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Legislative Council
 
RACIAL AND RELIGIOUS TOLERANCE BILL

14 June 2001
Second Reading
COOTE

 


  Hon. ANDREA COOTE (Monash) -- I have much pleasure in  speaking on  the Racial
and Religious Tolerance Bill and in supporting it. Some members of this  chamber
have  been  subject  to  vilification  and  others  have  not.  I have been very
fortunate in not having been subject to racial or religious  vilification.  I do
not have the temerity to begin to understand how that would affect people.

However,  listening  to  the speeches in this chamber and reading those made  in
another place,  I have been very moved by the courage many members of Parliament
have  shown  in  the courageous  way  they have  spoken  about  the vilification
addressed to them  and to members of  their  families. It says a  lot  about the
Victorian government and Parliament, and all  of  us,  that  we  can  share such
thoughts and speak about them in such a public place.
However, for those who are vilified there is something we should all understand.
In  its submission on the bill, the Australia Israel and Jewish Affairs  Council
put it very concisely:
Incidents of racially motivated hatred  and  violence  humiliate,  denigrate and
destroy the quality of life for those Australians who are its victims.

That is a very salutary point  to  understand  and something that all honourable
members should consider in debating the bill, and indeed when we go out into the
wider community.
The Liberal Party has approached the bill with dignity and an enormous amount of
understanding. The shadow  minister in the other place, Helen Shardey,  has done
an excellent job in consulting around the state and, with the  Honourable  Carlo
Furletti  and  the  honourable  member  for  Bulleen in  the  other  place, Nick
Kotsiras, has listened to a number of multicultural groups and  others  who  had
grave concerns about the proposed legislation, particularly the model bill which
was first presented for public discussion and which caused a great deal of angst
and concern amongst members of both the multicultural and wider communities.
I  am proud to be a Liberal. Liberal values are  enshrined in freedom of speech,
the freedom to make up one's own mind and to have a look at a number of issues.

I believe the debate we  had in our party room was healthy and constructive  and
underlined the very fundamentals of  what the Liberal Party stands for. This was
reflected in the very amenable way  in  which  our  leader,  Dr  Denis Napthine,
allowed  Liberal  members to have a free vote on this issue, which  encapsulates
Liberal philosophies.
The  bill and its clauses have been dealt with in  great detail by my colleague,
the Honourable Carlo Furletti. I  commend him on his presentation because it was
very thorough and  set  a high standard for the rest  of  the  debate. I want to
mention  four  clauses, as I  am particularly pleased  with  the Liberal Party's
approach to these provisions.
Clauses 7 and 8  now  provide  that  vilification, both racial and religious, is
unlawful but not criminal. This conduct will be  dealt  with  through  the civil
process.

I remind the  house that clauses 24 and 25 make  it a criminal offence to commit
serious racial and religious vilification. That aspect will be dealt with by the
courts and  will  attract criminal sanctions.  I  commend the  Honourable  Carlo
Furletti and the honourable member for Caulfield in  the  other  place  on their
approach to those clauses.  I will not go into the detail of  the bill clause by
clause because I believe that has already been dealt with.
I would like to speak about freedom of speech. It is  a fundamental right in our
community. Many members have spoken about the need for freedom of speech and 


