HOW FAR WILL THIS BRIDGE
GO?
(Investigator 43,
1995 July)
B S
A bridge
is banned from
being built for 25 years; a development company goes bankrupt; a
Federal politician loses his front bench seat; there are calls for
another to be sacked; Aborigines accuse each other of lying; some fear
being sung to death by Aboriginal medicine men; two government
inquiries are planned; and it's all due to "women's business" details
of which can't be publicised.
The
government inquiries
may cost $millions.
These
problems originated
in the lengthy disputes of developers and conservationists over
the building of a 200-metre bridge linking Hindmarsh Island with the
banks of the River Murray south of Adelaide.
In April
1994 claims
emerged that building of the bridge would threaten the fertility and
health of Ngarrindjeri Aboriginal women.
Subsequently,
in July,
Robert Tickner, Federal Aboriginal Affairs Minister, imposed a
25-year ban on building of the bridge.
The
reason was sealed
evidence apparently detailing that Ngarrindjeri women believed the
bridge would lower their fertility and health.
Ian
McLachlan, a federal
Liberal MP, had to resign when some of the sealed information came to
his office and a staff member photocopied it.
Meanwhile
the Federal
Court squashed the ban in February after an appeal by developers Tom
& Wendy Chapman but Mr Tickner is appealing against the decision.
On May
19 claims emerged
that the "women's business" was a fabrication and that most of the
Ngarrindjeri women knew nothing about it and that men had invented it
to help conservationists stop the bridge.
This led
to calls for Mr
Tickner's dismissal and talk by bankrupt developers of a $47 million
damage claim.
Now
there will be a State
Government royal commission into the "women's business". A separate
Federal inquiry is planned by Mr Tickner for October.
Some
Aboriginals who
support the fabrication claim now say that the opposing group is
arranging to have them sung to death.
A
spokesperson of the
Aboriginal Legal Rights Movement says that the royal commission into
cultural beliefs would offend the Racial Discrimination Act.
Skeptic
Annie Warburton
wants to nominate for the Skeptic Association's annual Bent Spoon
Award the Aboriginal Affairs Minister Robert Tickner "for
allowing the superstitious beliefs…to dictate government policy." (the
Skeptic Volume 15 No.2)
The Bent
Spoon is awarded
to an outstanding promoter of what the Skeptics consider
"paranormal piffle".
Another
attempt to bridge
the widening ripples of controversy is a statement by the Catholic
Church condemning the royal commission because it may inquire into
cultural and religious beliefs.
A PROBLEM NOT YET BRIDGED
(Investigator
51, 1996
November)
The
building of the
Hindmarsh Island Bridge was banned in 1994 for 25 years due to
unspecified aboriginal "women's business". (Investigator 43)
Afterwards
the SA Royal
Commission ruled that the women's business was a fabrication.
A
further 6-month inquiry
by Federal Court judge Justice Jane Mathews advised that concerns about
desecration of aboriginal sites had "sufficient evidence". This cost
over $1 million but was ruled invalid by the High Court in September.
This led
to calls for a
third inquiry.
Total
costs on inquiries
and court disputes have been estimated at $12 million which is almost
double
the estimated cost to build the bridge.
The
bridge was promised
by former SA Labor Government in 1990 to persuade a Westpac subsidiary
to keep a marina company going on Hindmarsh Island. The SA Brown
government said in 1994 it would have to pay Westpac at least $12
million if the bridge is not built.
What
came out of all this
is that the Heritage Protection Act of 1984 seems inadequate for
solving disputes involving the issue of secrecy.
The
latest phase is
dispute over the possibility of special legislation by the Federal
Government to exempt Hindmarsh Island from the Heritage Protection Act.
CONTROVERSIAL BRIDGE
COMPLETED
(Investigator
81, 2001
November)
In 1995 Investigator
No.
43 asked: "How Far Will This Bridge Go?"
The
answer is 290 metres.
In March 2001 the 140-year-old ferry service linking Hindmarsh Island
to the mainland of South Australia became defunct and the Hindmarsh
Island Bridge officially opened.
For ten
years the bridge
was a national scandal that pitted Aboriginals against Whites and
conservation against development. It led to costly court battles, a
Royal Commission and dragged in unions, anthropologists, religions, the
State Government and the Federal Government.
By 1994
the protesters
known as "Friends of Hindmarsh Island" had gained support from unions,
the Conservation Council, and Greenpeace. But the tide was still
against them and "Built Environs" was about to start work.
The
protesters then
gained help from leaders of the Ngarrindjeri tribe. There were claims
of "secret women's business" and Aboriginal burial grounds. The State
Government tried to ignore this but the Federal Labor Government
imposed a 25-year ban on construction. Prospects for building the
bridge seemed sunk.
A Royal
Commission
established in 1995 then found the Ngarrindjeri claims to be a
"fabrication".
The
Hindmarsh Island
Bridge – first proposed in 1989 by developers Tom and Wendy Chapman –
is now boosting tourism and property values in the area.
The
Bridge cost
$6.5million to build — but the legal disputes at least twice this
amount. (Investigator 43 & 51; Sunday Mail 2001 March 4)
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