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And on the other side of the coin, there is a question of whether the existence of Indigenous-only computing facilities actually violate the Racial Discrimination Act. Mary Kelly is QUT's director of equity and is one of the people being sued by Prior:
A university student accused of racial discrimination over a Facebook post has amassed a hefty legal bill, which could blow out to $200,000 if the case goes to trial.
Alex Wood is being sued under the Racial Discrimination Act over a 2013 post he wrote after being asked to leave a Queensland University of Technology computer lab reserved for the use of indigenous students.
"Just got kicked out of the unsigned Indigenous computer room. QUT is stopping segregation with segregation," he posted on a Facebook page called QUT Stalker Space.
The post attracted comments critical of both the incident and the existence of the indigenous-only space.
"I wonder where the white supremacist lab is," wrote another student, Jackson Powell, who is also being sued.
The third student involved in the lawsuit, Calum Thwaites, has emphatically denied being responsible for a post that included a reference to "ITT N---s" and has produced a volume of evidence supporting his denial.
The trio are being sued, alongside the university and two staff, by the administration officer who asked Mr Wood to leave the room, Cindy Prior.
An indigenous woman, Ms Prior went on sick leave following the incident and reports she felt unsafe leaving her home because she was afraid somebody would say something offensive to her.
She also says she was unable to return to work in a role that required her to have face-to-face contact with white people.
Ms Prior is seeking hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages.
Lawyers for the students have sought to have the case dismissed in the Federal Court, citing a lack of legal basis to contend their clients had breached the act and labelling the lawsuit an abuse of process.
Judge Michael Jarrett has reserved his decision.
It is understood the trio's lawyers have spent several hundred hours defending the action.
A legal source told AAP the costs of defending the proceeding would have already run into tens of thousands of dollars for Mr Wood and could rise to around $200,000 if the case went to trial.
The cumulative bill for the students to defend the case at trial could be more than $500,000.
The trio have also hit out at QUT, claiming they were kept in the dark about Ms Prior's complaint to the Human Rights Commission and, therefore, deprived of having the matter thrown out earlier.
Under the Racial Discrimination Act, complainants must go through a conciliation process before a Federal Court action can be launched and the Human Rights Commission says more than half of all section 18C cases have been resolved at that level.
But the students were not made aware of the complaint until days before a final conference with the commission, despite the matter having been underway for 12 months, and Mr Wood claims a QUT lawyer told him he did not need to attend.
QUT's law firm, Minter Ellison, admits one of its solicitors told Mr Wood his presence was not required but denies she discouraged him from attending.
And on the other side of the coin, there is a question of whether the existence of Indigenous-only computing facilities actually violate the Racial Discrimination Act. Mary Kelly is QUT's director of equity and is one of the people being sued by Prior:
An “annihilation’’ of Aborigines roughly 200 years ago helped to justify an indigenous-only computer lab today, according to a top university executive in a Federal Court racial vilification row embroiling three students.
The Queensland University of Technology’s director of equity, Mary Kelly, has slammed as “nonsense’’ any suggestion that QUT entrenched racial segregation by barring non-indigenous students from its Oodgeroo Unit.
Ms Kelly’s newly sworn affi**davit is a key piece of evidence in a case in which the Racial Discrim*in*ation Act’s section 18C is being invoked by the Oodgeroo Unit’s Cindy Prior, who is seeking $250,0000 in damages from students over their Facebook posts.
After turning students away from the computer lab because they were not indigenous, Ms Prior alleges she has been hurt, humiliated, severely injured and unable to work for more than three years as a result of the Facebook posts.
The students deny racial hatred* and say they were exercising their right to free speech. The university rejects claims that the Oodgeroo Unit, a “culturally safe space’’, encourages racial division.
“These facilities are provided on a limited basis to those who have a particular need for the *support,’’ said Ms Kelly in the affidavit inspected by The Weekend Australian.
“I would not expect to see a male or non-breastfeeding woman in the private room set aside for breastfeeding, unless by invitation, and nor would I expect to see non-religious students in the prayer room.
“For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, there is a particular and specific historical dimension arising from the colonisation of Australia without a treaty, resulting in the differential and negative treatment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders since that time.
“Aspects of the differential and negative treatment include the dispossession of indigenous people from their land, policies or practices of annihilation and assimil*ation, the forced relocation of groups, the forced removal of children from their families and the use of indigenous labour without payment or proper payment.
“Thus, having a culturally safe space for indigenous students … is considered to be an important eleme*nt.”
Ms Kelly did not believe she had said to Ms Prior that it was “very clear they were not racist’’, in reference to the students and their Facebook posts, because “this does not reflect the view I felt at the time, nor my views now’’.
“At no time during the meeting did I disparage Ms Prior’s fears (of the return of an organised group of white students who could be viol*ent),’’ she said. “Rather, I was attempting to convey my genuinely held belief that there was no evidence of an organised white supremac*ist group on campus.
“I was trying to comfort Ms Prior in this regard.”
Ms Kelly’s affidavit confirms it is “well within the rights of the (Oodgeroo) Unit to ensure the faciliti*es are only used by indigenous students”, but adds that “it is nonsense” to suggest this is a race-based form of segregation.
“Indigenous students are not required to utilise only the Oodgeroo Unit facilities and nor is the unit intended to provide a complete university experience. In my view, the unit does not create ‘segregation’ on the basis of race any more than chaplaincy services separate faith-based students from non-religious students.”
The affidavits filed by Ms Kelly and the unit’s director, professor Anita Lee Hong, show how QUT called on a wide range of professional resources and expert help to try to resolve the concerns of Ms Prior that a “Ku Klux Klan-style’’ bloc of white students was ranged against her.
They also disclose that Ms Prior, an administration officer, had been moved from a previous role in the university because of her complaints of bullying.
The students, who are being accused under section 18C, told the Federal Circuit Court they replied* with innocuous Facebook posts after being abruptly turned away by Ms Prior from a comput*er lab they did not know was off-limits to whites.
Judge Michael Jarrett, who has been hearing the matter, intends to rule on the students’ arguments that they have no case to answer, not constitutionality questions about the legitimacy of 18C as a barrier to free speech.
A compulsory mediation is set down for next week.
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