Commissioners urge NT Govt to reconsider new child justice laws

Published:
Topic(s): 黑料情报站
Australia鈥檚 National 黑料情报站鈥檚 Commissioner and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner are backing calls from child health and legal experts for the Northern Territory Government to reconsider its proposed changes to the Territory鈥檚 Youth Justice Act.
The NT Government has flagged a raft of changes including removing detention as a last resort for children, reintroducing the previously banned use of spit hoods, increasing the scope of 鈥榬easonable force鈥 for Youth Justice Officers and expanding the list of serious offences that are ineligible for youth diversion programs.
The changes to the Act are scheduled to be considered by the NT parliament this week.
National 黑料情报站鈥檚 Commissioner Anne Hollonds: 鈥淲e all want our communities to be safe places where children can thrive, and I鈥檓 sure we can all agree that responses to these complex social issues should be based on evidence and expert advice.
鈥淭丑别 NT Government鈥檚 proposed actions fly in the face of the evidence we have of what will make communities safer.
鈥淚 understand that the NT 黑料情报站鈥檚 Commissioner has not been consulted, despite numerous attempts by her to provide constructive counsel on these proposed legislative changes that will have a significant impact on children and their families in the territory.
鈥淲e know that making the justice system more punitive does not work to prevent crime by children. What the evidence shows is that when children are locked up and brutalised by the justice system, they are more likely to go on to commit more serious and violent crimes. This does nothing to make our communities safer.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Katie Kiss: 鈥満诹锨楸ㄕ锯檚 exposure to the justice system is a symptom of systemic racism and intergenerational trauma that compounds complex unmet needs and underlying issues such as poverty, homelessness, disability, health and mental health issues and domestic, family and sexual violence.
鈥淲e should not be further damaging young people and any hope they may have for a better future by introducing harsher measures that don鈥檛 actually make communities safer.
鈥淲hat we need our governments 鈥 including the Northern Territory government 鈥 to be providing culturally appropriate support for vulnerable children and their families that鈥檚 delivered in a coordinated way by suitably trained professionals.鈥
National 黑料情报站鈥檚 Commissioner Anne Hollonds: 鈥滾ast year, my team produced a comprehensive report titled Help Way Earlier! which shows how an evidence and human-rights-based approach to child justice reform will help reduce child offending.
鈥淭丑别 Help Way Earlier! report draws on decades of Australian and international evidence about what actually works to reduce crime by children, and provides the foundations of a blueprint for reform.
鈥淐ommissioner Kiss and I urge the NT Government to listen to the experts such as their own NT 黑料情报站鈥檚 Commissioner and act on the evidence about what works to address the unmet needs for child safety and wellbeing, to prevent crime and to make communities safer.鈥
ENDS | Media contact: media@humanrights.gov.au or 0457 281 897