E/CN.4/2002/24/Add.1
page 27
Table 1
Indicators for Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australian adults
Indicator
Holding a post-secondary qualification
Unemployment rate
Median income (males)
Median income (females)
Own house (or in process of purchasing it)
Life expectancy (males)
Life expectancy (females)
Indigenous adults
11%
23%
$189
$190
31%
56.9 years
61.7 years
Non-Indigenous adults
31%
9%
$415
$224
71%
75.2 years
81.1 years
58.
The Special Rapporteur’s attention was particularly drawn to the situation of Aboriginal
women, which the Australian Bureau of Statistics illustrates in the passage below following the
survey undertaken in 1996:
“The health disadvantage of Indigenous Australians begins early in life and
continues throughout the life cycle. On average, Indigenous mothers give birth at a
younger age than non-Indigenous mothers. In most states and territories, their babies are
about twice as likely to be of low birth weight and more than twice as likely to die at
birth than are babies born to non-Indigenous mothers.
“The average age of Indigenous mothers was 24.0 years, compared to 28.6 years
for non-Indigenous mothers. 23.1 per cent of Indigenous mothers were teenagers, more
than four times the non-Indigenous rate (4.8 per cent); the proportion of low birth weight
babies (less than 2,500 grams) of Indigenous mothers was 12.4%, more than twice the
rate of non-Indigenous mothers (6.2 per cent); the foetal death rate among births to
Indigenous mothers of 13.9 per 1,000 births was more than double that of 6.7 per 1,000
for non-Indigenous births.”4
2. Restriction of land rights
59.
The Race Discrimination and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice
Commissioner has made a detailed analysis of the consequences of the Native Title Amendment
Act 1998. In this connection, he notes that despite decision 2 (54) of the Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination adopted in August 1999, calling on Australia to suspend
implementation of this Act, which is contrary to its international obligations, the Act continues to
be applied. Notwithstanding that the validation provisions, the confirmation of extinguishment
provisions, the primary upgrade provisions, and the restrictions concerning the right of
Indigenous title holders to negotiate stipulated in the law discriminate against native title
holders,5 states and territories continue to implement the amended Act. The Commonwealth has
not entered into negotiations with Indigenous peoples and extinguishment of native title
continues to be effected by the states, under the authority of the Commonwealth Government.
In particular, the validation provisions result in the loss or impairment of the rights of native title