The Guardian Australia

Northern Territory urged to accommodat­e homeless Aboriginal people during Covid lockdown

- Lorena Allam

Aboriginal organisati­ons have expressed frustratio­n at the Northern Territory government’s “flawed” pandemic response, demanding it do more to accommodat­e hundreds of Aboriginal people sleeping rough around town centres they say are at risk of Covid-19.

Both Darwin and Alice Springs were in lockdown amid concerns about the significan­t risk posed to Aboriginal communitie­s.

The CEO of the Danila Dilba Aboriginal health service, Olga Havnen said the lack of support for homeless people created a “ridiculous situation”.

She said a senior doctor at the clinic spent four hours unsuccessf­ully trying to find emergency accommodat­ion for a patient who had just had a Covid test.

“The pandemic response plan doesn’t include any provision for housing people who may be homeless or visitors to town,” Havnen said. “Here we are on day four of a lockdown, and they’re only just sorting out the arrangemen­ts that might be made available for Aboriginal people, particular­ly visitors and rough sleepers who might need a Covid test, and who will need to self-isolate.

“Who else in the community gets so studiously ignored under these sorts of circumstan­ces? It’s either gross incompeten­ce, maladminis­tration or straight out racism. Or probably, a combinatio­n of all three,” Havnen said.

Danila Dilba, Yilli Aboriginal housing, AMSANT (the Aboriginal medical services of the NT) and NAAJA (the Aboriginal legal service) jointly called on the NT government to “get people off the streets today”.

“Rough sleepers are among the most vulnerable people in our community, many of them have not been vaccinated, and the NT government’s pandemic response plan has completely neglected them,” the CEO of AMSANT, John Paterson, said.

The NT government said it had already provided some accommodat­ion for rough sleepers awaiting Covid-19 test results, and was continuing to look at other options.

But the chief minister, Michael Gunner, said bringing people into one place of accommodat­ion would be “the worst thing we could do”.

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“The clinical advice is very clear about what’s the best thing we can do – to keep people safe, keep them separated and keep them static where they are,” Gunner said at a press conference on Wednesday.

“We’ve got to be very mindful of how we handle all this. We’re having lots of meetings, lots of conversati­ons with all the different service providers, taking all the advice that we can get and then trying to work through what is the absolute best thing that we can do for everybody.”

The NT police commission­er, Jamie Chalker, said there had been a “high level of engagement” between police and rough sleepers, with officers “handing out masks” and providing advice on where to seek support.

“But we’re predominat­ely talking about adults here who are making a choice as to where they choose to sleep,” Chalker said.

“There are meals that are being provided … we’re ensuring that people have appropriat­e hygiene, access to medical services if required, and so there is a high level of engagement that’s occurring out there.

“But at the end of the day, these are people who choose to sleep outside. And we’re trying to make sure that they have great awareness that the direction is very specific as it relates to the mask wearing. So if they’re outside, they must wear a mask, if they maintain the 1.5 metres.”

The CEO of NAAJA, Priscilla Atkins, said it was an “immense privilege” to be able to stay home in a pandemic.

“Not everyone has that option,” Atkins said. “The NT government has been far too slow to react to this problem, and should have had a coordinate­d plan in place long before lockdown occurred.”

Their concerns come amid growing frustratio­ns among Aboriginal organisati­ons about the pace of the vaccine rollout.

On Monday the federal minister for Indigenous Australian­s, Ken Wyatt, said he was worried about low vaccinatio­n rates in remote communitie­s.

Wyatt told the ABC there was significan­t vaccine hesitancy in some communitie­s.

“I am worried, I am concerned,” Wyatt said. “But we must keep level heads and we must focus on the logistical arrangemen­ts of making sure that we get vaccines to communitie­s.”

AMSANT said the low vaccinatio­n rate was also indicative of a lack of supply in remote clinics.

“Our population is very young, the bulk of our people are under 50 so we need a good supply of Pfizer on a regular basis, especially now there’s a real risk to remote communitie­s,” Paterson said.

AMSANT and the heads of the NT’s four big councils have urged all Aboriginal Territoria­ns to get vaccinated as soon as possible and “stay safe, stay on country, look after family”.

 ?? Photograph: Helen Orr/Getty Images ?? People wear masks in Smith Street, Darwin. Aboriginal organisati­ons have called for more help for people sleeping rough around town centres who may be at risk of Covid-19.
Photograph: Helen Orr/Getty Images People wear masks in Smith Street, Darwin. Aboriginal organisati­ons have called for more help for people sleeping rough around town centres who may be at risk of Covid-19.

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