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Once were warriors

In Social justice, The Age on February 5, 2014

As Melbourne plans a memorial to Aboriginal resistance fighters, momentum is growing for official recognition that the brutal colonial frontier wars were pivotal in this nation’s history.

THE two Aboriginal men were dressed wholly in white, including white caps and capes, for their public hanging. It was early in the morning on January 20, 1842. Maulboyheenner refused the outfit at first, but Tunnerminnerwait laughed as he was helped with the long white socks.

A gaoler asked why he wasn’t worried about dying. Tunnerminnerwait answered – so the story goes – that he had three heads: one for the noose, one for the grave, and one for Van Diemen’s Land.

The two men were drawn in a cart to Gallows Hill, the site now occupied by RMIT University next to the city baths. A quarter of Victoria’s white population at the time – 5,000 people – attended the execution. The atmosphere was like a “race-course”, the Port Phillip Herald reported, “… with spectators as anxiously awaiting the awful scene as if it were a bull-bait or prize-ring”.

The pair had been condemned to death for the murder of two whalers at Cape Paterson, during several weeks of raids conducted with three women – Truganini, Planobeena (Tunnerminnerwait’s wife) and Pyterruner. Theirs was likely an act of resistance on the violent frontier of newly settled Victoria.

Last December, the Melbourne City Council voted unanimously to establish a permanent marker to the men. It will vote again in late April to decide on the form of the memorial, after consulting with Aboriginal leaders here and in Tasmania.

The council’s decision comes after sustained pressure from a small group of citizens and Aboriginal leaders who have staged a ceremony on the anniversary of the hanging each year since 2006.

“These young men died for our country, for our people,” Boon Wurrung elder Aunty Carolyn Briggs said at this year’s commemoration. “They were put up on show.”

The new memorial will be established amidst renewed questioning of the way Australia commemorates the violence that occurred on the colonial frontier. They are questions that challenge the official military history marked by the Australian War Memorial, and even the sovereignty of the nation itself. 

Adding to this debate is a new book, Forgotten War, by historian Henry Reynolds. In it, he lays out evidence that colonial authorities and settlers regarded the conflict as war, and argues that this history must be acknowledged.

If these seem difficult questions now, it is no surprise; they were such from the earliest days of the colony.

Tunnerminnerwait and Maulboyheenner stood trial a month before they were executed. The three women were tried and found not guilty as accessories.

All five were from Tasmania; they’d been brought to Melbourne by George Augustus Robinson, the newly appointed Protector of Aborigines at Port Phillip, two years earlier. He had argued they would be “most useful auxiliaries in conciliating the natives of Australia”. None were permitted to give evidence in court.

For six weeks, in October and November 1841, they raided stations in the forest from Dandenong to Cape Paterson, stealing guns and supplies, and eluded the large parties sent to catch them – once, by stealing a boat. Finally, a group of 29, including seven Aboriginal trackers, captured them at dawn near Venus Bay.

In research prepared for the council, historian Clare Land describes the five’s exploits, capture and trial as “the biggest story” in the newspapers of the day. The Port Phillip Herald reported they had committed “numerous depredations” and “unmentionable atrocities”.

Their defence counsel was Redmond Barry, the man who sentenced Ned Kelly to hang nearly four decades later. He argued, unsuccessfully, for a jury partially comprised of people who, like his clients, were not subjects of the Queen. Barry referred to the “destruction” of their nation during “the war” in Tasmania as motivation for their raids: “revenge in minds like theirs was not easily forgotten, and particularly for wrongs like theirs”, he said.

Yet in only half an hour, the jury reached its verdict. They recommended mercy on the death penalty, but Judge John Walpole Willis denied it. He told the men their punishment was designed to inspire “terror… to deter similar transgressions”.

In that respect it failed, explains Land. “There was guerrilla war and frontier violence in every district of Victoria at the time,” she says. “It went on from the late 1830s until the gold rush of the early 1850s.”

In his 2005 book, Aboriginal Victorians, Richard Broome concluded it was likely that 1,000 Aborigines and 80 Europeans were killed on the state’s frontier.

One squatter in western Victoria at the time, Nial Black, wrote in his diary that it was “universally and distinctly understood” that settlers needed to kill Aborigines to gain control over their properties.

The best way to get land, he wrote, was to “take up a new run, provided the conscience of the party is sufficiently seared to enable him without remorse to slaughter natives right and left”.

*

On January 26, thousands of people gathered in a shady park in Belgrave to celebrate Survival Day. It is the seventh time the event has been held, and the theme this year was the frontier wars.

The Yarra Ranges regional museum set up its marquee with a display on the “Battle of Yering”, near Yarra Glen in January 1840. A small memorial stands near the Melba Highway, marking the location of the clash between dozens of Wurundjeri men and troopers of the Border Police.

The Wurundjeri men attacked a homestead where their leader, Jaga Jaga, was imprisoned. While the troopers were distracted in a counterattack, others of the clan broke him free.

Wurundjeri elder Uncle Bill Nicholson says it began with a dispute over a potato crop – a sign that people were going hungry. “The Battle of Yering was a great symbol that Aboriginal people did not just sit back and let people take over their land. They fought for it, and fought hard,” he says.

“People in this city have to know how the Indigenous people were treated in that era, because only then can we move forward in reconciliation.”

The memorial is one of very few recognising frontier conflict throughout the state.

This imbalance in our official history – between our domestic and overseas conflicts – is the subject of Forgotten War, which last week won the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for non-fiction. As he announced the prize, Premier Denis Napthine described it as “a very important book for Victorians and Australians”.

Reynolds says Aboriginal organisations around the nation should be given the opportunity to consider whether or not they want memorials, and if so, funding for their establishment.

“We’ve raised war to be absolutely central to the national story,” he says. “But what about the most important war in our history, the one about fundamental Australian political issues – sovereignty and property?”

He contrasts the earliest campaign recognised by the Australian War Memorial – in Sudan, in 1885 – with the intense fighting that was occurring on home soil at the time.

The New South Wales government sent 770 men to assist the British to quell an uprising. The soldiers saw little or no fighting, but six died of disease.

“The 1880s was possibly the most intense period of conflict and mass killing, because miners, cattlemen and pearl shellers were penetrating right across north Australia,” Reynolds says.

“So you have this extraordinary juxtaposition: the Sudan campaign is treated reverentially, but the much more serious conflict is simply ignored.”

Tim Flannery, Australian of the Year in 2007, recently expressed his “personal sense of outrage” that Aboriginal warriors who fought and died defending their lands and people against white settlers are ignored by the Australian War Memorial.

The memorial’s director, former Liberal Party leader Dr Brendan Nelson, says the story of frontier conflict needs to be told, but not at his institution.

“Our mission is to tell the stories of Australians in the service of the nation in the defence of our country. [It] is not an institution which presents a story of armed conflict within Australia amongst Australians,” he says.

“It’s questionable whether there was a declared war in Australia. After the British garrisons left, the violence, where it did occur, was from police militia, colonial militia and Indigenous militia.”

For two decades, until 2007, Peter Stanley was the principal historian at the Australian War Memorial. Now a research professor at the University of New South Wales in Canberra, Stanley says it is not only historians of our Indigenous past who regard the nation’s colonisation as war.

“Australia’s military historians have long accepted that frontier conflict was a part of Australia’s military history. No military historians I know take the opposite view,” he says.

“An armed conflict occurred across the pastoral frontier for about a century: don’t tell me that that’s not an actual military conflict. It resulted in more than 30,000 deaths and involved the British army.”

Stanley says the question of whether the Australian War Memorial should recognise frontier conflict was first raised by Geoffrey Blainey in an internal report in 1979, and Stanley himself presented a paper on it in 1981.

“I gave the same advice as principal historian, but it was declined,” he says.

Stanley argues that the memorial’s public position is based a narrow reading of its legislation and a flawed view of history: the ongoing denial that frontier conflict constituted war.

“It has come up repeatedly during the terms of successive directors and governments, but has been either outright rejected or avoided as too hard,” he says. “I think the war memorial’s council fears that acknowledging the truth of frontier war will somehow bring Anzac into disrepute. But the two are completely separate.

“It is not an aspect of Australia’s military history that Australians take pride in, but you can’t always cheer your history – sometimes you just have to accept it,” he says.

On the anniversary of the Melbourne hangings, Tasmanian writer and filmmaker Jim Everett said the council’s memorial would “be a very big step towards white and black Australia coming together and hopefully [to] a recognition that Aboriginal people are indeed their own people”.

“I’m a Plangerrmairreenner man,” Everett said to the crowd. “I hold my sovereignty as my shield.”

For his part, Everett doesn’t covet a place for Indigenous resistance fighters in the Canberra memorial. “If they asked me, I’d say ‘no we don’t want to be stuck alongside you mob – we had to fight you’,” he says. “If we want to remember our heroes, then we should be doing it ourselves.”

But wrangling over the appropriate place to recognise the wars doesn’t undermine the need for it. “I think this is the most important thing that Australia needs to think about,” Everett says. “You can’t have your roots in Gallipoli.”

