‘This town is a symbol of government failure’ Aaron Langmaid
Herald Sun
April 04, 2015 FORMER AFL star Richard Tambling has urged Australians to wake up to the Third World crisis gripping indigenous settlements across the nation.
The 28-year-old, drafted to Richmond in 2004, has returned to the town camp where he grew up to highlight the plight of residents plagued by poverty and appalling services and infrastructure.
Tambling said the area, just 20km from Darwin, was a symbol of the failure of governments to close the gap for indigenous Australians.
More than a decade after he left, the footballer says nothing has changed at the Palmerston indigenous village, known locally as “15 Mile”.
Up to 20 people are crammed into each ramshackle “chicken coop’’, building frames with no doors or windows. Electricity is intermittent. The community hall is riddled with asbestos.
Rubbish is as strewn and scattered here as the litany of political excuses to clean up the place.
Not one new dwelling has been built in more than a decade, despite rigorous assurances from governments at every level.
“The majority of Australians wouldn’t be aware of just how bad it is,” Tambling said.
“All they see is the government handouts to indigenous communities but they don’t understand the disadvantages here. There is still an enormous gap in the services — but also in understanding.’’
The footballer, who played six seasons at Punt Rd before a trade to Adelaide in 2010, grew up at 15 Mile with his grandmother who, terminally ill, still lives there.
He can still remember pinning tarps up to block out the belting rain. During the wet season, snakes and scorpions would scuttle across the floor where he slept. Drug and alcohol abuse was rampant.
Looking across the destitute land is bittersweet for Tambling.
He hates what goes on here, yet he is often drawn back.
“Throughout my career, I always came back just to spend time with my grandmother and family,” he said.
“I’ve offered to take her with me but she won’t leave. She is connected to the community, to this land. We just have to put things in place so her needs are met. I worry that may never happen.’’
Read more: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/this-town-is-a-symbol-of-government-failure/story-fni0fiyv-1227290474345