Political reform on the agenda at Garma Festival

The annual Garma Festival has returned to the Top End with cultural celebrations and political discussion in equal measure.

Clan members of the Yolngu people from north-eastern Arnhem Land perform the Bunggul traditional dance.

Clan members of the Yolngu people from north-eastern Arnhem Land perform the Bunggul traditional dance. Source: AAP

More than 2,500 people are expected to come together in Arnhem Land for this year’s Garma Festival, but the latest iteration brings with it a decidedly political backdrop.

Starting out as a small community gathering at Gulkula more than two decades ago, the iconic event serves as a prime outlet for the celebration and discussion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture.

Closing the gap, treaty negotiations and constitutional recognition for First Nations people remain the hot topics of discussion, but this year's event is proving a history-maker in its own right.
Minister for Indigenous Australians, Ken Wyatt.
Minister for Indigenous Australians, Ken Wyatt. Source: AAP
The 2019 festival is the very first Garma attended by an Indigenous Minister for Indigenous Affairs.

Upon taking up the role, Ken Wyatt pledged to examine the recognition of First Nations peoples in the nation's founding document.

The move garnered significant attention and came just two years after the Turnbull government rejected calls for an Indigenous voice to the parliament to be included in the constitution.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison remains publicly sceptical of the idea and Mr Wyatt says any major reform is simply too important to rush.

"We need to design the right model to progress to a point at which the majority of Australians, the majority of states and territories and Indigenous Australians support the model," he said.

Shadow Minister Linda Burney is also taking part in Garma celebrations and maintains the nature of reform should not fall under the responsibility of elected officials.
Shadow Minister for Indigenous Australians, Linda Burney.
Shadow Minister for Indigenous Australians, Linda Burney. Source: AAP
"It really is up to the discussions that we will have with First Nations people right across this country in terms of what the makeup and the way in which that referendum and that voice should be framed," she said.

This year’s Garma Festival will run until 5 August and is expected to pump around $2.5 million into the local economy.

Around two-thirds of Garma attendees venture to the Top End from interstate and overseas.




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Published 2 August 2019 3:26pm
By Natalie Ahmat, Evan Young


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