*

When the five Tasmanian Aborigines began their raids, in October 1841, they had been in Port Phillip for nearly two years.

Clare Land says researchers have long debated their motives for fighting, but the remaining written documents are not definitive. Historians have speculated that they may have been driven by hostility towards whalers, disillusionment with their “protectors”, or by the overarching desire to resist colonisation.

All had been alienated from their land, witnessed the deaths of their families, and had direct or indirect experience of sexual violence by whalers and sealers.

Immediately before quitting Melbourne, Tunnerminnerwait had toured the western districts for several months with George Augustus Robinson, collecting testimony about frontier violence. On that journey, Robinson recorded evidence of the Convincing Ground massacre, near Portland in 1833-34, in which whalers killed between 60 and 200 members of one Gunditjmara clan.

The group’s reasons may have been many, Land says, but “it is likely they saw themselves as part of the colonial resistance of their countrymen in Tasmania and in Victoria”. Given their experiences, the question isn’t just “why they did what they did”, but rather, “why not?”

She argues the story is important not only for the past, but the future, because it illustrates the conflict over land and the legal status of Aboriginal people.

“It tells us about what Aboriginal people suffered in Tasmania and Victoria and about their resistance, and it stretches forward to the struggle for land rights today.”

The three women – Truganini, Planobeena and Pyterruner – left Melbourne within months of the executions. They returned to Flinders Island, where in 1846, their community petitioned Queen Victoria for the removal of their white superintendent.

The hanging of Tunnerminnerwait and Maulboyheenner was botched: the trap did not fall fully at first. The newspapers reported it “a gross insult to public decency”.

Robinson, the Protector of Aborigines, did not attend. He waited beside two open graves, outside the boundary of the cemetery. The location is thought to be between sheds E and F of the Victoria Market. So far, it goes unmarked.

Read this article at The Age online

Memorials to frontier conflict in Victoria

Port Fairy: a stone monument to “the thousands of aboriginal people who were massacred between 1837 and 1844 in this area”.

Sorrento: a plaque in memory of “Aborigines who were killed or wounded during the first British visits to Port Phillip Bay” in 1803.

Yarra Glen: a plaque commemorating the “Battle of Yering”, which took place on January 13, 1840, between 50 Wurundjeri clansmen and troopers of the Border Police.

Orbost: a stone commemorating Dan (The Cook) Dempsey who was speared by Aborigines in 1851.

Benalla: a memorial at the site of an attack on settlers William and George Faithfull and their men in 1838. Eight of the settlers and one Aborigine died.

Peterborough: a memorial on “Massacre Hill”, five kilometres west of town along the Great Ocean Road, to Aborigines killed at that location.

Mt Dispersion: a cairn commemorating the naming of the area by explorer Major Thomas Mitchell in May 1836 after he ambushed and shot at a large group of Aborigines between Robinvale and Mildura. There is also a plaque to this incident in Shepparton, at the Bangerang Cultural Centre.

Source: monumentaustralia.org.au

The long road to change

In Community development, Social justice on December 4, 2013

This story was first published by Right Now

EIGHT years have passed. Daniel Haile-Michael no longer remembers the night as a moving image, only in snapshots: he is on the oval; then at the petrol station; he’s slumped on the ground, kneed by a police officer; he’s alone in the back of the police car. He is at the police station. He is crying.

Paperwork typed long ago – complaints, affidavits, outlines of evidence – reveal the scenes that once fixated his mind, but Haile-Michael doesn’t care to look at them anymore. He gives interviews to journalists often, and speaks at forums and conferences about his legal case. He is committed, yes, but he is weary.

His engineering assignments are waiting. As a reflex from those years, his academic confidence is low. After that night, and the hostile months that followed, he fell behind in class. Eight years later, he still postpones uni homework, listening to the small voice that insists: “I won’t be good at this.”

BACK THEN

It was October, muck up day, late at night. It was Ramadan and Haile-Michael was with two of his mates, Magdi and Ahmed, Muslims who had broken the day’s fast. The weather had been warm and humid, so the Year 10 boys stayed downstairs, beneath the Flemington high-rise where they lived. On the oval, between the flats and their school, they felt a breath of cool wind and exhaled.

Haile-Michael lived with his aunt, sharing a room with his younger cousin. He’d arrived in Australia, aged five, with his great uncle. The extended family was from northern Ethiopia; they spoke Tigrinya at home. But his great uncle had recently remarried. “You are going to live with your aunty,” he’d said, two months earlier.

His aunty did not have a choice and she was not happy. So Haile-Michael avoided going home – he studied late at school, then lingered downstairs at the flats with friends. Cramped homes, teen boredom and solidarity snared the lot of them in a web anchored at five points: school, Maccas, KFC, the basketball court and the oval. There was nowhere else to go.

This night, they crossed the oval and walked up the main road towards school to see if the older kids were up to trouble, but before they got there Haile-Michael felt apprehensive, watched. Under a yellow streetlight, they saw two security guards. The boys turned back, walking at first, then running to get away from the school.

Near the service station, they stopped. A divvy van pulled in and two police officers approached them.

What happened next is contested. It was slated for court so many years later, the belated consequence of an official complaint, then a human rights grievance and finally, unprecedented racial discrimination litigation in the Federal Court. Along the way, unpredictably, what happened that night became unimportant.

Maki Issa was one of Haile-Michael’s friends from the flats, and the next day, what had happened was very important to him. Issa lived with his mother and three brothers and sisters. Slight, but fast, he was signed to the Yarraville Glory soccer club, where he trained three times a week.

He was only 15, but had developed an abiding attachment to the mixed-up community at the Flemington Estate flats. There were more than 4,000 people living in the four 20-storey towers and dozen walk-ups, which were built over the site of an old colonial farm and tannery. Half the residents were under 25 years old, and four in 10 spoke an African language at home. Issa’s family, who had arrived from Djibouti, often exchanged food with their next-door neighbours, from Turkey.

Maki Issa, February 2013. Photo by Charandev Singh. 

Issa was already a volunteer. The year before, he had helped start a local soccer team, the North Lions, where he coached younger kids from the flats. His mother took to chiding him, affectionately: “Maki, you’re never going to be rich.”

The landscape changed when he heard Haile-Michael’s story. Among his friends, Daniel was the most reserved and considered – the one who spent the most time in the library. And another friend, too, told Issa he’d been hit by police the same day. There’d been trouble with the cops before, but not like this. In recent months, his friends had grown used to being stopped and sworn at, but they were mouthy too: they’d give it straight back. He knew there had been some robberies, but mostly it was people from Braybrook and Carlton, coming in and giving his friends a bad name. Mainly he’d blamed those guys for the crackdown, not the police. But this violence was different, he thought, and it freaked him out.

There was a social worker Issa knew, Simone Perkin, from the Mooney Valley council. With her encouragement, he and the other boys began to visit the Flemington and Kensington Community Legal Centre.

A SPATE OF ROBBERIES

In October and November 2005, police in the Mooney Valley area – comprising Flemington and surrounding suburbs in Melbourne’s inner north-west – noticed a trend. The region’s new inspector described it as a “spate of robberies, armed robberies and assaults”. He reported that a number of victims said “the offenders were groups of ‘dark skinned’ or African youths”, but local police couldn’t identify any suspects.

By December that year, senior police resolved to target the problem. The Flemington station would stage “Operation Molto” for a month, from early February to March 2006, coordinated by Acting Sergeant Nick Konstantinidis, who prepared the orders. “The as yet unidentified suspects for these serious offences are primarily young African males who either live at or from time to time attend the Flemington Public Housing Estate,” he wrote.

Konstantinidis noted that police were already speaking to boys around there, and that they didn’t like it. “The young African males stopped and spoken to by police on and around the Flemington area view this police activity towards them as racially motivated harassment and retaliatory incidents have occurred.”

Nevertheless, he determined that part of the mission of the operation was to “engage the African youth” and build “positive relationships where possible”.

SCORES OF COMPLAINTS

Tamar Hopkins had started working at the Flemington and Kensington Community Legal Centre a couple of months earlier, in August 2005. She arrived from Canberra, via the Tenants Union, with dreadlocks and a preoccupation with renters’ rights and social security issues.

Immediately, she noticed that young men were coming into her office with questions about police: “Can they take photos of you?” they asked. “Can they confiscate your phone?”

She held an information session at the local high school, then another at the community centre, where people told her they’d been assaulted by police, stopped several times in one day by the same officer, or that police had refused to give their names when requested. It was clear that something was going wrong.

Hopkins felt disoriented, paranoid. Could this really be happening in Melbourne? And there was nowhere to turn. In the past, she’d worked on domestic violence, which was troubling, but a remedy – of sorts – was clear: report the matters to the police and seek restraining orders through the courts. Now some clients asked if they could get a restraining order on Konstantinidis.

Hopkins started going to the police station whenever anyone was arrested. She and Perkin distributed their mobile numbers and ran informal 24-hour support hotlines. With volunteers, she collected stories. She woke in the night to the ring of her phone, and also, to the fear and powerlessness she had absorbed from her clients’ statements.

