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'Unleashed a tsunami of racism.' Indigenous leaders' open letter to Australians.

Indigenous 'yes' campaign leaders have broken their silence over the October 14 referendum, describing the result as "shameful".

An unsigned, open letter released on Sunday said that after a week of silence, they were speaking out to respond to the majority of Australians who voted against the proposal to enshrine an Indigenous voice in the constitution.

"In refusing our peoples' right to be heard on matters that affect us, Australia chose to make itself less liberal and less democratic," the statement read. "It is clear no reform of the constitution that includes our peoples will ever succeed. This is the bitter lesson from 14 October."

Watch: Indigenous Australians minister Linda Burney held back tears as she stood and conceded recent months had been 'tough' on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. Post continues after video.

The latest count from the October 14 referendum shows the national 'no' vote at 60.69 per cent and 'yes' at 39.31 per cent. Every state turned down the proposal, with the ACT the only jurisdiction to back the 'yes' case. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has acknowledged the disappointment of 'yes' campaigners but said Australia's choice must be respected. "We respect the outcomes in our democracy and I have done that," he told reporters in Perth on Friday.

Sunday's statement, which did not name its specific authors, said there was nothing positive to be taken from the referendum result. Post-referendum commentary absolving 'no' voters was expected, it said, in the usual kind of post-election approval or praise of the electorate. "The truth is that the majority of Australians have committed a shameful act whether knowingly or not, and there is nothing positive to be interpreted from it," it said. There was little that could be done after the federal opposition announced it was opposing the voice, the letter stated. "The support for the referendum collapsed from the moment Liberal and National Party leaders, Mr Dutton and Mr Littleproud, chose to oppose the Voice to Parliament proposal after more than a decade of bipartisan support."

The statement described the level of misinformation surrounding the campaign and lead-up to the vote as "unprecedented", saying it had "unleashed a tsunami of racism".

"We know that the mainstream media failed our people, favouring 'a false sense of balance' over facts," said the letter, which also criticised organisations for "lies in political advertising and communication".

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On Saturday, three Northern Territory land councils said the result of the referendum could not be separated from a "deep-seated racism". "It is fair to say that not everyone who voted 'no' is racist but also fair to say that all racists voted 'no'," said the Northern Land Council, Tiwi Land Council and Anindilyakwa Land Council. "The vitriol and hatred that were part of the campaign existed prior to, but were given licence through the process."

Feature Image: Getty.

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Top Comments

balibeli a year ago 4 upvotes
Whilst the government should have provided alot more information in relation to the implications of a successful yes vote, the information was still easily available online. And many people sat on their hands saying, "but the government aren't telling us anything!" It is just as easy to find this info online as it is to search for that cheap gorgeous dress as it is to search for info on the Voice. There was a huge amount of frustrating apathy.
snorks a year ago
@balibeli I've red it all. Can you point out where they said how it would help anyone? I'm genuinely asking because I haven't found anything. 

yeahyepyes a year ago 4 upvotes
It shocks me that these land councils seem to have learnt nothing and are still insisting that voting no was racist. Their comment "It is fair to say that not everyone who voted 'no' is racist but also fair to say that all racists voted 'no'," is really just a weasely way of calling all no voters racist without calling them racist. They will win no support from this.
laura__palmer a year ago 5 upvotes
@yeahyepyes It's true though. And I for one applaud them for not just bowing down.
mustlovebooks a year ago 3 upvotes
@yeahyepyes why would racists vote yes? I think the land council has interpreted results correctly. Why do no campaigners publicly blame yes voters/campaigners for the result of the referendum? Can no voters start to say how they would improve the lives of indigenous Aussies, rather than same as usual? 
snorks a year ago
@mustlovebooks yes voters are blamed because they never explained how this was supposed to help anyone. 
Why do yes voters say no voters are racist just because they disagree with the proposal?
zaky a year ago 2 upvotes
@snorks and how the No vote, aka as business as usual, is going to help the indigenous people.  Most of the No private messages I got were in the tune that it is a communist plot that "they" will take our land/backyard/business and that "they" are getting far too much money now.  Ignorance arising out of indifference and, yes, racism.