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    Iratiwanti

    support the kungka tjuta's campaign against proposed nuclear waste dump on their country

     

    We are the Aboriginal women Yankunytjatjara, Antikarinya and Kokatha

    We are the Aboriginal women Yankunytjatjara, Antikarinya and Kokatha.
    We know the country.
    The poison the Government is talking about will poison the land.
    We say "NO radioactive dump in our ngura - in our country."
    Its strictly poison we don't want it.

     

    The nuclear industry in Australia is gearing to undergo a massive expansion. The Federal Government is now proposing a national radioactive waste dump in the central desert homelands of South Australia. The dump will open the door to high level waste and threaten country and culture for thousands of years.

    Actions and Campaignswhat can you ?

    • Write a letter of support to the Kungkas.
    • Organise a film screening of the Irati Wanti documentary.
    • Get the Kungka's Statement of Opposition translated and printed local press. Download it from www.iratiwanti.org.
    • Distribute Irati Wanti postcards and posters.
    • Put on an event, film screening, art exhibition (etc) as fundraiser for the Irati Wanti Campaign.
    • Organise a local support group for the Kungka's campaign.
    • Make a link from your website to www.iratiwanti.org
    • DONATE! Send a cheque or money order made out to Irati Wanti.

    Have a look at the wish list on www.iratiwanti.org - hunt it down and send it to Coober Pedy.

    Irati Wati protesters

    Hello,

    I am writing from Coober Pedy home of the Kupa Piti Kungka Tjuta - Senior Aboriginal Women of Coober Pedy and their campaign Irati Wanti, The Poison, Leave It! - against the proposed nuclear waste dump in S.A.

    I am not sure if you are familiar with the campaign already or not, but it has quite a high international profile, particularly after two of the Kungkas, Mrs Eileen Kampakuta Brown and Mrs Eileen Wani Wingfield were awarded the Goldman Prize last year for their efforts against the dump. (Mrs Brown also recieved an order of Australia for her work!)

    The Kungkas suffered the effects of the British Atomic Tests in the S.A desert in the 1950s and this horrific experience informs their steadfast opposition to the irati - the poison: uranium, and as such, the dump.

    With the dump licencing application under review and the Federal election looming things are at a crucial stage for Irati Wanti and we are in need of further support to stop this dump once and for all!

    For further information and campaign background please refer to www.iratiwanti.org

    Thanks,

    Alex Kelly

    Irati Wanti Campaign Office PO Box 1043
    Coober Pedy
    SA 5723
    p: 08 8672 3413
    email: kungkatjuta@iratiwanti.org
    www.iratiwanti.org

    www.iratiwati.orgTHE POISON - LEAVE IT

    We are the Aboriginal women Yankunytjatjara, Antikarinya and Kokatha. We know the country. The poison the Government is talking about will poison the land. We say "NO radioactive dump in our ngura - in our country." Its strictly poison we don't want it.

    We were born on the earth, not in the hospital. We were born in the sand. Mother never put us in the water and washed us when were born straight out. They dried us with the sand. Then they put us, newborn baby, fireside, no blankets, they put us in the warm sand. And after that, when the cord comes off, they put us through the smoke. We really know the land. From a baby we grow up on the land.

    Never mind our country is the desert, that's where we belong. And we love where we belong, the whole land. We know the stories for the land. The Seven Sisters travelled right across, in the beginning. They formed the land. Its very important Tjukur the Law, the Dreaming that must not be disturbed. The Seven Sisters are everywhere. We can give the evidence for what we say; we can show you the dance of the Seven Sisters.

    Listen to us! The desert lands are not as dry as you think! Can't the Government plainly see there is water here? Nothing can live without water. There's a big underground river underneath. We know the poison from the radioactive dump will go down under the ground and leak into the water. We drink from this water. Only the Government and people like that have tanks. The animals drink from this water malu kangaroo, kalaya emu, porcupine, ngintaka perentie, goanna and all the others. We eat these animals, that's our meat. We're worried that any of these animals will become poisoned and we'll become poisoned in our turn.

    Everywhere there is underground water. We know that. It doesn't matter what station you make the dump on or near. They've all got wells. The sheep and cattle have to drink from the bores. Of course they'll get poisoned in their turn. Can't the pastoralists see that plainly?

