A/HRC/36/46/Add.2
51.
Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services have achieved remarkable
success in delivering culturally appropriate services for primary health care. However, the
Special Rapporteur was informed by multiple stakeholders during her visit about
inequalities in the resources available for rural and remote service delivery and of cuts to
community managed primary health care, which play an essential role, for example in the
prevention of chronic diseases.
52.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders also told the Special Rapporteur about their
feelings of powerlessness, loss of culture and lack of control over their lives. Suicide rates
among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are escalating at a shocking rate and are
double that of non-Indigenous Australians. The current situation was described to the
Special Rapporteur as a suicide epidemic. While visiting the Kimberley region in Western
Australia, she learned about youth-developed and -driven projects to prevent suicide among
Aboriginal adolescents. She strongly urges that such initiatives be supported and replicated.
Adopting a holistic approach to social and emotional well-being that recognizes the need
for cultural connection is essential to achieve sustainable improvement in health indicators.
53.
Aboriginal-led health research capacity has been established and should be drawn
upon to inform policies. Strengthened financial and political support for Aboriginal- and
Torres Strait Islander-led expertise, professional development and research is crucial in
order to close the gap in relation to key health inequalities faced by indigenous peoples. In
order for such measures to be sustainable, longer-term funding agreements are necessary.
I.
Access to education
54.
In the area of education, large gaps remain, notably between children living in urban
versus remote areas. Despite the adoption of the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Education Strategy, there had been no real change in school attendance rates
between 2014 and 2016. The Special Rapporteur was informed that Aboriginal community
involvement in early childhood, primary and secondary education has declined over the
past decade, particularly in the formulation and delivery of programmes, and that
centralized decision-making without appropriate cultural awareness has led to poor policies
and practices in Aboriginal education.
55.
It is essential to increase parents’ and community engagement with schools, for
example, by introducing Aboriginal parents’ groups in schools or community-controlled
school boards. A trauma-informed approach to education should identify the barriers to
attendance and help parents and families to improve it. The current application of financial
penalties should be discontinued as they further disadvantage children who already live in
poverty, and who are likely to be exposed to overcrowded and poor housing, family
violence, chronic illnesses and food insecurity. Unless such action is taken, Aboriginal
children, especially in remote areas, are set up to fail.
56.
Regrettably, Aboriginal languages are seen as a barrier to education rather than an
asset, and bilingual education programmes have been wound back in remote communities.
The lack of secondary school provision in remote communities forces parents to send
children to secondary boarding schools, far away from family, community and their
country.
J.
Unemployment and housing shortage
57.
Equal opportunity of employment is critical to overcoming disadvantage. Efforts to
reach the “Closing the Gap” target of halving the gap in employment between indigenous
and non-indigenous Australians within a decade (by 2018) have been unsuccessful and
rather indicate negative trends. The national unemployment rate for Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander people is 20.8 per cent, compared with the national average of approximately
5-6 per cent.
58.
In 2015, the Government introduced the Community Development Programme in
remote areas. Among the jobseekers enrolled in the Programme, 83 per cent identify as
10