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how well regarded Australia, and Victoria in particular, are throughout the world for this most treasured of opportunities. I would like also to quote from a submission that all members probably received from Liberty Victoria. It is a letter dated 23 May and signed by Chris Maxwell, the president of Liberty Victoria. He says: First, there are competing rights and freedoms to be considered. As the bill now acknowledges, the right to freedom from discrimination and personal attack must be balanced against the right of free expression. Freedom of expression is a precious freedom. It must be jealously guarded. Of course freedom of expression is not absolute, but it is vital to the health of our democratic society and must not be curtailed except where absolutely necessary. I think everybody in this chamber would believe in those fundamentals, and I agree totally with what Liberty Victoria had to say. Parliamentarians in this chamber and the other place have been flooded with emails, faxes, phone calls and letters about this bill, and not all of them have been positive. Although I do not want to give credibility to a number of the letters members have received, I want to quote from a couple because I feel that it will give balance to what this debate is about. This shows the sort of pressures members were subjected to. I have one email dated 9 June. I am not sure where this person comes from because members have had many requests and have been lobbied by people from as far as way as Toowoomba as well as places in Western Australia and Tasmania. These people say they will be interested to see how we vote on this bill because it will affect their vote. I have many constituents in Monash Province, but I do not think any of them live in Toowoomba. The email is addressed to 'Senators' which I thought was quite interesting. This is indicative of some of the mail members have received. It says: Imagine if this bill goes through and you or a member of your family or friends were accused under this act, would you be able to look yourself in the eye each morning in your bathroom mirror? I have a lot of difficulty doing that anyway so I do not think I will worry about what he has to say. I have another letter that is a more disturbing. I will read it into the record; it comes from the Citizens Electoral Council of Australia, and states: There is not an Australian in the lot of you to let this fascism get passed. Don't you know your history of how Hitler was put in power just 69 years ago? To vote for that legislation you would be traitors to Australia and to Australians. I find that fairly heavy, and it is important to include it in Hansard so we understand what some people in our community are thinking. Hon. Andrew Brideson -- It is offensive. Hon. C. A. Furletti -- Despicable. Hon. ANDREA COOTE -- It is very offensive and very despicable and I am most concerned about it. My electorate is an interesting one. It contains a number of multicultural groups, but by far the majority of my province is in the lower house electorate of Caulfield, where we have probably the largest Jewish community in Australia and certainly the largest number of Holocaust survivors outside Israel. I am very proud to be speaking on their behalf. They have lobbied me significantly and I have a lot of understanding and sympathy for the feelings they have expressed. Many people have spoken about this bill as a Jewish bill. I take umbrage at that because I believe it is a multicultural bill. It is not just about the Jewish community, although it is seriously concerned about this issue. As other members have said, it is a multicultural bill that affects the many people who constitute the population of Victoria. I know my Jewish constituents best, so I will concentrate on some of the issues of concern to them. I would like to reinforce that this is not a Jewish bill. I will quote from a letter from the presbytery of Benalla dated 20 February. It says: There is no public demand for such legislation. It seems only the Jewish B'nai B'rith movement wants it, as they do around the world. I apologise to the house because the author of this next piece does not seem to have signed the letter, but it is headed 'Jewish community leaders in US, UK and Israel rebel against ADC'. It goes on to say: Its Australian branch, the ... (ADC), has helped to destroy the trade union movement. Today not the unions but ADC runs the Australian Labor Party, the working man's party no more. I am sure the Labor Party would be very interested to hear that. The letter continues: ADC is the sponsor of a spate of un-Australian legislation erasing freedom of speech and Australia's identity. Democracy is easily manipulated by secret societies through control of education, media and party backrooms. Why do liberalism and humanism eventually turn into terror and totalitarianism? Because he who does not stand up for something will fall for anything! This is the calibre of information we have been flooded with. Some of the correspondence I have just read out is among the milder examples.
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As I said before, I dispute the assertion that this is just a Jewish bill: it is a multicultural bill. However, as I suggested, I know the Jewish community best of all. In looking into this bill and the reasons we need it I have been quite horrified to realise the depth of some of the vilification that is happening within my electorate. These are not things that happened 10 years ago, five years ago or even two years ago -- they are things happening within my electorate right now. While I do not want to give credence and credibility to the vile and hateful sorts of letters people receive, I want to put them on the record because I think it is important to balance this debate and understand some of these issues. I will quote from the Australia/Israel and Jewish Affairs Council's submission on the Racial and Religious Tolerance Bill dated 25 May. I want also to mention a letter; I will not read it all because, quite frankly, it is too disturbing to read. The letter begins, 'Dear Thea,' and is written in someone's personal handwriting. This letter is being sent to people who have had a bereavement and put a death notice in the Jewish News. If my husband were to die and I placed a bereavement notice I would get one of these letters. In this instance it says 'Dear Thea'; in my instance it would say 'Dear Andrea'. It is written in a