Justice for David Dungay, TJ Hickey, Kumanjayi Walker
And all Other Aboriginal People Killed by Prison Guards or Police!
Racist, Rich People’s Court Whitewashes
State Killing of David Dungay
22 January 2020 – It has been over four years since the killing of 26 year-old Dunghutti Aboriginal man, David Dungay. David was killed in state custody at the “Hospital” section of Sydney’s Long Bay jail. His horrific death was captured in video footage taken by a prison guard (see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lny6jqivLqc). The footage, which was finally made public two and a half years after David’s death, shows prison guards storming into David’s cell on the pretext that they needed to stop him eating his own packet of biscuits. The guard’s excuse was that since David was refusing to accept their demands to stop eating his biscuits, they needed to forcibly move David into a cell with a camera in order to monitor him out of supposed concern for the diabetic man’s blood sugar levels. The video footage shows the guards throwing David into a face down position and then cruelly shackling him. As the weight and brutal force of the five heavy-set guards bear down upon him and strangles his breathing, David repeatedly pleads, “please, I can’t breathe!” David can obviously be heard in the recording gasping desperately for breath. But the guards ignore David’s distressed pleas. They drag him to another cell and again constrict him in the prone (face down) position. Even as David continues to scream repeatedly, “I can’t breathe!” and cries out in extreme pain the sadistic guards keep on brutally shackling him with one guard even putting his knee into David’s back. Minutes later, David Dungay turns blue in the face and dies. Yet, despite this graphic evidence, the coroner’s inquest concluded two months ago recommended no criminal charges against any of the prison guards. The Coroner even refused to recommend any work disciplinary action – even the most minor (like a warning) – against any of the guards!
The Dungay family
and supporters who packed the Coroner’s Court to hear the inquest findings were
rightly furious at this despicable whitewash. David Dungay, who loved sports as
a child and had a talent for writing poetry, was much loved by his mother and
siblings and was very loyal to them. The November 22 Coroner’s findings are a
severe blow against their fight for justice. However, David Dungay’s mother Leetona,
his siblings, nephews and nieces and other family members and their many
supporters are determined to continue the fight for justice for David. We must join them in this struggle!
The Deceptions Used
by the Coroner to Protect the Killer Prison Guards
The outrageous
behaviour of the prison guards was so obvious that even the Coroner had to
concede that many of their actions were wrong. This is because he knew that the
inquest was being closely watched by many people campaigning for justice for
David. So the Coroner does admit that there was no medical necessity to move David
into a cell with a camera. Indeed, David had not even been showing adverse
diabetes symptoms at the time that he was attacked by the guards for “his own good.”
Based on evidence from doctors and nurses, the Coroner concluded that David’s
consumption of biscuits was not a pressing threat to his wellbeing. Moreover,
the Coroner concluded that it was not the trained medical staff but the senior
prison guard involved, “Officer F” (the inquest went to great lengths to cover
up the identities of the killer guards) that decided that David be forcibly
moved to a camera cell on supposed medical grounds. This “task” Officer F prescribed
not to the regular guards but to the prison riot squad, the IAT (Immediate
Action Team). By calling in the riot squad, Officer F greatly escalated what this
senior prison guard acknowledged during the inquest was a medical issue rather
than a security one. The Coroner had to make a concession here too accepting
that “it was neither necessary nor appropriate for Officer F to request the
attendance of the IAT….”
It was the actions
of the IAT guards that directly killed David. The IAT was so brutal when they
attacked that they caused David to bleed. Even a senior officer involved admitted
during the inquest that David was bleeding while in his original cell.
Evaluating the IAT’s conduct, the Coroner had to acknowledge that, “even
leaving aside any gap in training, David’s persistent complaints of being
unable to breathe, together with his audible gasping respirations should have
prompted action in the form of a request for nursing or medical assessment.” When
assessing the actions of an IAT officer who even after David had already been
moved cells put his knee into David’s back as David lay face down gasping for
breath and desperately crying out, “I can’t breathe”, the Coroner conceded,
albeit with incredible understatement,
that this was “not warranted.”
