preview

Eddie Mabo Case And Their Role In The Case

Good Essays

Describe the individual of group that initiated the case and their role in the case. Provide background information about them.
Eddie Mabo’s ancestors lived for centuries on a group of three islands in the Torres Strait, near Cape York. The islands, known as the Murray Islands, were annexed by the Queensland Government in 1879 which meant they became a part of Australia

Queensland became responsible for their administration but despite this annexation, and the presence of European missionaries on the islands, the indigenous people permanently and continuously inhabited them – with very little change to their way of life as a result of the annexation. They continued to live in their settled communities; they maintained their traditional beliefs and customs; there was a clear way of passing on their garden plots of land, and ways of settling disputes about legal matters.

Mabo was a long-running case launched by the Meriam people of the Murray Islands to challenge the validity of state land laws and seek recognition of rights to land.
It involved the High Court considering the application of Australian law to the rights of Indigenous Australians, in particular regarding the legal concepts of terra nullius and native title
What was the event of right violation that led to legal action being taken?
In the late 1970s, the Queensland Government attempted to dispossess some of the local people in their own land. In 1982, Five members on the island of Mer decided to take the matters to court, one of these people was Eddie Mabo.

They claimed that their rights to the land had not been extinguished by the Crown when their islands were taken over or annexed by Queensland. They still had a legal right to the land based on the legal concept of ‘native title’ – right of ownership based on traditional ownership of the land. The Queensland Government’s response was to pass the Coast Islands Declaratory Act, 1985. They claimed that: All rights to the land went to the Crown on the 1879 annexation – that native title had been extinguished, and that no compensation for loss of land would be due to the Meriam people.

From 1985 and 1992, Eddie Mabo and other residents of the Murray Islands in far north Queensland took action

Get Access