World

No delay for Indigenous Voice referendum, says Australian PM

In a recent speech at the Garma Festival in the Northern Territory (NT), Albanese said there was no guarantee of success for the referendum, but rejected calls to put it off, Xinhua news agency reported.

IANS

CANBERRA: Australian Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese, Indigenous Voice , Parliament , Garma Festival, Northern Territory

The referendum will ask Australians to vote yes or no on altering the nation's constitution to establish the voice, which would advise federal politicians on all matters relating to Indigenous Australians, and formally recognize Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Peoples of Australia.

In order to be successful, more than 50 per cent of Australian voters as well as a majority in at least four out of six states must vote yes in a referendum.

"Today I can promise all of you - and all Australians - there will be no delaying or deferring this referendum," Albanese told Australia's largest Indigenous cultural gathering on Saturday.

"In the months ahead, just as we will continue to make it clear what voting Yes will achieve. Australians should be equally clear about what voting No means: it is more of the same. Not only rejecting the opportunity to do better but accepting that what we have is somehow good enough."

He listed some examples of the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people to show the urgency, including high suicide rate and shocking disease rate.

The statement comes despite support for the "yes" campaign trending downwards in recent months according to some polls.

Three Bills to tweak women's quota law, set up delimitation panel introduced in Lok Sabha

DMK burns copy of delimitation bill, raises black flags across State

AIADMK, TVK lock horns with three-time winner TN CM in Kolathur

CM Stalin burns copy of delimitation Bill, DMK calls for statewide protest

Toddler flung out in crash: why child car seats can save lives; here’s everything you need to know