishing a "apartheid at the level of infrastructures.
I thank you my dear readers for your attention. And let us try to change the world.
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