Skip to content
Indigenous, Political

Education union condemns shameful NT government decision to scrap Treaty process

Independent Education Union - Queensland and Northern Territory (IEU-QNT) 2 mins read

The union representing teachers and support staff in Queensland and Northern Territory non-government schools has condemned the Northern Territory government’s decision to axe plans to negotiate a Treaty with First Nations Peoples.

It comes as the most recent Commonwealth Closing the Gap Annual Report (2024) indicates only five of 19 key Closing the Gap targets are on track to be met.

Independent Education Union – Queensland and Northern Territory (IEU-QNT) Branch Secretary Terry Burke said the decision undid seven years of meaningful progress and undermined considerable reconciliation efforts.

“The decision is shameful but unsurprising and characteristic of a government not fully committed to reconciliation,” Mr Burke said.

“Seven years of hard work and considerable funding were invested into this Treaty process, which has now devastatingly been scrapped.

“Alarming disparities continue to exist in our country between First Nations Peoples and non-First Nations people.

“Once again, First Nations Peoples are having the rug ripped out from under them,” Mr Burke said.

The decision is at odds with the recommendations in a report published last year by the Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC), which called on governments to recognise the devastating impacts of systemic racism on First Nations Peoples and take urgent action to address it.

The AHRC report noted truth-telling, education about historical impacts and a commitment to self-determination is critical to dismantling racism against First Nations Australians.

Mr Burke said the forced cancellation of the Northern Territory’s Treaty process would prevent better outcomes of First Nations Peoples and erode efforts to close the gap.

“We urge the NT government to reconsider its decision and do the right thing by reestablishing the Treaty process,” he said.

ENDS


About us:

The Independent Education Union – Queensland and Northern Territory (IEU-QNT) represents more than 17,000 teachers, school support staff, principals, early childhood education and VET and RTO employees across Queensland and the Northern Territory. www.ieuqnt.org.au


Contact details:

Contact: Emily Campbell, IEU-QNT Communications Officer- [email protected] / 0400746175

 

More from this category

  • Finance Investment, Political
  • 17/12/2025
  • 17:13
Super Members Council

Low- and middle-income Australians with super should not foot the bill for compensation scheme cost blowout

The Super Members Council (SMC) is urging the Government to rethink its decision to push the bill for compensation scheme cost blowouts onto Australians with super, with data in the Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO) released today showing super tax receipts at forecast highs. Super tax receipts are expected to increase by $10.9 billion over the forward estimates from 2025-26 compared to the estimates in March’s Budget, a 10% increase on the already-high levels estimated in the last update. Despite that, the Government is asking poorer Australians, already feeling squeezed by cost-of-living pressures, to help plug a hole in…

  • Contains:
  • Political
  • 17/12/2025
  • 15:45
Family First Party

How Australian Islam proved it is not a religion of peace

Statement by Family First National Director Lyle Shelton We need to face the fact that Islam in Australia is not a religion of peace.…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Political
  • 16/12/2025
  • 15:53
Make Big Polluters Pay

Treasurer must levy big coal and gas corporations to fund climate disasters Make Big Polluters Pay

Climate disasters are projected to cost the federal budget $6.3 billion in the upcoming mid-year economic forecast this week. The Treasurer should follow public opinion and ensure coal and gas corporations responsible for most climate pollution pay for these costs, rather than forcing ordinary taxpayers to shoulder the burden, according to the Make Big Polluters Pay alliance. Climate disasters already cost the economy $38 billion each year, with households, communities, local governments and small businesses paying to recover from extreme weather. These impacts are also driving up insurance premiums, food prices and household bills. Deloitte projects disaster costs will exceed…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.