
Aboriginal organisations and Gunnai, Gunditjmara and Djab Wurrung independent Victorian Senator Lidia Thorpe are calling on the federal government to suspend federal funds for policing and prisons in the Northern Territory until the Country Liberal Party (CLP) government reduces the incarceration of First Peoples and children.
Thorpe and the North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency, the Northern and Central Land Councils, Justice Not Jails and the National Network of Formerly Incarcerated Women say Laborβs commitment of $205 million to the NT police must be suspended. They say any funding must come with conditions, or be cut. The federal government gave $205 million to the NT Police in March, dressed up as βClosing the Gapβ money.
While the who have died in custody since the 1991 Royal Commission surpassed 600 on July 29, the NT government is busy passing draconian laws that remove detention as a last resort and even reintroduce spit hoods. The laws will mean more Black children will be incarcerated.
New figures show the NT prison population has surged to 2842 people β up by more than 600 sinceΒ the CLP took office in August last year. Almost 90% are Aboriginal and nearly half are being held on remand.
The that almost 400 First Nations children have been held in NT Police watch houses over a six-month period, where there have been nearly 20 incidents of self-harm involving children.
Thorpe said the βextremist NT CLP governmentβ is pushing through a tranche of laws this weekΒ that will harm children. βThese kinds of laws directly contribute to more deaths in custody. If the Northern Territory government wonβt listen to the experts and communities, then the Commonwealth must act.β
She said Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and minister for Indigenous Australians Malarndirri McCarthy must βtake strong actionβ against hundreds of children being locked in brutal watch houses and where kids are self harming. βThis is torture, not justice.β
Thorpe said the CLP government is refusing to meet with Aboriginal leaders, but it must. βThe federal government β¦ can withhold funding, and they can legislate minimum standards in line with our international human rights obligations. So far, they have not used these powers, and theyβve been contributing to the problem.β
βYou canβt βClose the gapβ by locking our kids in cages. The NT government is violating the rights of children every day, and the federal government is funding it. That has to stop.β