Given that the
Coroner accepted that the actions of the prison guards was “wrong” on the
critical aspects of their “response” to David’s consumption of his own packet
of biscuits (!), how does the Coroner then end up justifying his refusal to recommend
any action whatsoever against these same prison guards? He does so by
unleashing the kind of deception that would make even Scott Morrison proud. One
method that the Coroner uses is to greatly underplay the significance of the
prison guards’ actions to David’s death. The Coroner does acknowledge that
David not being able to breathe adequately due to being restrained for a
lengthy period in the face-down “prone” position (a fairly common occurrence
known as positional asphyxia which is made more likely when weight is placed on
a person) – and his body hence being starved of oxygen (hypoxia/hypoxaemia) –
was a “contributing factor” to his death. Yet the Coroner lists this as just
one of many factors causing David’s death and, indeed, places this as one of
the last of the factors on his list! Thus, in finding that David died of
cardiac arrhythmia (bad heartbeat), the Coroner “explains” David’s death as
follows: “David’s long-standing poorly controlled type I diabetes,
hyperglycaemia, prescription of antipsychotic medication with a propensity to
prolong the QT interval [a measure of the normalcy of a heartbeat], elevated
body mass index, likely hypoxaemia caused by prone restraint, and extreme
stress and agitation as a result of the use of force and restraint were all
contributory factors to David’s death … prone restraint, and any consequent
hypoxia, was a contributing factor although it is not possible to quantify the
extent or significance of its contribution.” “Not possible to quantify the extent or
significance” of the contribution to David’s death of the guards’ use of force
against him? What kind of complete rubbish is this? The fact is that despite his diabetes, being on medication and being slightly
overweight, David, who remember was just 26 years-old, was in quite decent
physical health before the prison guards attacked him. Indeed, the Coroner
reports that less than an hour before David was killed, a nurse who checked his
blood sugar levels found that he had no acute symptoms (i.e. he was physically
fine). The report also details that up to forty–five minutes before his death,
David had been in the jail’s exercise yard. So it is completely obvious that the overwhelming reason for David’s death
was the actions of the prison guards. Moreover, it is apparent that the
Coroner is aware that he is conducting a smoke and mirrors trick by listing
David’s diabetes as a key cause of David’s death (and even listing this diabetes
above the guard’s use of force and restraint when “explaining” David’s death).
This is because in another part of his own report – when he refutes a
submission by the Dungay family’s lawyers that there was a failure to provide
David with proper management of his diabetes – the Coroner categorically states
that “there is no evidence to indicate that David’s diabetes (and consequently
the management of it) led to the development of an acute condition proximate to
his death, or was contributory to it.” So when
it helps protect the prison authorities, the Coroner emphatically says that
David’s diabetes did not contribute to his death but when it helps to obscure the
prison guards’ role in David’s death, the Coroner lists diabetes first in his
list of contributory factors to David’s death!
To see the level of
deceit that the Coroner is practicing here, consider the analogy of a person
who dies after being shot. Now, if a person is shot in their most vital organs
like the heart they will likely die no matter how healthy they are. However, if
they are shot elsewhere, say in the abdomen, then a very fit person would have a
slightly higher chance of survival than a person who is, say, a bit overweight
and with diabetes. Yet, imagine if a coroner reporting on the death of the
latter person concludes that: “The dead person’s long-standing poorly
controlled type I diabetes, hyperglycaemia, elevated body mass index and
internal bleeding caused by gunshot were all contributory factors to his death
… gunshot was a contributing factor although it is not possible to quantify
the extent or significance of its contribution … and so no criminal charges
are recommended against the shooter.” That is the kind of fraud that the
Coroner is trying to sell the Dungay family, their many supporters and the
broader public!
