Australia adds $300 million in funding for Indigenous pledge

FILE - Prominent Australian Aborigine Lowitja O'Donoghue, left, and Prime Minister Kevin Rudd talk after Rudd delivered an official apology, at Parliament House in Canberra, Feb. 13, 2008, to its indigenous people for past treatment that "inflicted profound grief, suffering and loss." Fifteen years after the Australian Parliament’s historic apology to its Indigenous people for past wrongs, the government on Monday, Feb. 13, 2023 announced 424 million Australian dollars ($293 million) in new funding to improve the lives of Australia’s original inhabitants. (Gary Ramage/Pool Photo via AP, File)

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Fifteen years after the Australian Parliament’s historic apology to its Indigenous people for past wrongs, the government on Monday announced 424 million Australian dollars ($293 million) in new funding to improve the lives of Australia’s original inhabitants.

In 2008, a newly elected center-left Labor Party government apologized to the Indigenous population for "laws and policies of successive Parliaments and governments that have inflicted profound grief, suffering and loss on these our fellow Australians.”

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