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Skip to content. Aboriginal women from the remote Central Australian community of Ampilatwatja performing at a public ceremony in to protest against the Northern Territory intervention. Facebook is facing scathing criticism Down Under, after suspending multiple accounts for sharing the above photo of Aboriginal women performing a public ceremony. In a speech honoring International Women's Day, indigenous rights activist Celeste Liddle spoke about women of the central Australian Arrernte Aboriginal group, to which her family belongs, and their representation on the Internet. Shortly thereafter, her account was suspended. This is not the first time Celeste has found herself on the wrong side of Facebook's standards. On hearing this, I was outraged that Arrernte woman undertaking ceremony could ever be seen in this way so I posted the trailer up on my own page stating as such. Following the more recent suspension, Liddle launched a Change.
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It promises a new, global platform for cultural storytelling — a significant opportunity to know one another better than ever before. But major technology platforms are led by western capitalist ideals, and one major consequence of this is that not all stories are treated equally. She spoke about the challenges of her upbringing in Australia, as well as those that women in Aboriginal communities still face — among them, a white western-centric lens on feminism that does not account for international or multicultural voices.
Updated March 14, Facebook has suspended the profiles of people who shared an article about Aboriginal feminism, because it contains a photograph of two Indigenous women in traditional attire. Celeste Liddle, a feminist and freelance author, gave the keynote speech at the Queen Victoria Women's Centre's annual International Women's Day address, and a version of her speech was published by online publication New Matilda. When New Matilda published the speech, the outlet included a photograph of two women who were participating in a ceremony wearing traditional body paint and with bare chests. Ms Liddle's speech had mentioned a previous incident in which Facebook had suspended her for sharing an image of Aboriginal women dancing, who also had bare chests.