The main way that the Coroner gets the killer guards off the hook is through, while acknowledging that their key actions were “wrong,” putting this down to lack of medical knowledge, “deficiencies in training” and “misunderstanding of information.” Thus, in knocking back the Dungay family’s submission that the senior officer engaged in a reprehensible power play when he ordered that David be forcibly transferred cells just for refusing the guards’ unnecessary orders for David to stop eating his own biscuits, the Coroner stated that: “the rationale given by Officer F as to his decision-making process was that it was based on medical grounds. Whilst the evidence demonstrates that there was no medical basis to support such a rationale, this was not known to Officer F at the time.” So here the Coroner grants the senior officer the excuse of lack of medical knowledge. Yet there were plenty of nurses around the prison as well as doctors who could be contacted who did have medical knowledge. The senior guard, knowing that he did not have medical training, chose to bypass these trained medical officers and have David forcibly moved cells on supposed medical grounds. Indeed, this senior guard did not even inform the nurse present of his decision to have David forcibly transferred on medical grounds. If the senior officer was really concerned about David’s health wouldn’t he have called the nurses or the doctors to check David out rather than call in the brute force of IAT riot squad; knowing that force would inevitably be used by the riot squad which would put a person who he supposedly feared for the health of in still greater danger? It is apparent that the only real reason for the senior officer to want to order David to be forcibly transferred cells is, indeed, because of a repugnant power play. And this was not simply a power play but no doubt a racist power play; you can bet that as far as the senior guard saw it, David was not simply a prisoner refusing to obey guards (to stop eating his own biscuits of all things) but a “cheeky black ….” being disobedient. That’s why he unleashed the riot squad against a person just for eating their own biscuits!
The biggest of all
the whitewashes by the Coroner is when he excuses the murderously cruel actions
of the IAT guards as being due to “systemic deficiencies in training.” Yet, how
much training does one need to know that when a person you are roughly handling
and putting your weight on is repeatedly screaming out “I can’t breathe!” and
is obviously gasping for breath you should release your hold and check on their
condition? Even eight-year old children fighting in a playground would release
their hold on another child if their adversary was crying out “I can’t breathe”
and obviously struggling to breathe! Indeed, David was so plainly in a dire
condition after the IAT riot squad attacked him that when they were
transferring him to the new cell he collapsed to the ground. Yet the guards
continued to forcibly restrain him, continued to exert great force upon him and
continued to refuse to check on his medical condition. In ignoring David’s repeated pleas, the IAT guards and the senior officer
overseeing them acted all the more criminally because this person pleading,
“please, I can’t breathe!” was someone that they were supposedly concerned
about the health of and who they were supposedly moving solely in order to
protect the health of. That’s not
“deficiencies in training”! It’s not lack of medical knowledge! That’s racist
brutality! That’s manslaughter! And the guards whose actions killed David Dungay
must be jailed for this crime!
There is an
additional technique that the Coroner used to get the prison guards off the
hook. The one bit of action he recommends against any prison employee is not
against any of the killer guards but against one of the nurses. This was the
nurse that administered the sedative Midazalom after David had been moved to
the new cell. The Coroner recommends that the professional conduct of this nurse
be referred for review for his failure to examine David’s breathing and
circulation when giving this injection, especially given that he had heard
David scream out, “I can’t breathe.” Such action and much more against this
nurse is certainly warranted. However, his responsibility is far less than that
of the prison guards whose actions directly killed David and who, what is more,
ordered the nurse to leave David’s new cell immediately after giving the
injection. It is obvious that the Coroner hopes that the minor action he
recommended against a nurse will help get the heat off the killer guards. As a
close relative of David insightfully shouted out soon after the Coroner
delivered his report: “They throw a medic under the bus to save the guards!”