Once Operation Molto commenced, Perkin was bringing young people to the legal centre almost daily. For the few who were willing, Hopkins filed complaints to the Office of Police Integrity.

On 6 April 2006, she wrote to the OPI detailing an incident that included an alleged assault, racist taunts and confiscation of a phone. It was the twelfth complaint she had mailed in the past six weeks, and she was worried. “We ask that you investigate this matter urgently and with sensitivity,” she concluded. “We are very concerned by the continuing nature of these assaults on young people in the area.”

Nearly three years later, the OPI wrote back. It was a brief letter stating that the investigator had deemed the each of complainant’s allegations either “Not substantiated” or “Unfounded”.

In 2006, the legal centre lodged 17 complaints. One was withdrawn, but in every other instance, the OPI returned the same verdict: “Not substantiated”. In three of those matters, the complainants themselves had been charged with resisting, hindering or assaulting police, but they were each found not guilty before the courts.

When Hopkins saw that magistrates didn’t accept the police version of events, she began to guard a flimsy hope that the bench could help. But the incidents continued. By the end of 2008 she was exhausted. With her phone always on call, she judged that she’d been in emergency mode for two years. When the young men first arrived at her new office, she was shocked. When their visits became a pattern, she resolved that it was her responsibility not to walk away.

Above all, Hopkins was fed up with the force’s complaints system. Every letter returned with the same finding: “Not substantiated”. The OPI delegated its investigations to the force’s Ethical Standards Department, who weighted their fellow officers’ version of events above that of the complainants. Their conclusions were inevitable. She received a grant from the Victoria Law Foundation to examine complaints systems elsewhere around the world: six months to stop and sleep, study, and then start again with a different mobile number. She packed her bags and carried her guilt about those left behind.

AN ETHICAL HEALTH CHECK

In 2006, Ken Lay – now the chief of Victoria Police – was the assistant commissioner responsible for a region that stretched from the CBD to the outer edges of the city’s sprawl in the north and west.

Concerned by the number of formal complaints the OPI had received from the legal centre, Lay commissioned an investigation into the Flemington police station. One officer would review the specific allegations, and a second would review the operation of the station itself. This latter part, conducted by Inspector Mark Doney, was referred to as an “ethical health check”.

By mid-year, Doney reported back. His diagnosis was troubling – he was critical of the behaviour of both Konstantinidis and the officer-in-charge of Flemington police station, Mick Maloney. Quietly, both were moved elsewhere. (Maloney was aggrieved however, and eventually his agitation prompted another internal inquiry – this time, into Doney’s report. Victoria Police refuses to release either document.)

Despite internal tension, the force felt it was making progress. The September 2006 issue of the Police Association Journal carried an article about the Flemington community and refugees from the Horn of Africa. “Cultural differences and a mistrust of police because of experiences in their homelands have made policing in the area a challenge – a challenge the members at Flemington have tackled head on, with success,” it began.

Senior Sergeant Langdon, the new officer-in-charge, said he was proud of his team. “Our members are very professional and thorough. They are fantastic coppers and they are tireless. They are good, honest people and they do a good job. There is no bigotry. There is no racism and there is no unprofessional behaviour.”

Late that year, his station received the “Premier’s Award for Community Harmony”, one of the annual awards bestowed by the state’s multicultural commission for “outstanding achievements” by organisations that have “actively supported cultural diversity”.

Unfortunately, after only six months’ respite, complaints began to arrive again in early 2007. At the time, and throughout the years to come, police officers stationed at Flemington regarded the flats and the shops nearby on Racecourse Road as crime hotspots. The perpetrators of robberies were usually described as groups of “young African males”. It was a necessary part of their duties, they argued, to stop people in these areas, especially late at night.

In November 2007, the station conducted Operation Square, targeting “anti-social behaviour”. The order stated that local police had identified about 30 youths responsible, most of whom “identify themselves as the ‘Flem Boyz’”, but it did not name anyone specifically, stating instead: “Members are to use common sense when it comes to the type of people who are spoken to.”

A few weeks later, Chief Commissioner Christine Nixon received a long letter from Hopkins and others, complaining about chronic overpolicing and harassment of young African men. They suggested a policy of providing a receipt whenever officers stop someone – it would explain why they’d been stopped and create a statistical record that could be analysed. Police in London had implemented a receipting policy following an inquiry into the botched investigation of the murder of a young black man, Stephen Lawrence.

Delegated to respond on Nixon’s behalf, Superintendent Brett Guerin replied acerbically: “Unlike many of its critics who are conspicuously absent when the ‘heavy lifting’ has to be done with local initiatives, Victoria Police is committing human, physical and financial resources into improving a problematic environment,” he wrote.

He dismissed the receipting policy as impractical, and maintained that Flemington police had worked hard to improve their relationship with young African people in the area, listing a number of community policing initiatives, such as sporting programs and a joint expedition to the Kokoda Track.

“I encourage you and your staff to become involved in some of these programs… so that you may gain a more balanced perspective of the relationship between police and the local community, especially as it relates to some young people who have benefited from their interaction with police.”

The station had a multicultural liaison officer and a youth officer, who organised the activities with the local community.

One day, the whole station was required to attend a training session about people from the Horn of Africa. Subsequently, one officer explained that the session had helped him understand “why African youths could be overrepresented in the justice system”. He recalled being told that “a number of the local African youths may have grown up in refugee camps and therefore may find it difficult to identify with a particular race or culture”.

The particular training session, a seminar called “African/Sudanese Community Cross Cultural Advice”, was delivered to over a thousand members of the force between 2007 and 2010. One slide, titled “Working with African/Sudanese Young Men” stated that they “are typically inducted into a rebel army or warrior tribe as part of their teen years and consequently, develop a strong ‘warrior’ ethic”. They “will openly challenge anyone who threatens them regardless of potential consequence”. Among its “Final Words of Advice” was this: “despite not even knowing you, they may hate you”.

The training was shelved after a complaint from Kot Monoah, an unsworn liaison officer who was born in Southern Sudan. He had attended a session, and left with his blood boiling – he couldn’t sleep properly for days afterwards. In a statement sent to senior police, Monoah described the seminar as “gross professional negligence” and “not cultural awareness, but… misinformation and ridicule”, which only depicted stereotypical images. Monoah quit his job with Victoria Police shortly afterwards.

THE COURTS

Frustrated with all the dead-end complaints, Hopkins had met with Peter Seidel and his team at the Collins Street law firm Arnold Bloch Leibler. Seidel was the partner responsible for the practice’s public interest and native title work – he had represented the Yorta Yorta people in their protracted native title claim over land near the junction of the Murray and Goulburn Rivers.

The legal centre had received advice from Debbie Mortimer SC – now a Federal Court judge – suggesting the young men had a racial discrimination case worth pursuing. At first, as Hopkins told Seidel her story, she felt overawed by the firm’s luxurious office, but by the end of the meeting her nervousness was supplanted by giddiness: Seidel offered to work on the case pro bono.

Progress was slow, due both to the lawyers’ busy schedules and the boys’ relaxed attitudes towards appointments. The boys were under pressure at home too – many elders counseled against complaining. “You’re new in this country,” they would tell Haile-Michael. “The police are untouchables, so why are you being silly?”

But the young men, who had grown up in Australia, viewed the situation otherwise. On the street, their aggressive response to questioning had welled up from a sense of injustice. “It’s our home,” they thought. “Why should we be treated any differently?”

Finally, in December 2008 – already more than three years after Haile-Michael’s bad night, and just before Hopkins went on study leave – the matter was lodged with the Australian Human Rights Commission. The lawyers, and Mortimer, had collated the stories of 16 young men who said they were repeatedly stopped, harassed and abused by members of the Victoria Police. They detailed about 140 incidents, and alleged that they comprised a systemic pattern of racial profiling, constituting a breach of the Racial Discrimination Act 1975.

Nearly two full years passed in delays and fruitless conciliation. The commission had no power to decide whether or not discrimination occurred. It could only help parties reach agreement, and these parties could not agree.

In November 2010, seventeen young men – including Haile-Michael and Issa – lodged their case in the Federal Court. The application named several individual police officers, together with the chief commissioner and the State of Victoria.

Over the course of nearly 50 pages, the statement of claim documented scores of incidents: assaults, abuse and misuse of power. As they had in the Human Rights Commission, the young men alleged that, cumulatively, these incidents revealed a pattern of racial profiling. Members of the African community were suspected of committing crimes, and singled out for rough treatment, by reason of their race.

The team’s new pro-bono barristers, Rachel Doyle SC, Emrys Nekvapil and Phoebe Knowles, had helped shift the focus of the complaint before it had transferred from the commission to the court. Previously, they’d been preoccupied with the violent confrontations. But although it would be satisfying to prove that police had used excessive force in various encounters, even if they could pull it off, it wouldn’t say anything about systemic racism. To make a case about racism, the lawyers needed to show that Africans were being disproportionately targeted.

