E/CN.4/1997/71
page 20
48.
It has been also alleged that “the way the criminal justice and penal
systems function makes Aborigines particularly vulnerable to cruel, inhuman
and degrading treatment. The high rate of Aboriginal death in custody is also
due to the dramatically disproportionate representation of Aboriginal people
in detention”.
49.
Alleged ill-treatment by police officers has been reported. Police
continue to intimidate and harass relatives who do not accept official
explanations about deaths in custody and instead have called for further
investigations.
50.
Furthermore, it has been reported that some prisoners have been kept in
leg-irons, handcuffs and chains for up to 24 hours a day and over a period of
several days.
51.
In one case, an Aboriginal man was assaulted by four police officers and
sustained head injuries from the use of batons. More than 26 months after an
initial complaint had been lodged, the Director of Public Prosecutions found
that there was evidence on which one of the officers should have been charged
with assault occasioning bodily harm. However, for technical legal reasons,
the officer could no longer be charged.
52.
No reply has been received from the Government of Australia.
2.
Communication dated 18 December 1996
53.
The Special Rapporteur has been informed of the surge in racism, racial
discrimination and xenophobia in Australia towards Aborigines, Australians of
Asian origin and foreigners, and in particular of the Hanson syndrome or
phenomenon. 26
3.
Special Rapporteur's observations
54.
The Special Rapporteur hopes that the Government of Australia will
respond to his initial communication and provide him with the necessary
information on the later one so that he can plan, if appropriate, for a field
mission in 1997.
C.
1.
Austria
Communication dated 26 May 1995
55.
It has been reported that “on 5 November 1994, in the city of Bludenz, a
predawn arson attack was set on a Turkish-owned building which was to be
converted into a mosque after its renovation. The building was heavily
damaged, but there were no injuries. It has been alleged that the arson
attack had racist motivations.”
56.
It has been reported that “on 5 February 1995, in the city of Oberwart,
a pipe-bomb concealed in a placard reading 'Gypsies go back to India'
killed 4 people living in the Gypsy settlement, where a total of 117 people
live in 19 box homes. The bomb had been designed to explode at chest-height
when anybody touched the placard, whose message had been inscribed in the