Mercury (Hobart)

200 kids strip searched

200 minors suffered ‘state-sanctioned physical abuse’

- CHANEL KINNIBURGH Crime Reporter

MORE than 200 minors were strip searched in adult prisons last year, it has been revealed.

And nine of them were not even yet teenagers, according to Right to Informatio­n document released on the Department of Justice website.

Custodial officers searched 135 minors at the Hobart Re- ception Prison and 83 at the Launceston Reception Prison.

Indigenous juveniles accounted for 27.5 per cent of children strip searched.

Lawyers and community groups have again called for an end to the “manhandlin­g of children” in custody.

LAWYERS and indigenous representa­tives have again called for an end to the “manhandlin­g of children” in custody after it was revealed 218 minors were strip searched last year.

Three children aged 11 were the youngest among the hundreds of minors subject to strip searches in adult prisons during the 2018 calendar year, according to a Right to Informatio­n document released by the Justice Department.

Tasmania Prison Service custodial officers searched 135 minors at the Hobart Reception Prison and 83 at the Launceston Reception Prison.

Indigenous juveniles accounted for 27.5 per cent of children strip searched, a figure Aboriginal Land Council of Tasmania chairman Michael Mansell described as “shocking”.

“Strip searches should be banned in this day and age,” he said. “Unless a very good reason is provided by police, there will continue to be a feeling that we are being targeted and discrimina­ted against for no real reason.”

The records do not include strip searches conducted by Tasmania Police or the Ashley Youth Detention Centre.

The alarming statistics come after the Mercury last month revealed an 11-year-old boy with “reportedly poor behaviour” was strip searched and locked in a cell at the Hobart Remand Centre after being fake-arrested by an off-duty police officer on January 14.

Barrister Greg Barns, who is the Prisoners Legal Service chairman and a criminal justice spokesman for the Australian Lawyers Alliance, labelled strip searches “state-sanctioned physical abuse”.

“It’s barbaric and yet another example of the fact that Tasmania is at the bottom of the ladder when it comes to human rights,” Mr Barns said. “There is no need for manhandlin­g of children in the 21st century.”

The Justice Department last night confirmed it was currently reviewing its procedures regarding strip searches and “balancing the security and self-harm risks with the dignity and wellbeing of minors”.

“The review is ongoing and any changes will be adopted as soon as practicabl­e,” a spokeswoma­n said.

The Directors Standing Order includes provisions requiring strip searches be conducted by a person of the same gender as the detainee and ensure a detainee is never completely naked. chanel.kinniburgh@news.com.au

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