For the young men, being stopped by police was unremarkable, like seeing a beggar on a city street. Haile-Michael guessed it happened to him every week or two. Issa estimated that in the two years from 2006, he was asked for his name and had his bag checked at least 100 times. One day, he was asked five times. It happened so often, one officer would greet him by name – and then insist on asking for his ID. “Is this guy sick?” Issa wondered. “Or is it me?”

When someone came into the legal centre’s office to detail an altercation, Hopkins would ask how often they’d been stopped. Invariably, they replied: “All the time.” The lawyers had anecdotes, but they needed statistics.

In New York, four men were suing the police department in a similar case, arguing that it racially profiled people and undertook “suspicion-less stop-and-frisks”.

Crucial evidence had come from Dr Jeffrey Fagan, professor of law and public health at Columbia University, who analysed six years of data from the police. He found that “unconstitutional stops” by the NYPD were “more likely to affect Black and Latino citizens”. The pattern was evident, even after adjusting for factors such as crime rates, social conditions and the allocation of police. In 2009, half a million New Yorkers were stopped; nine-out-ten were “Black” or “Latino”.

PULLING OUT

By 2010, Haile-Michael was living in a public housing flat in Clifton Hill, and was enrolled in civil engineering at Victoria University. His aunt had kicked him out long ago – she was suspicious of his trouble with the police, and to make things worse, he’d fought badly with her son. During his final years at school, and afterwards, he lived off-and-on with friends and other family members and then in temporary accommodation in West Footscray.

When the police trouble had first blown up, Haile-Michael’s first instinct was to make himself scarce – he was never the kind to talk back – but there was nowhere to hide. All the public spaces near his home were targeted by police. He channeled his worry somewhere productive, and began doing community work.

Daniel Haile-Michael in February 2013. Photo by Charandev Singh.

He and Issa were both involved in a drama collective, the Flemington Theatre Group. Their first play, Black Face White Mask, wove fictional stories of several young African-Australian people, including some who’d clashed with police. In the play, one of the characters argued with his girlfriend about racism: “The police, the politics won’t accept us,” he said.

After school, Issa began a diploma in liberal arts, and then switched into community development. He was still getting stopped from time to time, but the worst seemed to pass after he walked the Kokoda Track with some officers. Before long, however, most of those police had moved elsewhere. Overall, he judged it another failed attempt. Things might have been different if they’d stayed.

Issa wasn’t going anywhere. Sometimes his mother talked about leaving Flemington, but he refused to budge; living there, he felt part of something bigger. He was less certain about the legal case.

The lawyers had applied for a protective costs order to guard against financial ruin if they lost. Without it, none of the guys would have stuck around – they’d be in debt for years if it turned out badly. But with the order, they couldn’t receive compensation if they won. Several decided to pull out. The case was a grind, costing time off work or uni, and for what?

Whenever someone left, Seidel would invite them for lunch. A couple of times, he shouted them at Strozzi, an upmarket Italian restaurant favoured by Collins Street corporates. If he could not persuade them to hang in, then at least he would dignify their effort in style.

Then, their morale worsened. Chief among the remedies the young men sought was a receipting system to record stops and searches, as well as an independent complaints system and training for police about racial profiling. But these claims had to be dropped, because the judge did not have the power to make those kinds of orders. When the lawyers informed him, Issa walked out of the meeting. Hopkins followed him out and he told her he couldn’t understand how they didn’t know earlier. “That was our fight,” he said. “Our fight was for the receipting policy – there’s nothing left.”

Afterwards, more of the young men left the case. Those remaining wavered, wanting to forget about it and move on with their lives.

Finally only six remained. Haile-Michael and Issa stayed in. Partly their decision was one of inertia – they’d been in for so long already – but it also encompassed a change in mindset. Haile-Michael now knew that the justice system could not give them justice. But he thought it could provide the media coverage to spark a public campaign. This case, as well as his community work, had taught him something: if you put a spotlight on something shadowy, people of goodwill are drawn to you.

EXPERT REPORTS

In August 2012 Seidel wrote to Professor Ian Gordon, a statistician at the University of Melbourne, asking him to analyse a number of files from the police database. The data comprised interactions between police and young men who had lived in North Melbourne or Flemington from 2005 until 2008.

Two weeks later, Gordon wrote back: he’d found that young men of African ethnicity were two-and-a-half times more likely to be stopped, relative to their population in the neighbourhood. But compared to young men of other ethnicities, they had committed fewer crimes, on average.

Quickly, Seidel forwarded the material to Professor Chris Cunneen, a criminologist from James Cook University who specialised in the policing of Aboriginal people.

In his report, Cunneen drew on international case law, and his own research on Aboriginal people and policing, which had shown that racial profiling was already occurring elsewhere in Australia. One study found that search powers were used more frequently in the parts of NSW with large Aboriginal populations, and a higher proportion of them were unsuccessful. In Bourke and Brewarrina nine out of every 10 searches were unsuccessful.

He wrote that racial profiling involved “police making decisions to initiate contact with individuals on the basis of their race or ethnicity”. Typically, that meant stopping, searching, questioning or asking people to move on because of their race, rather than any reasonable suspicion. After analysing Gordon’s statistics, Cunneen concluded that racial profiling was happening in Flemington.

By now, Seidel and his team were feeling cautiously optimistic. One of his colleagues had secured an expert report from Associate Professor Yin Paradies, a Deakin University academic who had reviewed international research about the health effects of racism and racial profiling. At a public presentation months later, Paradies summarised what he’d found: the research showed a strong connection between racism and depression, anxiety and behavioural problems. “Importantly, this association was causative,” he said. “The longitudinal studies showed that racism came first and these effects came afterwards.” One New Zealand study showed that young people who’d experienced police racism reported worse general health, smoked and drank more, and had more symptoms of depression.

Taken together, Seidel thought the experts’ evidence was damning. There was no doubt in his mind that there was a culture of institutional racism in the force. But going to court was a lottery – racism is notoriously difficult to prove, especially while picking over the specifics of an incident.

Much would come down to credibility. Haile-Michael and Issa were cleanskins with extraordinary resumes of community service. Even so, they would be cross-examined on the minutia of events long since passed, and any inconsistencies would be exploited. Some of the other applicants had chequered records – in the intervening years, two had spent time in jail. But Seidel had been working on the case for several years, and not once had their stories deviated. He trusted that.

The police’s expert statistician largely accepted Gordon’s report, although he differed on the statistical significance of some findings. Their criminologist, however, had criticised Cunneen’s conclusions, arguing that while the evidence indicated the “possibility that racial profiling has taken place”, it could not be demonstrated for sure – other factors, such as the officers’ state of mind and what they knew about each situation needed to be considered too. Correlation is not causation, they would argue.

Victoria Police maintained it had taken all reasonable steps to prevent discrimination, by means of its training, supervision, and community and multicultural initiatives. And, even if it had occurred, there was no detriment. Its lawyers had assembled more than 100 officers to take the stand – they would say they were just doing their jobs, as usual: investigating crimes, apprehending offenders or responding to public requests for assistance.

But as Seidel and his team trawled through the officers’ evidence, they realised that the police had inadvertently made a case for the applicants.

Professor Gordon had found that when police recorded the stops of African youths in their database, they were more likely to use words like “gang” or “negative attitude”, or to state they had “no reason” or “nil reason” for being where they were.

Now, the lawyers saw those phrases connected with their clients.

During Operation Molto, Haile-Michael was stopped one Friday afternoon on the housing estate, while he was with four friends. The police record of the incident stated: “all part of gang activity in the area… targeted as part of Operation ‘Molto’”. A few hours later he and his friends were stopped again, at the housing estate on Racecourse Road, by the same officers. This time the record read: “In area of recent robberies and crim activity. 2 part of larger gang.”

Neither record made mention of any suspicious behaviour. It was Friday night, and all the places Haile-Michael would usually hang out had become regarded as areas of high crime.

One of the boys was stopped with a friend late one night in the car park at the flats. The policeman wrote that they were “known criminals loitering in the area”. Then, in his statement for the case, the officer had tried to explain: “the term ‘known criminals’…  did not necessarily mean that the people concerned had been convicted of criminal offences. It was a shorthand term that may have meant that the people concerned had been charged with minimal offences or had otherwise come to the attention of police as being potentially involved in criminal offences.”

Another boy was checked with two friends at 8:30 pm one evening, just downstairs from his home in the high-rise. He was 16 at the time. The police record read: “Checked loitering around park bench near basketball court. High criminal area of robberies and assaults. All wearing ‘home boy/gangstar’ clothing.”

At a minimum, the officers’ notes indicated they were influenced by implicit or unconscious racial biases. Despite long years of difficult work on the details of legal cases, Seidel had not lost his habit of enthusiasm. Whenever he explained what they’d come across in the police records, he became effusive: “That’s racial profiling from central casting!”

THE SUBPOENA

In February 2013, two weeks before the case was scheduled to begin, the applicants’ lawyers subpoenaed Ken Lay. The police chief would be the first witness in the case. He would be cross-examined by Jeremy Rapke QC, the former director of public prosecutions, who was now acting for the young men.

