Activists rally as Commonweath Games begins
April 4, 2018Around a hundred indigenous protesters blocked a road outside the stadium hosting the Commonwealth Games as the opening ceremony got underway in Australia on Wednesday evening.
Flanked by a heavy police presence, the protesters waved black, red and yellow Aboriginal flags and chanted "No Justice, No Games."
Australian Associated Press reported that three demonstrators were arrested by police as they tried to enter the stadium without tickets.
Read more: New rehab law targets Australia's Aborigines
'Colonial whitewash'
The protesters have labeled the event "The Stolenwealth Games" in reference to the injustices suffered by the Aboriginal community.
"I'm here to tell the rest of the Commonwealth that the Aboriginal nations of Australia have not ceded their sovereignty," one protest leader blasted through a megaphone.
Brief scuffles later broke out between protesters and police, with activists vowing to target the Games every day until it ends on April 15.
Relay interrupted
Ahead of the opening ceremony, the protesters blocked the route of the Queen's Baton Relay as it was in progress in the suburb of Southport, causing the run to be halted for about an hour.
Aboriginal peoples inhabited Australia at least 50,000 years before Britain's "First Fleet" sailed into Sydney harbor in 1788 and declared the land unoccupied.
Aboriginal communties make up about three percent of Australia's population of 25 million but they remain the most disadvantaged, with higher rates of poverty, ill-health and imprisonment than any other community.
Activists say that despite former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's national apology in 2008 to Australia's Aboriginal people for past injustices, progress has been slow on the timetable he set for ending indigenous disadvantage.
Read more: Olympics: Australia names first indigenous Winter Olympian
Opened by Prince Charles
Later in the evening, Prince Charles, who opened the 21st Commonwealth Games on behalf of his mother Queen Elizabeth II, said "sport can be a great force for good which can help create harmony between communities."
The opening ceremony featured symbolic tributes to Australia's indigenous people, including a traditional welcome by a local indigenous elder and a smoking ceremony near the end. It also highlighted imagery, scenes and sounds of the ancient culture.
Read more: Indigenous Australians fight coal and climate change
Some 6,600 athletes from 71 nations and territories — all of them former British colonies that now make up the Commonwealth of Nations — are taking part in 18 sports (seven para-sports) for a chance to pick up a total of 275 gold medals.
mm/jm (AFP, AP, Reuters)