handwriting that looks as if it may be familiar. I will use Thea because it is easier. The letter starts: Dear Thea, I don't know if you remember me. It is a couple of years ago since we briefly met. More about that later. ... I am terribly sorry to hear about your bereavement ... It then goes on to say in the vilest, most ghastly and racist language that they are not sorry that Thea had a bereavement, they are sorry that Hitler did not wipe out the Jews completely. It is an appalling letter. I have to say that it was sent very recently. As I said, this is not something that happened 10, 5 or 2 years ago -- it is happening in my electorate now. I believe the bill will help address these issues. A pamphlet from the Hitler-Australia Alliance Group was handed out to synagogues in my electorate -- a flyer handed out to people as they were going to their place of worship. It is appalling that this is happening now in Victoria and Australia, which have a truly multicultural community. Again I indicate that I am referring to these documents not because I believe in them but to provide balance to the debate and to put into the record some of the views of different groups, so that we can understand what is happening in the community, a community that is just 15 kilometres from here. The flyer states: Hitler was right It is about time that we as proud Australians put a stop once and for all to the influx of outsiders into our society. We've had enough of our country being overrun by ring-ins, the large numbers of chinks wogs and Jews are of great concern to us. That is the tenor of the information in the flyer. I have a number of examples of such incidents that have occurred in my electorate, and I will read one or two of those examples. There were three incidents in October last year when Jewish people returning from a synagogue were pelted with eggs. That is unacceptable behaviour in our community, yet it happened in East Kilda and Caulfield. We should all be ashamed. Glass panes on the front door of a Jewish community organisation were smashed by a person or persons unknown using a brick or a rock. There are many similar examples. These things did not happen 10 or 15 years ago, but just six month ago. I hope people will have more security when going to the synagogue, going about their daily lives, and living a peaceful and respectful life, as do the rest of us in the community. An article in the Herald Sun of 12 June demonstrates what has been happening in my electorate in recent months. The article by Michael Harvey states: A far-right group accused of anti-Semitism has made Melbourne's Jewish community the target of a new propaganda blitz. The Citizens Electoral Council has provoked outrage by dropping its newsletter to thousands of homes in Caulfield, Elsternwick and St Kilda. A resident yesterday described the campaign as 'grotesque'. ... Elsternwick resident, Andrew Hockley, who received the newsletter, said he wasn't Jewish but had been offended by 'virulently anti-semitic' CEC material before. This is totally unacceptable. If we are to stop this and live in a community that never has to evoke a bill such as the one being debated today, it is incumbent on all of us to ensure future generations are taught to be tolerant, understanding and supportive of all of those who are different. If I am critical of the bill it is because it does not go far enough to ensure there is a proper place for education, understanding, adequate funding and a proper strategy that will ensure we have tolerance in the future. I was pleased to read from a Herald Sun article dated 28 February that the Premier has promised a $850 000 grassroots campaign to promote community harmony. That is a start, but significantly more funds should be allocated, and it should be more formalised rather than just a grant. I call on the government to
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promote and develop a strategy for the education and promotion of tolerance within Victoria. In summary, I refer to a number of articles that sum up what I believe. I refer to an article in the Age of 9 March written by the Reverend David Powy, an Anglican minister, which states: Victorians have many reasons to be wary of broad laws prohibiting religious vilification. People should be protected from discrimination and vilification regarding race and other fixed attributes. And they should certainly be protected from discrimination and vilification regarding religion, and other matters over which they have no choice. David Powy then goes on to state something that I believe: The trick is to build that protection without removing the capacity for the freedom of choice. It is a salient lesson for all of us to take out of the debate today. I refer also to an article in the Herald Sun of 28 February, which refers to a submission by the Jewish B'nai B'rith anti-defamation commission. I place on the record my admiration for B'nai B'rith, whom I have worked closely with, and for Kerry Kleinberg and Danny Ben Moshe. The article states: ... anti-defamation commission said in its submission that Victorian needed protection from several racist groups active here. 'We do not expect racism to cease with the passing of such legislation', it said. 'But we believe that it would ... be a hindrance to those who sow division and hatred. Finally I quote from a speech many of us heard when we attended the memorable commemorative meeting of the Parliament of Australia at the Royal Exhibition Building. It was the speech that many of us believed touched us most, and it was from a young Asian girl, Hayley Eves, who stated, in part: I'm proud to be part of a multicultural Australia. I was born in South Korea and am part of a very multicultural family. I'm happy that many of them could be here with me today. Whether you are born here or overseas it does not take long for you to become part of Australia, to feel that you belong. I know this hasn't always been the case and I know we have to keep working on tolerance and understanding between us all. ... In representing the voice of the future I hope to leave you with a sense of how we, young Australia, view our nation, of how we view our future. ... I am young. I am a woman and I am an Asian Australian. That I am standing here in front of you demonstrates clearly that we have changed. I believe we have a long, happy future to look forward to and in the words of Hayley Eves, 'We have a country to be proud of'. I have much pleasure in supporting the bill. Hon.