At a preliminary hearing, Rapke indicated his line of questioning: he would press Lay on the inquiry he had ordered into the Flemington police. Those documents had not been made public – indeed, it appeared that parts of the inquiry had never been completed. Why? What had Doney recommended? And what had Lay done, and not done, in response?

Suddenly, Victoria Police was eager to settle the case. It was more than four years since the complaint was first lodged with the Human Rights Commission. Seidel estimated that his firm’s forgone fees would have accrued to about $2 million, and the various barristers fees, more than $1 million. The police acknowledged its defence had cost more than $3 million. Within a fortnight, the two sides agreed.

A MONUMENTAL EVENT

The seats in the Federal Court room were full, and two dozen people stood awkwardly along the side. It mattered little, because the session was brief.

“The police commissioner is off the hook,” Justice Shane Marshall noted, dryly. He congratulated the parties for settling the matter before the trial, which had been scheduled to last two months, and then read the agreed statement.

Victoria police still denied the allegations, but agreed to hold twin inquiries, reporting by the end of the year, into its cross-cultural training and the way officers deal with people they stop in the street.

There was another unprecedented element: there would be no gag order. The young men were free to talk to the media – although only Haile-Michael and Issa were willing – and most of the documents from the case would be made public, including the experts’ statistics.

After such a long build up, the rapid conclusion was vertiginous. One of Haile-Michael’s friends approached him for an explanation. He was incredulous when he learned the case was over within 10 minutes. “What?” he exclaimed. “I took the day off for that?”

From left: Daniel Haile-Michael, Peter Seidel and Tamar Hopkins outside the Federal Court. Photo by Charandev Singh.

It was a warm, windy morning and Haile-Michael and Issa joined Hopkins and Seidel for a press conference in the shade. Before the cameras, Seidel lauded the courage of the young men, including those who had dropped out along the way. “It’s an incredible gift they’ve given to the public,” he said.

Haile-Michael hadn’t prepared, but as he began, he found himself asserting something unforeseen – this case, brought by teenagers, represented a coming of age. “I share the same opinion that this is a monumental event,” he said. “For our community, it’s finally time.”

But the courts alone were not sufficient to end racial profiling, he said. It was up to the people. “So what we’re striving for is a political movement, for people to become aware of these issues. I’m sure the public will get behind this great cause.”

An ABC journalist wearing a Panama hat pressed him on how he could justify settling the case, if police had assaulted him. “I myself have been beaten up,” he replied, “but it’s not a personal thing. We understand it’s a systemic issue and that’s why we’re trying to address it in a systemic way. It’s not about one police officer, it’s about changing a whole system.”

POSTSCRIPT

In mid-September, Ken Lay met the incoming Victorian Equal Opportunity and Human Rights commissioner, Kate Jenkins, at the commission’s office on Lygon Street, just north of the city. Lay wore the force’s new, darker uniform – ‘Salute’ blue – which only the top brass had received so far. They discussed the race discrimination case.

In its submission to the police inquiries, the commission had recommended, among other things, that the force conduct a six-month trial of a receipting policy, review its complaints-handling procedures, and “deliver targeted anti-racism and unconscious bias training that educates staff at all levels”.

Already, the commission had begun working with the police on its complaints system and its human rights and race discrimination training.

Afterwards, Lay told me that for Victoria Police, the case had been the kind of “crisis of confidence” that occasionally jolts an organisation into radical change. He said the force would become more open to outside scrutiny; its training would change; and, most likely, the way officers interact with people on the street would change too.

“It’s like a waypoint,” he said. “We were going along and we hit this point, and now we’re going in a different direction.”

Six months earlier, immediately on settling the case, Lay had struck a different note. At his press conference, he denied any possibility of systemic racial bias: “I do not believe our members would identify people and harass or continually check them simply because of their ethnicity,” he said.

But in the meantime, the public conversation seemed to shift. Lay had been embarrassed by revelations that officers in three stations had printed stubby holders with racist slurs mocking the Sudanese, Aboriginal and Vietnamese communities.

The force had received 68 submissions to its inquiries. IMARA Advocacy, a youth-led lobby group on racial and religious profiling, had coordinated a “People’s Hearing on Police and Racism” to gather the stories of young people who would not otherwise contribute.

Also, an instance of crowd abuse during the AFL’s annual “Indigenous Round” had sparked a news storm about racism in society. Collingwood player Harry O’Brien criticised his club’s president Eddie McGuire, for what he dubbed “casual racism”. Much of the response was unpleasant. But Jenkins, on starting her new role, interpreted the furor as progress: while the conversation didn’t play out as she would have liked, at least the complexities of unconscious and institutional racism were being debated beyond the small realm of human rights advocates.

“This particular case is a very practical outcome,” she told me. “If a group of 16 youths and a very passionate and committed community legal service can bring about very serious cultural change to the whole of Victoria Police – then that’s an amazing achievement. We will see how much change occurs, but my sense is that this doesn’t only affect African youths. These changes will also assist Aboriginal people and a whole range of other people.”

That is exactly what Issa was hoping for. At the lowest point in the case, after Hopkins had trailed him out of the meeting, he made her promise that the legal centre would not stop fighting until it had achieved systemic change. To do so, the centre started a specialist “Police Accountability Project”, beyond its normal legal services. Hopkins delayed having a baby, not wanting to break her word. At last, with the case over and the inquiries pending, she was on maternity leave when she heard she’d been named a finalist in the 2013 Australian Human Rights Law Award.

In July, Issa and Haile-Michael had flown to Cairns to accompany Hopkins at the annual conference of community legal centres, along with the cofounders of IMARA Advocacy. The group spoke to people from Aboriginal communities in Redfern and Darwin, who were interested in running “People’s Hearings” of their own.

During their session, entitled “The national implications of Victoria’s race discrimination claim against the police”, they stressed that the legal challenge would not have been possible without the support of youth workers initially, and, as time went on, a community campaign.

In September this year, not long after Lay met with Jenkins, Haile-Michael and Issa spent a day shooting a documentary about the case. It was the mid-semester break, and Haile-Michael should have been catching up on his assignments. Issa, too, should have been elsewhere. The Flemington Theatre Group’s latest play, called Fate, was scheduled to open in two months, and he was still writing the script. But they’d decided to promote their cause however they could, fielding requests from interstate and even overseas.

Today’s shoot, surprisingly, was for an Iranian English-language television channel, called Press TV. The journalist asked if they believed genuine change would take place. “We’re optimistic,” Issa replied. “Because it has created dialogue in public. It’s given people with the same issues the opportunity to stand up and talk. That’s how all movements start.”

Filming dragged on much longer than they expected, and afterwards, Haile-Michael was tired. He was more cautious than Issa, wary of an empty response to the inquiries, which are due before new year. But he was hopeful. “You can’t be in this line of work and not be an optimist,” he said.

This essay was originally published on www.rightnow.org.au, an online human rights magazine, with the assistance of the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.

Many happy returns

In Community development, Social justice on October 9, 2013

Can private wealth cure social ills, at a profit?

An edited version of this story was published in Smith Journal, Volume 8

THE Peterborough prison was opened in 2005, at the old Baker Perkins engineering works, half a mile from the centre of town. Where once they had manufactured industrial machinery, now they would punish and rehabilitate humans.

The jail was designed and managed by Sodexo, a French multinational hospitality company; the UK’s prisons chief said it would provide a blueprint for prisons of the future. But initial results were troubling: after just three years, a leaked assessment revealed that Peterborough, an hour north of London, ranked last out of 132 clinks across the country. Among other deficiencies, it had scored poorly for reducing the rate of re-offending.

What to do? The authorities doubled-down on privatisation.

In mid-2010, the justice minister Crispin Blunt went on location to announce a world first: private investors would fund a scheme that worked with 3000 short-term jailbirds to help them stay out, once they got out. He called the initiative a “social impact bond”. Investors would provide the cash to pay for the social workers and support staff, and if reoffending fell by more than the target amount, the government would give their money back, plus 13 per cent interest.

The payoff hasn’t yet come, but already the Peterborough bet has been replicated elsewhere around the world. In New York, Boston, London, Leeds, Manchester and Sydney, on recidivism, chronic homelessness and child welfare: private investors are now speculating on cures to society’s most challenging problems. It is only the beginning. Governments in Canada, Scotland, Germany, Israel and Ireland are eyeing the bonds too.

“This promising financing model has potential to transform the way governments around the country fund social programs,” said Michael Bloomberg, mayor of New York, announcing a plan to work with young men at Rikers Island prison, bankrolled by $10 million from Goldman Sachs.

Mayor Bloomberg’s personal philanthropic foundation guaranteed a loan on the scheme. “Social impact bonds have potential upside for investors,” he says, “but citizens and taxpayers stand to be the biggest beneficiaries.”


In early spring last year, academics, bureaucrats, bankers and do-gooders gathered at the Sydney Harbour Marriott Hotel, near Circular Quay, for the “Inaugural Social Finance Forum”, organised by the Centre for Social Impact, at the University of New South Wales. For a day, they debated social impact bonds.

