By ALYS GAGNON
With our Prime Minister spending a week in Arnhem Land right now, one could be forgiven for thinking that here we have a leader truly committed to closing the gap for Indigenous Australians.
Before he was elected Prime Minister, Tony Abbott promised to spend one week every year embedded in a remote indigenous community. A worthy and important attempt to bring indigenous issues to the forefront of political debate and demonstrate his commitment to the policy area.
“I think it would be a very instructive thing for a prime minister and senior officials of the Government to spend a week here [Arnhem Land] to learn what it is like to live, to train, to study in this area,” he said during last year’s election campaign.
And true to his word Mr Abbott is currently embedded with the Yolgnu community in Gulkula, in the north east of the Northern Territory.
Now, I have no doubt that Prime Minister Abbott has an honest wish to address the issues that confront Indigenous communities, remote and suburban, across the country. You could hardly be human and not be moved to want to do something when you understand the statistics on life expectancy, education attainment levels, health outcomes to name a few of the factors that impact on Indigenous life in Australia.
For example, the Australian Institute for Health and Welfare has found that, “for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander