A/HRC/36/46/Add.2
65.
The Special Rapporteur was informed that certain Aboriginal women’s
organizations are in favour of income management measures as they consider that these
have improved the safety of women and children as well as food security.
L.
Incarceration and the administration of justice
66.
The administration of justice and detention practices were raised as key concerns
during the country visit. The extraordinarily high rate of incarceration of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islanders, including women and children, is a major human rights concern.
While Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders make up only 3 per cent of the total
population, they constitute 27 per cent of the national prison population. More than half of
the children in detention are Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. In some detention
facilities, such as in the Northern Territory and in the Cleveland Youth Detention Centre in
Queensland, indigenous children constitute an astonishing 90 per cent of the detainees,
which prima facie raises concerns over racial discrimination in the administration of justice.
67.
The proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders continues to rise and is
expected to reach 50 per cent of the overall prison population by 2020. Despite the
comprehensive recommendations issued to address incarceration rates over 25 years ago in
the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody in 1991, the indigenous prison
population has on the contrary doubled during that period. The reasons for the
overrepresentation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in Australian prisons are
manifold. Imprisonment is the end result of years of dispossession, discrimination and
intergenerational trauma faced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. It is also caused
by the lack of political will to address the situation, despite that key measures for
improvement have been repeatedly identified by a string of national and state inquiries,
royal commissions, coroners’ reports and international human rights monitoring
mechanisms.
68.
Current laws and policies continue to contribute to the swift escalation in the
incarceration rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. Though not explicitly targeted
at those populations, their disproportionate impact is clear. For instance, paperless arrests
laws in the Northern Territory, which allow the police to detain a person for several hours if
they have committed or are suspected to have committed a minor offence, have led to a
dramatic increase in the number of indigenous persons in police custody. Bail laws and
policies have become more restrictive in most States and Territories and have led to a
significant increase in the number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders held on remand.
Longstanding calls for the abolishment of mandatory sentencing laws, notably in Western
Australia, continue to be ignored. The current inquiry by the Australian Law Reform
Commission into the Incarceration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples should
help identify laws that need to be amended to reduce such incarceration, and the
Government must act on those laws to impede this national crisis, which has devastating
effects on the indigenous community.
69.
Funding for legal services for Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders has been
reduced since 2015, which has had a significant impact on Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islanders, who have higher rates of unmet legal needs, owing inter alia to not speaking
English as their first language and having lower literacy skills. High-quality and culturally
competent legal assistance services are critical to ensure access to justice for Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islanders and to reduce imprisonment. The Special Rapporteur is pleased to
learn, that subsequent to her visit, federal funding cuts for Aboriginal and Torres Straits
Islander legal services were reversed in May 2017. A national mapping of unmet legal
needs has however yet to be undertaken, a step that is essential in order to overcome the
persistent disadvantage and to address effectively incarceration rates.
70.
Since the 1991 Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, there have
been over 340 deaths of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in detention. Certain deaths
have been caused by the negligence of the staff responsible for the care of the person in
custody. This was the case for Ms. Dhu, a 22-year-old indigenous woman who died within
48 hours of being taken into police custody in Western Australia in August 2014. She
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