World

Australia removes monument to renowned British explorer James Cook

An often vandalised monument to renowned British explorer James Cook in Melbourne, Australia, will not be repaired due to the growing cost of doing so, however, authorities reject accusations that the vandals have won.

Statues and monuments to the 18th-century naval officer are frequently targeted by opponents of Britain’s settlement of the country without a treaty with its Indigenous people.

In 1770, then Lt. Cook charted the Australian east coast, laying the groundwork for the establishment of Sydney as the first British colony on the continent.

The granite and bronze monument to the master navigator and cartographer in an inner-city Melbourne park was vandalised days after the anniversary of the first British settlers’ arrival at Sydney Cove was commemorated on January 26. Opponents of Australia Day celebrations denounce the public holiday as “Invasion Day.” There are growing calls for the country to find a less divisive national day.

The monument in Melbourne’s Edinburgh Gardens was snapped at its base and spray-painted with the words “cook the colony.”

Mayor Stephen Jolly, head of the Yarra City Council, which is a municipality near the heart of Melbourne, said his fellow councillors had voted unanimously on Tuesday night against spending 15,000 Australian dollars ($9,700) on repairing the monument, which remains in storage.

Jolly said the decision to permanently remove the monument, which included an image of Cook’s face cast in bronze, was about economics rather than taking a position in Australia’s culture wars.

“It‘s about being economically rational. It’s AU$15,000 a pop every time we have to repair it and it’s persistently getting either demolished or vandalised or tagged,” Jolly told the ABC.

“It’s just a waste of ratepayers’ money. We can’t afford to do that,” Jolly added.

But Victoria state’s Melbourne-based conservative opposition leader Brad Battin condemned removing such memorials as surrendering to vandals.

“We need to stand strong and remember the fact that this is part of our history,” Battin told reporters.

“If you start to remove the history of our state and our country because of activists, then you’re actually giving in to those that are campaigning against it,” Battin added.

Jolly disagreed that his council had given the vandals what they wanted.

“No, I think they would’ve loved for us to put it back up and then they could’ve just tagged it again or destroyed it again and just had this ongoing sort of little war going on in Edinburgh Gardens,” Jolly said.

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  • Source of information and images “independent”

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