Robbie Thorpe, Aboriginal law student, takes Australia to the World Court

"All non-Aboriginal Australians should be prepared to leave the country if the indigenous people want that, making restitution for the vile sin of genocide. If they stayed, they would have to provide whatever recompense indigenous peoples thought appropriate". Dr Peter Adam, Principal of Ridley College and Canon of St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne, Victoria
DOWNLOAD: Dr Peter Adam Lecture Notes (pdf)

David Langsam | www.activistrights.org.au | 1997

Pay the Rent campaign to the High Court

With native title negotiators sidelined in the latest government-supported farmer/mining company land grab, David Langsam reports on a legal challenge to Australian sovereignty.

Robbie Thorpe, a 39-year-old, first-year Melbourne University law student and a member of the Brabuwooloong clan, walked into the Melbourne registry of the High Court in 1997 and began the process of taking Australia to the World Court to decide who has the right to hear and decide cases involving sovereignty over the land known as the Commonwealth of Australia.

Mr Thorpe also obtained an inter partes summons to stop Prime Minister John Howard claiming that his 10-point plan on native title "does not breach international conventions or the Racial Discrimination Act". Mr Thorpe says that Mr Howard "acted in bad faith in his claims that Aboriginal rights will not be weakened in the present round of negotiations".

In a statement of claim served on the government, April 21, Mr Thorpe seeks High Court declarations on "the existence of the fiduciary obligation" by the Commonwealth (a duty of care for those in its charge) to the original peoples of Australia as a result of the "recently-admitted illegal invasion", "the commission of war crimes", "the general and continuing premeditated criminal genocide" of Aboriginal people and "the genocidal effect of the longstanding official lie of terra nullius".

It asks the High Court for a declaration requiring the Commonwealth to ask the United Nations General Assembly for an advisory opinion from the International Court of Justice on:

the rights and legal status of Aboriginal people including sovereignty;
the question of consent by the original peoples to the jurisdiction of the Commonwealth and the Constitution; and
in the absence of that consent whether customary law applies to and is binding upon the Commonwealth of Australia.
Mr Thorpe's claim quotes (then) Prime Minister Paul Keating's 1992 Redfern address acknowledging: "...it was we who did the dispossessing ... we committed the murders ... we took the children from their mothers".

Mr Thorpe said he has begun the legal action in response to Mr Howard's threats to effectively extinguish native title by upgrading pastoralists' rights.