Its Trigger speaking. Trigger, more formally Jimmy Daddie Tapau, is a 60-year-old Torres Strait Islander. He has been fishing off Murray Island for most of his life. He knows every reef and every channel. Where and when to find crayfish, giant clams and fish in these abundant waters.
Murray Islanders got formal legal recognition of their ownership of the land in the High Court judgment in the Mabo case, but without security over the sea, from whence comes their traditional livelihood, the land rights will not be complete.
When the Leader of the Opposition, Dr John Hewson, arrives on the island tomorrow, he will be told this by the chairman of the Murray Island Community Council, Ron Day.
The Mabo case has sent waves of expectation over Aboriginal and Islander communities around Australia. It has caused obvious concern among mining and pastoral interests and tourist operators who want to continue to have access to national parks.
On Murray Island, or Mer as the indigenous people prefer to call it, however, the issue has moved from the land to the sea.
The Mabo case declared and secured what they saw was their land anyway. The sea is another vital question. The islanders are concerned that large commercial fleets will take their sea produce.
The other linked issue is economic development.
“”The professionalism and self-esteem of islanders has been destroyed by the dole cheque,” Day said. “”People here are born fishermen. We have to re-create that professionalism and responsibility. Those responsible for destroying it had a responsibility to help re-create it.”
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