If people want to consider just how unfair the whitewash of David’s killing is let us envisage a scenario where the person killed is not an Aboriginal prisoner from a low-income background but a rich white big business owner. However, it is almost impossible to imagine a situation where such a corporate bigwig would be in prison at all given that such tycoons are largely above the law in capitalist Australia. So let us envisage a more realistic scenario where the young millionaire, who is slightly overweight and has diabetes, checks into a luxury hotel and goes to the hotel bar for several glasses of chardonnay. He later sees at the bar an Aboriginal woman as well as a Chinese couple and a group of Sudanese youth. Incensed that non-white people are in such an exclusive venue, the bigoted young capitalist makes a racist jibe at the Aboriginal woman. However, he does not realise that six of her friends are also at the bar. These Aboriginal men come to her defence. The most senior person among these friends tells the other five to forcibly remove the white tycoon from the hotel premises. He tells the young white man that this is for his own welfare because if he continues with making racist insults he may get severely bashed by other non-white patrons. The five heavy-set black guys tackle the rich man to the ground and roughly shackle him putting great force on him. The Aboriginal men are angry with this man’s racist behaviour. The white guy starts screaming out repeatedly, “please, I can’t breathe.” However, the Aboriginal men ignore his pleas. Before hotel security can arrive on the scene, the Aboriginal men frog march the young capitalist out of the hotel. Outside the hotel they again roughly tackle him to the ground and one of them puts his knee in the rich white man’s back. They ignore his continued cries of “I can’t breathe” and the fact that he is obviously gasping desperately for breath. Within a minute or two he turns blue in the face and dies. The whole incident is captured by the hotel’s various CCTV cameras. Unlike the case of David Dungay who was merely eating his own biscuits in his own cell, in this scenario the young white tycoon who makes a racist jibe certainly deserved to be confronted. However, unlike with the inquest into David’s death you can bet that any Australian coroner heading this inquest would have zero sympathy for the people perpetrating the physical attack. There is no way that a coroner in today’s Australia would rule that the white millionaire’s “long-standing poorly controlled type I diabetes, hyperglycaemia, elevated body mass index, likely hypoxaemia caused by prone restraint, and extreme stress and agitation as a result of the use of force and restraint were all contributory factors to the man’s death … prone restraint, and any consequent hypoxia, was a contributing factor although it is not possible to quantify the extent or significance of its contribution … the Aboriginal men were wrong to ignore the man’s gasping for breathe … but they were not trained in the dangers of positional asphyxia and so no charges are recommended against any of the Aboriginal men.” There is absolutely zero chance this would happen! Instead, any coroner in today’s Australia would not hesitate to recommend that the Aboriginal people involved be charged with the murder or manslaughter of the white corporate bigwig.
Cover Ups and the
Cover Up of the Cover Ups
During the
coroner’s inquest, it became apparent that the guards themselves knew that they had engaged in serious
wrongdoing. That is why the testimony that they gave was so dishonest. For
example, the guards tried to blame the nurses for causing the cell transfer of
David. Yet, in their actual incident reports written on the day of David’s
death, none of these same officers stated then that it was the nurses who
requested the transfer. Moreover, the key nurse who some of the guards claimed
had said that the biscuits needed to be removed from David, was adamant that he
never uttered any such thing let alone called for David to be forcibly moved.
This was confirmed by the fact that the nurse had not filled out the required
certificate needed to request a cell transfer on medical grounds. As their
claims became exposed during the inquest, the key officers changed their
testimony. One guard who had claimed that it was a nurse who suggested that the
biscuits needed to be removed later conceded that she had actually
independently come to that position. The other two officers involved in the
decision to forcibly transfer David moved from being sure that it was a nurse
who had raised a concern about David eating biscuits to, in one case saying
that it could have been another officer who expressed that, and in the other
case now saying that he could not properly recall.
It also became
apparent during the inquest that the guards’ cover up attempts actually began
well before the inquest started. For one, a prison officer ordered that the
cell that David had been moved from be cleaned of David’s blood even though it
was obvious that there would need to be an investigation into the incident.
Furthermore, it was revealed that one guard who had made no mention about any
conversation with a nurse in her initial incident report, then claimed, for the
first time, in a statement made a whole six months after David’s death that a
nurse had said to her that they needed to get the biscuits out of David’s cell.
Very dodgy! Even more dodgy was the erasing of crucial video evidence by
Corrective Services NSW staff. After the police detective investigating David’s
death requested all prison CCTV footage relating to the incident, he was only
sent the footage beginning from when the IAT arrived to storm David’s cell. The
detective was told by Corrective Services that earlier footage showing the
period leading up to the IAT being called and showing David’s movement for the
whole day had been written over!
Perhaps the most
blatant attempt to cover up responsibility for David’s death was conducted by
the IAT guards involved. They each claimed that David was not gasping for
breath after they moved in against him! Instead, they stated that David was
only breathing heavily from exertion. This is despite David being heard unmistakably gasping for breath in the
video footage of the IAT attack on him.
