With tears in his eyes Bill Heffernan rose to his feet in the Senate last night told his fellow Senators and the Australia public that:
I went to Yuendumu and discovered within 20 minutes of being there who was running the drugs at the school. I went to Mount Theo, which is the removal camp for the petrol sniffers and, within an hour, I discovered that one of the key managers there was having s-x with all the kids. When I came back to Canberra, I rang the policeman at Yuendumu and said that I had been there for a day, told him what was going on in the town, and described all of these dreadful bloody things that were going on there. I said, “What are you going to do about it?” He said, “I just want to get out of here, Senator.” He was not interested.
Heffernan’s comments are a shocking account of a community whose youth have lost their way and a government-funded program that is fundamentally flawed and corrupted by s-xual predation. All Australians would be appalled.
But despite the implication in his speech to the Senate that he’d been in Yuendumu in September 2006, Heffernan was last here in 2001 — six years ago. He flew into Yuendumu early in the morning with the then Indigenous Affairs Minister, Philip Ruddock and drove out to Mt Theo, a small outstation community 160 km to the north-west.
They spent the day there, talked to the people running the petrol-sniffing rehabilitation programs and returned to Yuendumu, where they had a barbecue with locals. They flew out early the next day.
Bill Heffernan knows a fair bit about the program at MT Theo. In June 2006, at the tabling of the Beyond Petrol Sniffing: Renewing Hope for Indigenous Communities report he publicly congratulated Mt Theo staff on their hard work and the success of the program. He repeated his praise in a private meeting later that day. At no time did he mention the serious allegations he raised last night in the Senate.
Otto Jungarrayi Sims is a long-standing committee member of the Mt Theo Program and travelled to Mt Theo with Heffernan and Ruddock in 2001. He remembers that day well.
Crikey spoke to Jungarrayi at the Mt Theo office in Yuendumu earlier today,
“Both Bill Heffernan and Philip Ruddock had nothing but good things to say the program at Mt Theo. After his visit Philip Ruddock gave us money so that we could replace the sheds at Mt Theo with proper facilities,” he said.
“I can’t understand why Bill Heffernan would say these bad things about Mt Theo and Yuendumu when he knows they are not true. Bill has been very supportive of Mt Theo in the past,” Jungarrayi told Crikey.
“If he knew of these things six years ago he should have spoken to me or the other people here and we would have investigated them and talked to the Police. But nothing. He didn’t say anything to me about these things when he was here.”
“It is really hurtful to me and our community when people like Bill Heffernan tell lies about us like this. This is the wrong story and Bill Heffernan should tell the right story. He owes all the people at Mt Theo and here at Yuendumu an apology,” says Jungarrayi.
Heffernan also owes an apology to the Senate.
Tomorrow is a big day in Yuendumu. The founders of the Mt Theo program, Peggy Nampijinpa Brown, Johnny Japangardi Miller and Andrew Stojanovski will be presented with the country’s highest honour in recognition of their years of hard work at Mt Theo. The Administrator of the Northern Territory will present each of them with an Order of Australia medal.
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