Annastacia Palaszczuk, the leader of Queensland state, has expressed her willingness to travel to the UK to retrieve artefacts belonging to local Indigenous communities’ ancestors. Her comments followed the passing of a law in Queensland to establish a Truth-telling inquiry, investigating the continuing impacts of colonisation on Indigenous communities. The Path to Treaty Bill will lead to treaty negotiations between the state and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. The government will also establish a First Nations Cultural Centre in Cairns. A committee of five will conduct the Truth-telling inquiry, investigating the true history of Queensland, publishing reports on findings and preparing Indigenous communities for treaty negotiations. Warren Mundine, an Indigenous leader, has expressed concerns that the Truth-telling process will sideline or censor those who oppose the officially endorsed narrative on colonialism. The bill received broad support, with Katter’s Australian Party being the only party not to back it. However, the Greens criticised the bill’s introduction in the same week as harsh bail laws for children, and Katter’s Australia Party called for equality and not division.