So how did the
Coroner deal with all these cover up attempts? On the IAT guards’ attempt to
deny that David was gasping for breath, the Coroner downplays the dishonesty of
such statements by merely calling them “incorrect.” Similarly, he describes the
guards’ devious attempts to blame the nurses for their decision to forcibly
move David as being merely caused by “misinterpreting” the nurses’ concerns. In
particular, the Coroner grossly understates the dishonesty of the senior
guard’s testimony, stating only that “the quality of Officer F’s evidence was
deficient in some regards” and then further watering down this mildest of
criticisms by adding that, “however, an appropriate concession was ultimately
made by Officer F ….” When it came to addressing how an officer ordered a
nurse to wipe David’s blood away from his cell before an investigation could
take place, the Coroner merely described this as being not “prudent” and
insisted that “evidence does not rise so high as to suggest that the actions
… were motivated by malicious intent.” Meanwhile, the Coroner’s conclusion
about the erasure of crucial CCTV footage was the benign statement that “it is
not possible to understand precisely why the entirety of the relevant footage
was not retained ….” In summary, it is apparent that the Coroner conducted
the whole inquest based on the premise – and with the intention of concluding –
that any “incorrect” actions by the prison guards were done without malicious
intent. And not surprisingly then, that was his ultimate conclusion too!
Indeed, the key
issue of the inquest, whether the guards acted with malicious intent or not,
the Coroner buries in a mass of talk about procedures and training. Thus, the very most crucial specific question of
the inquest, whether the IAT guards acted with malicious intent in using
excessive force while restraining David and in failing to cease restraint and address
David’s desperate cries that he couldn’t breathe, the Coroner dismissed with
one solitary sentence! And that in a 98 page report!
If we look as a whole at what happened in Long Bay
Prison Hospital on that fateful day of 29 December 2015 and strip away all the
fancy medical terms and other smoke thrown into the Coroner’s report about
procedures and training, the incident is quite simple: A physically quite
healthy young Aboriginal man who is eating his own packet of biscuits in his
own cell defies an unwarranted demand from prison guards to stop eating those
biscuits (supposedly for his own good). Upset at being defied, the guards on a
power trip – no doubt boosted by a huge dose of racism – call the prison riot
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causing him to even bleed. Then, as the five heavy-set officers shackle David
for lengthy periods in the dangerous, face down position, putting much force
and weight on him, David pleads repeatedly, “please, I can’t breathe!” and can
obviously be heard gasping for breath. The guards continue to ignore David’s
repeated and constant pleas over a period of some six minutes and maintain
their severe hold on him, including a knee in his back. This causes David to turn
blue in the face and die. We repeat: This is not “deficiencies in training.”
It’s not lack of medical knowledge! This is racist brutality! This is
manslaughter! And the guards whose actions killed David Dungay must be
thrown behind bars for an extended period!
What about the Recommendations from the Coroner
about Improving Safeguards in Prisons?
It is obvious that
the court wanted to make the inquest one about procedures in the prison rather
than about the criminal conduct of the guards. In of themselves, the
recommendations made by the Coroner about increased training of guards on the
dangers of positional asphyxia, more use of Aboriginal Inmate Delegates during
interactions between guards and Aboriginal inmates, greater emphasis on
de-escalation techniques etc could be helpful. The problem is that any positive effect of all these
recommendations is dwarfed by the terribly harmful effect of the most
significant recommendation – or rather non-recommendation: that no charges or
even work disciplinary action be taken against any of the prison guards. Racist
prison guards and police hearing of this will conclude that if in the future
they brutalise an Aboriginal prisoner so badly that it kills the prisoner they
will not be sacked for such murderous crimes – let alone jailed. Even if their
actions are caught on camera! In other words, this whitewash coronial inquiry
will be a green light for further racist state terror. With nearly 500
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people having been killed in state
custody over the last three decades, this is a terrifying prospect.
The effect of this
coronial inquest could turn out to be like that of the 1991 Royal Commission
into black deaths in custody. That Royal Commission also had some positive
recommendations, ones which would have reduced the rate of Aboriginal
imprisonment, for example, had they been implemented. However, those
recommendations were all greatly outweighed by the most significant aspect of
that inquiry’s findings: that it whitewashed all the cases where state
enforcement personnel murdered Aboriginal prisoners. The 1991 Royal Commission
refused to recommend charges against a single cop or prison guard over the
killing of an Aboriginal person. As a result, racist state personnel took it as
a green light to undertake yet more violence against Aboriginal detainees. In
the 28 years since that inquiry was held, 424 indigenous people have died in
state custody – a more than 50% higher
rate than before the inquiry.