The first speaker was Peter Shergold, formerly Australia’s top public servant under Liberal prime minister John Howard. His talk was called “Creating a win-win for government, social enterprise and investors”. He stressed the financially volatile times in which we live, when governments face increasing pressure on their budgets. It was an oft-repeated theme, including in the keynote speech, by David Hutchison, the CEO of Social Finance, and the broker of the Peterborough bond.

Hutchison described the government spending cycle in the grip of austerity: funds are directed to acute needs and cut from prevention; over time, this leads to more demand for crisis services, and further diminishes the budget for prevention – and so on. Social impact bonds, he argued, break the cycle by funding early intervention.

Earlier in 2012, the New South Wales government had announced a pilot scheme comprising three “social benefit bonds”: two would aim to reduce the number of children in out-of-home care, and the other, like Peterborough, would target recidivism.

For now, more than two-in-five prisoners in the state are back in the slammer within two years of being released. Cameron Robertson is the treasurer of Mission Australia, the large charity that is negotiating the recidivism bond, together with private prison operator The GEO Group. Financially, reoffending is costly all the way along the line, he explains, from the policing and the courts, all the way to the building and running of jails.

“If a program reduces reoffending it brings savings to everyone – that’s the financial side. More importantly, there’s a significant benefit to the individual and to society more broadly.”

Even before his bond has been issued, Robertson is confident that on the financial markets, there’s “significant demand for this type of product” among “high net-worth individuals, super funds and corporates”.

The investors in the Peterborough bond were almost exclusively charitable trusts. They’ve funded a program that works with criminals sentenced to fewer than twelve months. The men receive additional support inside jail and on the outside, and so too, do their families.

This June, the UK government announced interim results – a slight fall in reconviction rates from 41.6 per cent to 39.2 per cent. Elsewhere around the country, re-offending has risen by 2 per cent over the same period.

The measures were different to the ones specified in the bond, so it isn’t clear whether or not the program will meet its target for investors. The philanthropists won’t know until halfway through 2014 if they’ll get their money back. Nevertheless, Chris Grayling, the justice minister, described the results as “very encouraging indeed”.

The market for social impact bonds is a tantalising prospect: investors make money, governments save it, and prisoners, the homeless and broken families make good.

At the social finance conference at the Sydney Harbour Marriott Hotel, Shergold put it this way: “In the best of the possible worlds, this can be a win for the private sector, a win for the public sector, and a win for the community sector.”

That day, several speakers turned their minds to the obstacles between the world as it is, and the preferable world – the one with social impact bonds. Among the chief difficulties is the task of creating a market – establishing buyers and sellers, prices, measurements and yields – where once there was only taxing and spending, philanthropy, or nothing at all.

Shergold, who is now a key advisor to the New South Wales government on social investment, observed that no one knows whether investors will come. “Information is scant. Risks are hard to predict,” he said. Even so, he predicted that public sector contracting “will increasingly take the form of bonds”.

When Hutchison launched the Peterborough initiative, a big investor enquired about a derivatives market – four or five social impact bonds combined in a portfolio and exchanged like stock options, say, or sub-prime mortgages.

But even if there can be such a market, should there be?

***

In Australia and the UK, citizens volunteer to donate their blood to strangers for uses they will never know. In the US, some people donate theirs, while others sell to commercial blood banks as a way of making money.

The market for blood, thought British sociologist Richard Titmuss, is a market well worth dissecting. In his book, The Gift Relationship, published in 1970, Titmuss analysed the practicalities of blood supply and use. He argued that commercial exchange was less efficient: wastage and costs were higher in the US than in the UK, shortages more frequent, administration more excessive, and the risks of contamination more acute.

Titmuss began with those details – “the particular and microscopic” – but zoomed out to questions about the role of altruism in society. One consequence of blood money, he argued, was the creation of a new class: “an exploited human population of high blood yielders”. The redistribution of blood “from the poor to the rich appears to be one of the dominant effects of the American blood banking systems”, he said.

He believed that his subject illustrated something corrosive about economic thinking: rather than simply expanding people’s choices, as economists argued, establishing market mechanisms can take something important away. The commercialisation of blood “erodes the sense of community” and “represses the expression of altruism”, he said. Why give when others are earning?

“The ways in which society organizes and structures its social institutions – and particularly its health and welfare systems – can encourage or discourage the altruistic in man; such systems can foster integration or alienation; they can allow the ‘theme of the gift’ – of generosity towards strangers – to spread among and between social groups and generations,” he wrote.

“Where are the lines to be drawn – can indeed any lines at all pragmatically be drawn – if human blood be legitimated as a consumption good?”

***

As with Titmuss and the buying and selling of blood, the arguments against social impact bonds can be marshalled along both practical and ethical lines.

First, the practicalities – measurement. In the case of the Peterborough bond, Professor Sheila Bird, from the University of Cambridge, observes that it “might well be a brilliant success; it might achieve little. But we aren’t going to know either way.”

Neither the prison, nor the prisoners were chosen at random. The warden nominated his facility, and participation is voluntarily. Their reoffending rates will be compared against other convicts who don’t receive support, but under these circumstances, Bird says, no one can be sure it’s a good comparison. Did those crims have better attitudes, or fewer drug and mental health problems? Did the hard cases stay clear? Did the warden’s enthusiasm make a difference?

Neither will the trial explain attribution. Should the results be put down to the particular social work program, to the extra money alone, or to the innovative private funding mechanism?

To know if government is getting a good deal, these are crucial questions. Assessing impacts is always complex – arguably too complex to form a base for a financial product. It’s complex no matter who funds the program, but with bonds, the stakes are higher.

The Benevolent Society is one of the charities taking part in the New South Wales trial. Together with Westpac and the Commonwealth Bank, they’ll run a program designed to keep vulnerable children safely at home, and out of the child protection system.

At the social finance forum, Jocelyn Bell, the charity’s business development manager, referred to modelling on the scheme’s results. One option, she said, is to provide a level of service that ensures the highest number of children stay home, and therefore, offers investors the maximum return. But that level of service “would not sufficiently support children to thrive in a home environment”. There’s a trade-off between the interests of the kids and the money-makers.

The second practicality – money. This one, says Christopher Stone, from progressive think tank Centre for Policy Development, is one that should be apparent to economists: why pay more, when you can pay less?

“Governments could borrow that money at a far lower rate than the private sector does, and they won’t expect to make a profit,” he says. “Logically, government investment in these same programs would be more sensible than private investment.”

With social impact bonds, the public sector ends up paying anyway – it just pays significantly more. Year upon year, bond upon bond, the extra costs will mean governments can afford fewer programs overall.

At the social finance forum, Hutchison – the founder of the Peterborough bond –noted that public servants in the UK had struggled to justify high payments for bonds, when they could borrow at a risk-free rate and deliver the services directly. He believes the bonds are worthwhile because they’re more likely to succeed and the public won’t pay if they fail.

Stone is sceptical. He was one of the authors of ‘Big Society and Australia’, a report on the privatisation policies of the Conservative government in the UK and how they might apply in Australia. “There’s a question about whether government can ever really transfer risk,” he says. “And there are examples where even when the outsourced firms fail, they can still win.” Most of the claimed benefits of the bonds, he argues, such as extra investment in prevention, or a rigorous focus on outputs, can be achieved by other means.

He’s concerned about transparency too. In New South Wales, the government says modelling of the costs and benefits of its pilot social bonds, undertaken by the consultants KPMG, demonstrates the good value for taxpayers. But that modelling? You can’t see it. It’s confidential.

***

Titmuss died in 1973. In the four decades that have passed, market values have encroached on social policy in such a way as to support his warning that “no lines can be drawn”. Although markets have not yet acquired blood donation in Australia and the UK, many other elements of the welfare, education and health systems have been privatised or outsourced, at least in part.

Social impact bonds advance the project in a way likely unimaginable to Titmuss: where previously the rich were taxed to reduce inequality and pay for social programs, now they can earn a healthy return on them instead, directly underwritten by taxpayers.

“All policy would become in the end economic policy and the only values that would count are those that can be measured in terms of money,” Titmuss wrote. These are ethical objections to the bonds: they undermine the obligations of governments and wealthy citizens to the struggling. They alter the meaning of philanthropy, too. Why give when others are earning?

Cameron Robertson, the Mission Australia treasurer, acknowledges the experiment: “If, in five years’ time, we haven’t increased the pool of funding, and the wealthy philanthropist who was previously donating his money is now putting it in a bond, then we won’t have been successful.”

He’s hoping they’ll keep the donations and add something extra on top. “If we can get even a small portion of industry superannuation fund money, for example, then we’ll have increased the amount of capital and the number of programs.”

Just before Titmuss died, the philosopher Peter Singer wrote an essay defending the sociologist against economist Kenneth Arrow. In a critique of The Gift Relationship, Arrow had argued that altruism was a scarce resource – we’d better save it for when it really matters, rather than squander it where a price will work instead.

