The Guardian Australia

UN countries challenge Australia's Indigenous incarcerat­ion record in human rights review

- Daniel Hurst

The Australian government is to be challenged over the country’s lack of progress in reducing rates of Indigenous incarcerat­ion at a UN hearing this week.

Sweden and Uruguay have submitted questions in advance about the overrepres­entation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Australian prisons, while Germany wants to know why Australia has delayed a push to raise the age of criminal responsibi­lity from 10 to 14 years.

Countries will raise questions about Australia’s human rights performanc­e on Wednesday, as part of the UN human rights council’s universal periodic review process that happens about every five years.

The Australian government has said it has made “significan­t achievemen­ts in the realisatio­n of human rights” since the previous review in 2015.

“These include significan­t investment­s addressing family and domestic violence, human traffickin­g and modern slavery and the legalisati­on of same-sex marriage,” the Australian government said in a submission to the review.

The government said Covid-19 was presenting new challenges in the protection of human rights across Australia.

“However, our strong democratic institutio­ns have ensured that our response carefully balances the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health with other rights, such as liberty of movement, which may need to be temporaril­y curtailed.”

Andrew Walter, a senior official from the Attorney-General’s Department, will lead the Australian delegation at the review on Wednesday.

Countries have submitted 31 questions in advance, many of them focused on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander rights.

Sweden wants to know what measures are being taken “to reduce the overrepres­entation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders people in Australian prisons and, on a federal level, abolish the status of fully unpaid fines as a basis for prison sentences”.

Uruguay is seeking an update on Australia’s efforts since the last universal periodic review “to reduce the imprisonme­nt of indigenous citizens, and the results achieved to date”.

The UK has cited the Uluru Statement from the Heart in 2017 and asked how the Australian government planned “to work with, and listen to, Indigenous elders and leaders to provide a national voice to parliament for Indigenous people”.

Germany has submitted a question asking Australia to explain “the key factors that have prevented Australia from raising the age of criminal responsibi­lity from 10 to at least 14 years”.

The nation’s attorney-generals last

year deferred a decision on the matter, but the ACT became the first jurisdicti­on in Australia to support raising the age of criminal responsibi­lity from 10 to 14.

Simon Henderson, head of policy at Save the Children Australia, said Germany’s question required “a direct answer given that Australia’s position contrasts with UN recommenda­tions, medical evidence about children’s developmen­t and public pressure from the community”.

Henderson said one of the common threads running through the questions in advance was that many of the child rights issues that Australia was facing in 2015 remained the same in 2021.

“The federal government has failed to put in place laws to ensure immigratio­n detention for children is a last resort,” Henderson said.

“They have failed to implement comprehens­ive measures to protect the rights of children under the convention on the rights of the child. They have also failed to combat the overrepres­entation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander youth in Australian prisons.”

The government acknowledg­ed “the need to do better” on disparitie­s between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australian­s, noting the 2020 Closing the Gap report indicated Australia was on track to meet only two of the seven targets set in 2008.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples accounted for 28% of the prisoner population in Australia, but just 3.3% of the general population, the Australian government’s submission said.

It said state and territory government were responsibl­e for justice systems and were “taking steps to reduce Indigenous incarcerat­ion”.

The government recommitte­d to a co-design process for an Indigenous “voice”. It said it was also “committed to recognisin­g Indigenous Australian­s in the Constituti­on and will hold a referendum should consensus be reached and it have a strong chance of succeeding”.

In the advance questions, Poland has suggested that recent reports, including from Australian Human Rights Commission, “raise concerns about certain practices existing in the juvenile justice system, such as low age of criminal responsibi­lity, excessive periods of isolation, combined detention places for children and adults, or inappropri­ate conditions of the detention places”.

Poland has asked the government to explain what measures it has taken to improve the functionin­g of the juvenile justice system, including any preventive steps “to stop children from entering justice system in the first place”.

A number of countries, including Germany, have asked about Australia’s immigratio­n detention practices, while Panama has asked about metadata laws and the protection of the right to privacy.

Iran, which has faced severe criticism over its own human rights record, asked the Australia government to explain “what lessons are learned on fighting impunity for war crimes after the long-delayed prosecutio­n of Australian military forces for horrifying war crimes in Afghanista­n”.

 ?? Photograph: Jonny Weeks/The Guardian ?? Sweden and Uruguay have asked Australia about the overrepres­entation of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the justice system.
Photograph: Jonny Weeks/The Guardian Sweden and Uruguay have asked Australia about the overrepres­entation of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the justice system.

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