Where
recommendations about improved custody procedures would make a really major
difference would be if we were
in a system where the prison guards and police were sincerely committed to
treating black people in custody and others imprisoned, fairly. However this is
definitely not the case in Australia. The reason so many Aboriginal people have
been killed in state custody is not mainly because of bad procedures and
inadequate training but because of the racist brutality of the state
enforcement personnel and their contempt for those at the bottom of the
economic pyramid. This flows from the whole function and history of the police,
prisons and other repressive organs of the Australian state. After colonial
invasion, these bodies were built up to enforce the dispossession of Aboriginal
people from the land that they belonged to and to enforce the exploitation of
working class people by the capitalist business owners. Since then, these
repressive institutions have been replenished to maintain this purpose. Their
political character as the bully boys of the big end of town is reinforced
every time that they are unleashed against working class struggles (like
strikes and picket lines) or against staunch Aboriginal rights struggles (like
tent embassy occupations or the 2004 Redfern and Palm Island militant
resistance struggles). Naturally, this imbues the cops and prison guards with
hostility to both Aboriginal people and to those who stand up for the rights of
the working class masses. Therefore, even when police and prison officers are
not undertaking action directly connected to their primary political function
they still do their work coloured by their own racist and anti-poor people’s
prejudice. The Aboriginal people killed by the actions of police or prison
guards – John Pat, Eddie Murray, David Gundy, Daniel Yock, TJ Hickey, Mulrunji
Doomadgee, Kwementyaye (Terrance) Briscoe, Julieka Dhu, David Dungay, Kumanjayi
Walker and so many more – is testament to this horrific reality.
The racist,
anti-working class character of Australia’s repressive organs does not fundamentally
change whether it is the Liberals, the ALP or the Greens who are in government.
However, while the basic character of state enforcement personnel will remain until
the existing capitalist state is overturned, the behaviour of these authorities
is affected to some degree by prevailing political winds. The heightening
racism in Australian society, the growth of violent, white supremacist groups
and the rise of hard-right, racist governments (from Trump’s America to
Bolsonaro’s Brazil to Orban’s Hungary to Modi’s India to the racist-infested
Morrison government here) throughout the world is encouraging the most extreme
racist tendencies within the “justice system”.
Mobilise Mass Action Backed By Our Unions to
Win Justice for Black Victims of Racist State Violence
Like the police,
the prisons, the military and the spy agencies, the courts form part of
Australia’s racist rich people’s state. And although some judges and more
liberal members of the capitalist ruling class may sometimes be embarrassed by
the naked racism of many of their cops and prison guards, they still always
stand by these cops and screws because they are grateful to their physical
enforcers for defending their dominant social position. Meanwhile, the courts
are united with the police and prisons by a common purpose to enforce racist,
capitalist rule. Hence, these state organs act to protect each other whenever
any one of them is challenged by the oppressed. That is why not a single police
officer or prison guard has ever been convicted over the killing of an
Aboriginal person. The terrible reality is that the whitewash of David Dungay’s
killing is the norm in Australia.
The only way that justice can be won for David
Dungay, TJ Hickey and the dozens of other Aboriginal people killed by racist
police or prison guards (and the many other Aboriginal people who have died in highly
suspicious circumstances in state custody like Rebecca Maher, Eric Whittaker and
Nathan Reynolds) is through powerful, mass protest action that forces the
racist legal system to grant concessions to the demands for justice. It was spirited
nationwide protests across the country that finally compelled the authorities
to charge the officer who shot dead 19 year-old Aboriginal man, Kumanjayi
Walker, in the NT’s Yuendumu last month. Prior to these mass protest actions,
the initial police response to the killing of Walker was to cover-up the
killing as an act of self-defence.
Even now there is a
great danger that the trial of the officer charged with Kumanjayi’s death will
be a whitewash that will acquit the charged cop. That is why it is important
that the mass actions demanding justice for Kumanjayi Walker continue right up
to – and during – the trial. The judge who will instruct any jury in the case –
and the many corporate high-fliers, politicians, high-up bureaucrats and other
judges who will no doubt be in his ear over this high-profile case that has
major political implications – need to be shown that the usual biased outcome
will not be tolerated. In this, it is worth looking back at the lessons of the
fight for justice for Aboriginal man, Mulrunji Doomadgee, who was bashed to
death by the racist cop, Chris Hurley, in Queensland’s Palm Island in November
2004. As a result of the political impact of the militant resistance action by
hundreds of Palm Island residents that responded to Mulrunji’s murder and
subsequent street protests throughout the country, the killer cop was
eventually charged with manslaughter. However, once Hurley was charged, most
activists who had worked hard to fight for justice for Mulrunji then stopped
their street protests believing that the best way to ensure justice was to now
leave the justice system “to follow its course.” However, this allowed the
courts to simply follow their well-trodden, biased course by letting the cop
who killed the Aboriginal man go free.