Singer disagreed. Altruism was not limited in supply, like crude oil, but more like sexual potency: “much used, it constantly renews itself, but if rarely called upon, it will begin to atrophy”.

For Singer, the matter came down to a choice of questions: “We must ask ourselves not ‘How can we obtain the most blood at the least cost?’ but ‘What sort of society do we want?’”

The force of racial bias

In Social justice, The Age on September 16, 2013

Are Victorian police biased against people of particular ethnic backgrounds? A chorus of voices is speaking out about racism and the force is taking steps to tackle the problem.

BJ Kour took the microphone at the Melbourne Town Hall, on a Sunday in August. “I want to stand up because I’m fired up,” he said with a small smile, which was received with gentle laughter by those gathered to listen, in a stately room with worn carpets. He grew serious. “I am from South Sudan. My story is a real story.”

He related several disturbing encounters with Victoria Police, including one while he was a youth worker in Dandenong. He said he faced charges of hindering an investigation after asking the police for their names during the arrest of two young men he knew. The charges were later dropped, but not before an officer had phoned his boss to suggest he might not be a good employee.

Kour was speaking at the People’s Hearing into Racism and Policing. About 200 people attended over two days, and heard distressing testimony from young men and women of African, Arab and Pacific Islander backgrounds. They told of confronting, often violent, experiences with police, many of which had escalated from unnecessary contact.

Mohamad Tabbaa, an executive director of the Islamic Council of Victoria and a PhD candidate at the University of Melbourne, described how as a young man of Lebanese background he was constantly harrassed by police. He told of being rounded up with his friends, thrown into divvy vans, and beaten with copies of the Yellow Pages. On trains, he said, they were fined even when they had tickets, because as one policeman said, “you’re a ‘f…g Lebo’’. The harassment and fines continued, he says. Eventually, he felt so humiliated and disheartened, he stopped buying tickets.

Although he never faced any charges, he still carries a debt of about $10,000 in unpaid fines from those years. But he counts himself lucky. “Most of my friends from my childhood and early adolescent days have ended up in jail, on the streets, on drugs, dead or simply unmotivated,” he said.

The event was coordinated by IMARA Advocacy, a youth-led lobby group founded after the death of a young Ethiopian-Australian man in Melbourne’s inner-west two years ago.

One of the facilitators, Reem Yehdego, believes the forum has ended debate about whether or not discriminatory policing exists in Melbourne. “It was an incredibly emotional and heartbreaking two days, but the general responses were of relief, hope and healing,” she says.

Like Kour, a number of young men began their testimony by affirming that theirs was a true story. It was the mark of people unused to having their voices heard.

This time, however, those stories were recorded and transcribed. They will be submitted to Victoria Police, which is holding twin inquiries into its cross-cultural training and the way officers deal with people they stop in the street.

Victoria Police agreed to the inquiries in February as part of the settlement of a long running racial discrimination case. Several young African-Australian men had sued the police, claiming they were regularly stopped around Flemington and North Melbourne for no legitimate reason, and assaulted and racially taunted.

The case is set to have a deep and lasting impact on policing in Victoria.

Among some 70 public submissions to the inquiries, the Law Institute of Victoria provided a particularly strong critique, calling for “profound cultural change” and an “overhaul” of standards, including restricted stop and search powers. The first step, it said, was “to acknowledge that racial bias exists in current policing practices”.

Reynah Tang, the institute’s president, says his members consistently report that clients are regularly stopped for reasons of their race or religion.

Similarly, a submission co-authored by Jeremy Rapke QC, the former Director of Public Prosecutions, stated that racial profiling and racial bias “exists throughout the institution of Victoria Police”. Racial profiling occurs when police stop people, either consciously or unconsciously, because of their race.

In response, the Chief Commissioner of Police, Ken Lay continues to walk a thin blue line, defending the reputation of the force while also rebuking “individuals whose attitudes are intolerable and offensive”.

He says the huge majority police interactions with the public are positive, but the submissions from the People’s Hearing will provide a “wake-up call”.

“I’m not going to try and defend the indefensible, I know that at times our people let us down.”

The inquiries’ final reports will be released in December, and Lay says he is “open to anything possible”.

“I know there is a level of discomfort, distrust and bad behaviour. This is why this work is important to us. Out of a really, really difficult situation, Victoria Police will be a better organisation,” he says.

He has just appointed former AFL executive Sue Clark to a new high-level role. Beginning in late September, Clark – a former senior police officer – will oversee the implementation of the inquiries and the force’s cultural engagement practices.

In recent months, Lay has become increasingly vocal about racism within his ranks. He has condemned a series of racist stubby holders produced by officers, printed with slurs mocking the Sudanese, Aboriginal and Vietnamese communities.

In late June, he recorded a video for his members, in which he described the incidents as “mind numbingly stupid and insensitive” and “a failure of leadership”.

“It has shown me there is a dark, ugly corner of Victoria Police and I don’t like it. It embarrasses me and it should embarrass you,” he said.

So far, however, he has refused to accept that there is a systemic problem with racial profiling.

“It’s an ugly tag,” he says. “It has a connotation of a racist organisation that is out to hurt people. That’s what doesn’t sit well with me.”

At the People’s Hearing in Melbourne Town Hall, Mohamad Tabbaa was clear in his diagnosis: while there is a problem with overt racism among a minority of officers, the gravest issue is pervasive, implicit bias.

“For those of us on the receiving end, we know that the problem of police racism and profiling is endemic. It is a problem of police culture, and not individual attitudes. It is a problem of systems and structures, not of bad apples.”

Among the officers within those systems, diversity remains low. The force doesn’t keep complete records on its members’ ethnic background, but Lay acknowledges that it comprises “a large number of white Anglo-Saxon men”.

***

The theatre at the Police Academy in Glen Waverley is arranged with blue tables and blue chairs, aligned in rows on the blue carpet.

The room is full of recruits, both uniformed and protective service officers, in only their first and second weeks of training. They’re here for a session called Community Encounters.

It’s a kind of speed-dating the “other”: the recruits rotate among a dozen volunteers from different religious groups, ethnicities, physical abilities, sexual orientations and gender identities.

“People are quite complex,” warns Acting Senior Sergeant Scott Davis, before the conversation begins. “You can’t pick one thing about them and think it explains everything.”

Mohamed Saleh has been volunteering here for three years. He is 27; he grew up in the flats at North Melbourne, and eventually, he’d like to join the Federal Police. He speaks fast – he only gets 15 minutes with each group and he’s got a lot to say.

Saleh describes the cycle of profiling and exclusion he has witnessed, which was a common theme at the People’s Hearing a week earlier. “Listen,” he concludes. “When you get posted somewhere, even if your seniors tell you, ‘Forget Community Encounters, that’s all crap’, remember what you’ve learnt.

“A lot needs to change. It comes down to treating people with respect and dignity. You have power and it’s about how you engage with it.”

But all the questions he fields are about social issues in the flats, not policing. One recruit asks how people there can better assimilate with society.

Saleh isn’t deterred by these responses: “A lot of them are very eager – they want to be good officers,” he says later.

At the end of the encounters, Davis tells the recruits they are responsible for making cultural change in the organisation. “I put it fairly and squarely on your shoulders,” he says.

For now, however, they’re not being equipped to carry that burden. The community engagement training for police officers comprises only about 15 hours out of the 33-week course. Most of those are scheduled during the first two weeks, and some sessions continue to reinforce stereotypes.

On the third morning of their course, recruits hustle into class after a fitness test. The session, on multicultural communities and policing, begins with a discussion of the difference between migrants and refugees.

Then, a liaison officer who arrived in Australia as a refugee tells his harrowing story of state persecution in his former homeland and warns that he didn’t trust police here, as a result.

For the remaining time, the recruits respond to scenarios – they must contend with an Indian and an Afghani man who are fearful and angry towards them. One trainer warns the recruits that people who speak broken English might be faking it, to avoid fines.

In its submission to Victoria Police, the Law Institute of Victoria argued that the academy’s training should be much more sophisticated.

“People have a whole bunch of inbuilt biases, which are a way of coping with a complex world,” Tang says. “You need to critically examine them, particularly if you’re in a responsible position like being a police officer, and understand the assumptions that are driving you.”

American academic Lorie Fridell conducts “anti-bias” training through her organisation Fair and Impartial Policing. It trains recruits, as well as senior commanders in law-enforcement agencies across the US.

Fridell argues it’s misleading to characterise police as overtly racist. Social psychology research shows that discrimination is now more likely to be unconscious – but that doesn’t diminish the problem.

“In policing, implicit bias might lead the officer to automatically perceive crime in the making when she observes two young Hispanic males driving in an all-Caucasian neighbourhood,” she explains.

This kind of stereotyping happens everywhere. “The science tells us that even the best officers might practice biased policing because they are human.

“Agencies need to educate their personnel about how biases manifest and provide them with skills to reduce and manage them.”

That’s the sort of training advocated by the Law Institute. Tang says that without it, the community will lose faith in the force. “At the end of the day,” he says, “this is about community confidence in police.”

