00:00 Indigenous Australians have called for a week of silence and mourning after a referendum
00:05 on giving them more political representation was rejected by the country's white majority.
00:10 With more than 70 per cent of ballots counted on Sunday, about 61 per cent of Australians
00:17 said no when asked if the country's 1901 constitution should be changed to recognise
00:22 the country's original inhabitants. Less than 4 per cent of Australia's 26 million
00:27 people are indigenous. By voting no, Australians also voted against
00:32 creating a new consultative body - a voice to Parliament - that could have had a say
00:36 on issues related to indigenous affairs in Australia.
00:41 Indigenous supporters of the voice said it was a "bitter irony" that people who have
00:45 only been on this continent for 235 years would refuse to recognise those whose home
00:50 this land has been for 60,000 years. Thank you, friends, for sending your love
00:56 care in this sad time. Thank you to the many thousands of volunteers
01:00 for taking action. You were part of an unprecedented movement
01:04 that will continue on toward justice for First Nations people.
01:08 Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, whose centre-left Labour Party championed the referendum, said
01:14 sharing this continent with the oldest continuous culture was a source of pride for Australians.
01:20 But Albanese looked visibly distressed as he spoke to the nation on Saturday night and
01:25 called for a spirit of unity and healing. For many indigenous people, the election was
01:30 a source of additional distress. Indigenous Senator Leah Thorpe, who opposed
01:35 the referendum and campaigned for people to vote no, said the nationwide election had
01:40 caused nothing but harm to First Peoples. The National Aboriginal Community Controlled
01:45 Health Organisation (NACCHO), an indigenous-run health organisation, shared information on
01:51 mental health resources for people experiencing increased anxiety and depression in the wake
01:57 of the no vote. Mental health is one of many areas where indigenous people in Australia
02:02 experience disadvantage, adding to a more than seven-year difference in life expectancy
02:07 between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians. Calls for truth-telling.
02:13 Supporters of the failed vote had highlighted the large number of indigenous and non-indigenous
02:18 volunteers who supported the campaign. Thomas Mayo, a prominent indigenous supporter
02:23 of the voice, thanked the many thousands of volunteers who joined the campaign in the
02:28 lead-up to the election. "You were part of an unprecedented movement that will continue
02:33 on towards justice for First Nations people," he said.
02:37 The Greens, a minor party in Australian politics, said in a statement that corrosive disinformation
02:43 spread during the election showed Australia needed to introduce a truth and justice commission.
02:49 "Many people across the country have no idea of the truth of what happened to First
02:53 Nations people during colonisation," Doreen de Cox, a Greens senator and Yamiche Anoongar
03:00 woman, said in support of the proposal. "Thorpe has long called for a truth-telling process
03:05 and split from the Greens as their positions on the referendum diverged. Countries that
03:10 have held truth-telling commissions include South Africa, Canada and New Zealand. In 2021,
03:17 the Australian state of Victoria created the Yorok Justice Commission, becoming the first
03:23 and only Australian state so far to undergo the truth-telling process around colonisation
03:29 and treatment of the country's indigenous communities."
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