Here we Joh again? The spectre of Bjelke-Petersen still looms large over Queensland
The Guardian World ·

A sign stopped Aunty Sandra King in her tracks. The elder of the Yagara, Quandamooka and Bundjalung people, now in her 70s, spoke at a protest last month against plans to build an Olympic stadium in …
A sign stopped Aunty Sandra King in her tracks. The elder of the Yagara, Quandamooka and Bundjalung people, now in her 70s, spoke at a protest last month against plans to build an Olympic stadium in the heart of Brisbane’s Victoria Park. In the crowd a man held aloft a homemade placard with the words “I Preferred Joh”. In Queensland , regressive government decisions are often compared to the repressive decades led by the “hillbilly dictator”, the former premier Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen. For those who lived through those years, like Aunty Sandra, such comparisons are never made lightly. “At first I got a bit shocked by seeing [the sign],” she told the rally. But she says the LNP’s unapologetic moves to remove Indigenous people and programs from government are a throwback to the sorts of days many thought had come and gone. “That is going back to Joh Bjelke-Petersen, who we did not like,” she says. “Who was just against us. “No, Joh was not better, I can say. None of them, no Liberal party’s better for us.” This month the prominent Indigenous barrister Joshua Creamer told ABC Radio he had heard the government’s quiet purge of First Nations people, policies and programs described by a public servant as “project invisibility”. This has included the defunding of programs like Murri Watch – which provides services to Indigenous children in watch houses – as well as plans to contest all native title claims . …
Original source: The Guardian World