That is why those
fighting for justice for people killed by Australian regime enforcement
personnel need to be careful to ensure that any slogans raised by us do not end
up inadvertently breeding illusions in the fairness or “independence” of any
court proceeding, coroner’s hearing or other inquiry conducted by Australia’s
state institutions. For example, rather than calling for an “independent
inquiry” in the fight to win justice for David Dungay, those involved in the
struggle should now simply demand that the prison guards who killed David be
jailed for their crimes. This is especially because the video footage makes it
clear to any serious person that it was the guards’ cruel actions that killed
David. To be sure, if the movement demanding justice for, say, David Dungay or
TJ Hickey becomes powerful enough to make the ruling authorities consider
making a back down they would seek to do it through their own “processes”,
which may well involve them calling a new inquiry or coroner’s inquest. So be
it. However, those campaigning for justice must ensure that we do not make out
that any such inquiry would be “independent.” If we do that – for example, by
calling for an “independent inquiry” – we will mislead activists into thinking
that should the capitalist regime respond to demands for justice by deciding to
hold a new inquiry/inquest, activists should just sit back and let the
“independent” inquiry/inquest “run its course”, when what would actually be
needed then is the very opposite: for opponents of racist state oppression to
urgently intensify street actions demanding justice, which alone can have a
chance of compelling those in the biased legal system to actually conduct such
a proceeding fairly.
In the end, the
judges, magistrates and coroners heading Australia’s racist, rich people’s
legal system are not going to punish the perpetrators of state terror against
Aboriginal people unless they (and others in the ruling class elite who would,
no doubt, be in their ears whenever they have to adjudicate on high-profile
cases) fear the movement demanding
justice for the victims; and, in particular, fear the damage that such a
movement could do to the authority of the legal system should they make their
usual biased decisions. The regime will
fear far, far more a movement that mobilises people on the basis that
Australia’s “justice system” is a racist, rich people’s system that needs to be
forced against its will to concede justice than it will fear a movement that instead
says that the “justice system is basically fair and independent but needs to
deal with particular excesses by its enforcement personnel.”
What would most
make the racist authorities recoil in the face of movements demanding justice for
deaths in custody victims is if we are able to threaten the profits of the big
business owning elite whom the Australian regime ultimately serves. In other
words, if we are able to organise protest workers’ industrial action. Such actions
are possible because it is in the very interests of the workers movement to
stand behind deaths in custody victims. For one, the same capitalist state that
commits brutal terror against Aboriginal people is the very same one that
persecutes militant trade unionists, attacks the picket lines of striking
workers and storms the protest actions of working class movements fighting for
public housing. Moreover, only by positively standing with Aboriginal first peoples
and other victims of racist oppression can the union movement build the inter-racial
unity so vital to its struggle for workers rights.
The potential for mobilising union action in the fight for justice for deaths in custody victims was shown by the presence of trade union representatives – from the Maritime Union of Australia – bearing union flags at a December 2016 protest demonstration held to mark the first anniversary of David Dungay’s killing. This recalled the Sydney Branch of the MUA’s brave stand some twelve years ago in support of the Aboriginal Palm Island hero Lex Wotton. A union stopwork in November 2008 on the very day of Lex’s sentencing sent a powerful message to the powers that be that staunch sections of the Australian workers’ movement would not stand by and let the inspirational Aboriginal leader be hung out to dry with a long prison sentence. Lex had been accused of leading the Palm Island resistance, whose 100% justified actions in the wake of Mulrunji’s horrific death in custody saw the killer cop Chris Hurley’s house along with the very institutions of brutal capitalist state oppression on Palm Island – namely, the much hated police station and courthouse – poignantly go up in flames. Unfortunately, more recently, union participation in the campaign for justice for David Dungay has dwindled. To mobilise trade union power behind these campaigns, we need to remove the obstacles blocking this power from being brought to bear. One of these obstacles is the presence of prison guards and police in our union federations – like Unions NSW. It is obvious that when the very people whom action is to be taken against are part of our trade union federations it becomes very difficult to mobilise these union federations – and their affiliated unions – behind the struggle for justice for those killed by state enforcement personnel. Police and prison guards have no place in our workers unions. They are not real workers but rather exist to repress working class resistance in the service of the ultra-rich big end of town. Although they do jail actual criminals as well, it is their function as the suppressors of working class resistance and the enforcers of the dispossession of Aboriginal people that is their main purpose. That is why both the struggle to defend Aboriginal victims of state brutality and the struggle for workers rights demands that our workers unions be divorced completely from any police and prison guard associations.