    The poison the Government is talking about is from Sydney. We say send it back to Sydney. We don't want it! Are they trying to kill us? We're a human being. We're not an animal. We're not a dog. In the old days the white man used to put a poison in the meat, throw them to feed the dogs and they got poisoned, straight out and then they died. Now they want to put the poison in the ground. We want our life.

    All of us were living when the Government used the country for the Bomb. Some were living at Twelve Mile, just out of Coober Pedy. The smoke was funny and everything looked hazy. Everybody got sick. Other people were at Mabel Creek and many people got sick. Some people were living at Wallatinna. Other people go moved away. Whitefellas and all got sick. When we were young, no woman got breast cancer or any other kind of cancer. Cancer was unheard of with men either. And no asthma, we were people without sickness.

    The Government thought they knew what they were doing then. Now, again they are coming along and telling us poor blackfellas "Oh, there's nothing that's going to happen, nothing is going to kill you." And that will still happen like that bomb over there.

    And we're worrying for our kids. We've got a lot of kids growing up on the country and still coming more, grandchildren and great grandchildren. They have to have their life.

    We've been fighting this radioactive waste, this poison, for more many years. Arguing about it, talking to people, asking people to help us. They might help us, but they'll really be helping themselves. Whitefellas have got kids too, we all have to live in the country.

    And then, we really couldn't believe it when we heard them talking about sending the rubbish from all other countries as well! They must really want to kill us! We can't believe it! How can you live like that? They're really aiming to wipe the country out, not just us but all living things in the whole earth!

    It's from our grandmothers and our grandfathers that we've learned about the land. This learning isn't written on paper as whitefellas knowledge is. We carry it instead in our heads and we're talking from our hearts, for the land. You fellas, whitefellas, put us in the back all the time, like we've got no language for the land. But we've got the story for the land.

    Listen to us!

    Actions and Campaignsnews

    • Australia looks for Pacific solution to nuclear waste problem
      14 July 2004 - AFP - Prime Minister John Howard proposed Wednesday sending Australia's low-level nuclear waste to an offshore island after being forced to abandon plans for a radioactive waste dump on a remote mainland site. The repository was to have been built on a sheep farm acquired for the purpose near Woomera in South Australia, but after years of wrangling with state authorities, Prime Minister John Howard said his government had dropped the plan.
    • Australian court upsets government plan for desert nuclear waste dump
      24 June 2004 - AFP - Australia's federal court on Thursday overturned the government's seizure of a remote outback sheep station where it wants to build the country's first nuclear waste dump. Prime Minister John Howard's administration immediately said it would challenge the ruling.
      Resistance stopped Australian nuclear dump - ENIAR
      Why Howard dumped the dump
    • Iratiwanti Campaign gains support (throughout the world)
      22 October, 2003 - The anti-nuclear waste dump campaign, launched by a group of senior women from Cooper Pedy in South Australia, is gaining support throughtout the world.
    • Tourism site is a blast
      9 October 2003 - Reuters - Aboriginal community leaders on Thursday presented their plans to federal officials to turn a remote Australian wilderness site once used by Britain for nuclear testing into a tourist attraction.
    • Aborigines outraged but miners say yes, put it in our backyard
      29 April 2003 - The Guardian (UK) - The Australian government is completing its examination of two outback sites, 25 miles apart, for its first nuclear waste repository. The news, released this week, has dismayed politicians, environmentalists and Aboriginal groups.
    • World award for elders fighting nuclear dumpmaralinga test site
      15 April 2003 - Two South Australian Aboriginal elders have won a prestigious international prize for their campaign against a proposed radioactive waste dump. Eileen Kampakuta Brown and Eileen Wani Wingfield will today be presented with the $US125,000 ($A207,097) 2003 Goldman Environmental Prize dubbed the Nobel Prize for the environment.
    • Running costs dispute stalls Maralinga return
      22 March 2003 - Three years after the Federal Government spent $108 million cleaning up the contaminated British atomic test site at Maralinga in South Australia, negotiations to hand the land back to its traditional owners have stalled
    • Few set out on road to ethics
      14 April 2001 - The Guardian (UK) - Despite activists' clamour, key pension funds have yet to move towards socially responsible investment. Tony Levene reports.


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