Policing the statistics

LAST year, The Age published a story quoting police statistics that Sudanese and Somali-born Victorians were about five times more likely to commit crimes than the wider community.

The statistics appeared to justify racial profiling of people from those communities, in order to cut crime rates.

Yet academics have consistently rejected a causal link between ethnicity and propensity to commit crimes, explains Associate Professor Steve James, a criminologist at University of Melbourne.

He says police statistics “tell us much more about how police behave than they do about the real rates of crime in the community”.

Some people and some crimes are more likely to be reported, policed and prosecuted, he says. Broad comparisons are fraught, too.

“The peak offending period is young men between about 16 and 24. If you’ve got a bulge of that demographic in your population stats, then you’re going to have more crime.”

James Lombe Simon was born in Sudan and lives in Footscray. At the People’s Hearing into Racism and Policing, he spoke about the criminalising effect of those statistics.

“How does somebody trust me enough to give me a job, knowing that I might be five times more likely to cause crime in their workplace? How will somebody let me rent their house?”

Victoria Police subsequently apologised for releasing the statistics, which were used in a briefing with community leaders. Chief Commissioner Ken Lay admits that it was “damaging” for the force’s public relations. “This wasn’t about trying to demonise,” he says. “This was about trying to say, ‘Well how can you get better at preventing these young people falling into a life of crime?’, which we were worried about.”

But Professor James argues that the numbers, which relate to alleged offenders, are unreliable. He says better evidence came from the Victoria Police LEAP database (which records officers’ interactions with people) during the racial discrimination case settled earlier this year.

Those records revealed that young African-Australian men in Flemington were two-and-a-half times more likely to be stopped and searched, even though they committed relatively fewer crimes than young men of other ethnic backgrounds. A statistician for the police accepted these findings.

 

Read this article and Policing the statistics at The Age online.

You can read Mohamad Tabbaa’s full submission at the People’s Hearing at Right Now.

A case of police oversight

In Social justice on September 4, 2013

“DO you believe the Footscray police has done their duty of care?” Getachew Seyoum asks. He is standing at the bar table, during the coronial inquest into the death of his son, Michael Atakelt, who was found dead in the Maribyrnong River in July 2011.

“I don’t think I could comment on that,” Acting Senior Sergeant Tatter-Rendlemann, from Williamstown police station, replies.

The exchange is translated into Tigrinya for the family and members of the Tigray community, of northern Ethiopia, who have been present throughout the inquest. But there it ends. He does not explain why he can’t comment. He just doesn’t, and no one asks again.

Tatter-Rendlemann is the detective investigating the case on behalf of the Coroner. His evidence is this: he has “absolutely no results or theories” about what happened from the time Atakelt was last seen until his body was recovered eleven days later.

The initial investigation was completed by Senior Constable Tim McKerracher, from Footscray police station, whose best guess was that Atakelt had entered the river several kilometres downstream from where the body was found.

But during the first stage of the inquest – in February 2013, more than a year and a half after Atakelt died – Sergeant George Dixon, from the water police, said it was not possible for a body to move such a distance upstream. McKerracher had not investigated any upstream clues, and he hadn’t spoken to Dixon, or to the search and rescue squad, who retrieved the body and who have since provided similar evidence.

And so, with nothing to go on, the Coroner suspended the hearing. He directed the police to reinvestigate with a different detective in charge.

Tatter-Rendlemann took over, but was assisted by McKerracher. On the Coroner’s instructions, they followed up evidence that had never been collected. They sought CCTV footage and security information from several locations, but it was two years too late. Wherever there was footage or other records, they had long since been deleted. The detectives put out a media release and distributed posters asking for witnesses. No one replied. They sought further interviews, but couldn’t track everyone down. Those they did find offered no new clues.

***

Almost from the moment Atakelt’s body was found, community members have repeatedly requested an independent investigation, and that Footscray police not be involved.

At a public meeting in December 2011, Assistant Commissioner Stephen Fontana defended the decision to assign the case to Footscray, explaining that it was standard practice for the local crime investigators to handle such a case, and he would not deviate from that practice.

But he assured his audience that not only was an experienced investigator in charge, but also that his work had been closely overseen by the Homicide Squad, and monitored by both the Ethical Standards Department and the Office of Police Integrity. It was, he promised, “a very thorough investigation”.

Detective Senior Sergeant Sol Solomon was also there that day. Solomon, from Homicide, took the microphone and offered his sympathy to the family and community for their loss. He continued: “I can assure you that the investigation has been thorough and totally dedicated to finding out exactly what happened to Michael and why he lost his life in the river. I’ve seen the quality of the investigation myself and it is first class and you can be assured that all possible leads have been explored.”

Subsequently, in an interview with me on 29 December 2011, Fontana reiterated his comments at the forum. He explained that by “oversight”, he meant: “actively monitoring all stages of the investigation”.

Did that supervision occur? Were all levels of police oversight satisfied that the investigation of this young man’s death was “first class”? If so, who will hold them to account?

***

In February, Victoria Police settled a long running racial discrimination claim brought by several young African-Australian men. The young men say police regularly stopped them around Flemington and North Melbourne for no legitimate reason, and assaulted and racially taunted them.

Victoria Police denies the allegations, but as part of the settlement, it agreed to hold public inquiries into its cross-cultural training and “field contacts” policy.

These inquiries are being conducted now. They are independent and open to public submissions. The final reports are due in December. Ken Lay, the Chief Commissioner of Victoria Police, has made several strong public statements about the importance of these inquiries and the need to stamp out examples of racism in the force. “We need to have the public’s trust and confidence in what we do,” he said, announcing the public submission process.

One document released from the racial discrimination case – statistical evidence based on police data – shows that young African-Australian men in the area were two-and-a-half times more likely to be stopped and searched, even though they committed relatively fewer crimes than young men of other ethnic backgrounds.

But, as Michael Atakelt’s case demonstrates, overpolicing is only one part of the problem. “The flipside of overpolicing is underprotection,” explains Associate Professor Steve James, a criminologist from University of Melbourne. “You target certain groups and you overpolice them, but you don’t provide for them the same rigor of victim services.

“Police can do just as much damage to community relations by simply underpolicing as they can by overpolicing.”

***

After a six-month pause, the inquest into Atakelt’s death resumed last Monday. The Coroners Court is on the eleventh floor of an ordinary office building on Exhibition Street. Each day, about three-dozen members of the Tigray community attended. The presiding coroner, Ian Gray, was careful to ensure that everything was translated into Tigrinya and, also, that Seyoum, who is representing himself, has been able to ask whatever questions he would like.

For most of the week, evidence centred on the failed attempts by Atakelt’s mother, Askalu Tella, to report her son missing. It took four separate visits and several phone calls over three days before a police officer lodged the report, by which time Tella – whose English is limited – had become very agitated.

In their evidence for the Coroner, all the police officers maintained they had made the correct decision: at that time, there was no reason for any concern or fear for Atakelt’s welfare – even when the report was finally lodged. The following day, however, he was found dead in the river.

For days, those police officers were questioned at great length about normal procedures and about their conversations with Tella. And so, for most of the week, Atakelt went missing from his own inquest.

He returned late on Friday afternoon, in the final piece of evidence before the hearing adjourned once more: the court was shown CCTV footage of his last known whereabouts.

At 7.07 pm on Sunday 26 June, 2011, Atakelt stepped off the train at Newmarket Station, in Flemington. On the screen, we watched him walking calmly among the crowd of exiting passengers, dressed in a dark jumper with a pale stripe across the chest. He slowed an instant as someone passed through the gates before him, and then, he too, exited the scene. We watched him leave the station as though he were an ordinary young man getting off a train.

The Coroner called a break. Afterwards, community members asked to watch the video again to verify its authenticity. People had noticed that the date and time had not appeared on-screen. How could they believe what they had seen?

Among Atakelt’s family and community members, the conduct of the investigation has produced a vast store of suspicion. And the curiosities continue. Detective McKerracher was overseas on holidays, unavailable to attend for the whole week.

Also missing were the senior police – Fontana, Solomon, and the responsible officers of the (then) Ethical Standards Department and Office of Police Integrity – who oversaw and vouched for the quality of the investigation.

At that public meeting in December 2011, Fontana said this: “We will ultimately be judged on the quality of this investigation by the Coroner and any of these oversight bodies. We’re very conscious of that and the members, in my view, have done a very thorough job.”

Given Ken Lay’s commitment elsewhere to establishing the trust of the community, he should be keenly interested in their explanations. But no one, not the Coroner, nor any of the parties – including the barrister representing the Chief of Police – has so far sought their evidence.

There are still three days remaining in the inquest, scheduled for late September. At the last moment, on a request from Seyoum, McKerracher has been listed as a witness. He may yet have to answer questions about the conduct of the investigation.

Read this article at the Overland Journal blog.

Read other articles I’ve written about this case (most recent first):

Police have no leads in delayed investigation

Changing a whole system : racialised policing in Melbourne

Coroner tells police to reinvestigate death

Watching a hearing

Between two oceans

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