The overall hurdle that
we face in seeking to bring working class power behind the fight against racist
state brutality is that the current leadership of the workers movement – and,
indeed, the current thinking of most workers – is dominated by the social
democratic ideology of the ALP. This ideology promotes nationalist pride in
Australia as it currently is and sells workers the lie that the police,
prisons, courts and other state enforcement agencies are neutral bodies under
“democratic” control. Thus, any struggle to mobilise union power in support of
death in custody victims requires a simultaneous struggle against the
conservative, nationalist influence of Laborism. Fortunately, even now there
are pockets of workers who do not buy all the lies that they are told by the
ruling class – and its Laborite protectors – about “our wonderful law
enforcement personnel.” Moreover, what makes it possible to break the
ideological chains that tie the working class masses to the capitalist state
and to the ruling class’ “national interest” is that these chains are as
harmful to the struggle for workers rights as they are to the struggle for
Aboriginal people’s liberation.
Today, we are in a
period leading up to planned celebrations by the Morrison government of the 250th
anniversary of Captain Cook’s arrival on this country’s shores. The
commemorations of Cook’s landing will hail an event that opened the path for
the British colonial invasion that so devastated Aboriginal people. The
nationalist jingoism that will mark the commemoration will add to the thinly
veiled, white supremacist attitudes that dominate mainstream society.
Especially when combined with the chilling message that the whitewash of David
Dungay’s videotaped racist killing sends out, this is yet more bad news for
most Aboriginal people. Yet there is another dynamic going on in this country.
Many people of different ethnicities are outraged at the planned, grotesque
celebration of Cook’s landing. They realise that while this country may not be
exactly the same as it was in the first hundred or two hundred years after Cook
arrogantly claimed this land for the British Empire, in many aspects things
have not fundamentally changed. Aboriginal people are still killed with
impunity by racist state personnel, Aboriginal children continue to be taken
from their families under the guise of “protection” and Aboriginal people in some
parts of the country continue to have their payments compulsorily “managed” on
the racist “basis” that Aboriginal people supposedly can’t handle their own
money. Meanwhile, the last few years has seen a determined and knowledgeable
layer of feisty, young Aboriginal women and men that have burst onto the scene
to complement the struggles of longer-time warriors. The non-Aboriginal masses must
now urgently throw their weight behind Aboriginal people’s struggle for
liberation. This is not only the duty of the masses but it is in their very own
interests. Although working class people from non-Aboriginal backgrounds are often relatively privileged when compared
with most Aboriginal people, in that they do not face the extreme racist
discrimination and inter-generational trauma faced by Aboriginal people, they
are still exploited and bullied by the very same capitalist system that so
severely subjugates their Aboriginal sisters and brothers. So the working class movement, other oppressed groups in society –
including unemployed workers and people from embattled Muslim, African, Chinese
and other Asian communities – and all opponents of racism and tyranny: in this
250th year of an event that led to such a catastrophe for Australia’s
first peoples let us mobilise in mass action against all forms of oppression
faced by Aboriginal people. Let us especially oppose the most naked form of
this subjugation – the continued racist killing of Aboriginal people by police
and prison guards. Let’s work extra hard to mobilise mass action, backed by union
power, to win justice for David Dungay, TJ Hickey, Kumanjayi Walker, Rebecca
Maher, Eric Whittaker, Nathan Reynolds and all other victims of black deaths in
custody now!