Cherbourg Elder Aunty Ada Simpson with author and historian Dr Jackie Huggins AM in Cherbourg in 2019 … Dr Huggins is co-chair of the new Treaty Advancement Committee

February 15, 2021

The two co-chairs and members of Queensland’s Treaty Advancement Committee have been announced.

Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said the committee would continue the momentum of the Path to Treaty process, develop options and provide independent advice on how to progress treaty-making.

“Queensland has achieved many great things but as part of that, we need to acknowledge the past,” the Premier said.

“Our story began more than 60,000 years ago with our First Nations Peoples. Path to Treaty is about acknowledging the past and plotting a way forward for a new future between First Nation’s peoples and all Queenslanders.”

The Treaty Advancement Committee members are:

  • Dr Jackie Huggins AM (co-chair) – Bidjara/Birri Gubba Juru woman, former Co-Chair of the National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples, and former co-hhair of the Path to Treaty Eminent Panel and Treaty Working Group
  • Mick Gooda (co-chair) – Ghungalu man, former Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner of the Australian Human Rights Commission, and former co-chair of the Treaty Working Group
  • Emeritus Professor Michael Lavarch AO, former Attorney-General for Australia and former co-chair of the Path to Treaty Eminent Panel
  •  Josephine Bourne – a Gumulgal woman, Torres Strait Islander and former member of the Path to Treaty Eminent Panel
  • Sallyanne Atkinson AO, former Lord Mayor of Brisbane, former Senior Trade Commissioner (Paris) and former Special Representative for Queensland in south-east Asia.

Dr Huggins said she was pleased to see the commitment of the government continue.

“We need to finish this business, to reconcile our past so we can as a State move forward together, all Queenslanders, in a fair and just way. I have strong hope and confidence in Queenslanders that we can do this, and that the time has come,” Dr Huggins said.

Mr Gooda said Treaty was a long and emotional journey.

“The Treaty Advancement Committee is independent from government in forming its advice and developing options to implement the Panel’s recommendations,” he said.

“It’s important to build the trust of the Queensland community and to show that we are acting to improve life in our great country for everyone.”

On August 13 last year, the State Government confirmed its commitment to progressing a Path to Treaty, and publicly released its response to the Eminent Panel and Treaty Working Group advice and recommendations.

The appointed Treaty Advancement Committee maintains a core of the Eminent Panel members, with four of the appointees having helped to lead the first step on the Path to Treaty.

The Treaty Advancement Committee is expected to report to government on options later this year.

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