The Guardian Australia

First Nations boy, 10, dies in apparent suicide while in state care in Western Australia

- Tory Shepherd

A 10-year-old First Nations boy has died in an apparent suicide in state care in Western Australia, advocates for the family say.

Advocates for the family say the boy, who cannot be named, took his own life on Friday night, leaving his family “devastated” and triggering a coronial inquiry.

Megan Krakouer, director of the National Suicide Prevention and Trauma Recovery Project, said the family had other children in state care and had been trying for months to have them brought home. They had been promised overnight stays and unsupervis­ed visits, but it didn’t happen.

She told ABC’s Radio National that the boy’s death was “a grave and inhumane fail”.

A department of communitie­s spokespers­on said the safety and wellbeing of children was always the department’s “highest priority”.

“The death of any child or young person is a tragedy, which has a devastatin­g impact on the families, friends and communitie­s involved,” the spokespers­on said.

“In keeping with its legal and ethical obligation­s, [the department of] communitie­s does not comment on individual cases, particular­ly where there is potential or evident risk of identifyin­g one or more children in care.

“Any death of a child in care automatica­lly triggers a Coronial Inquest and we support all matters of this nature being investigat­ed.”

WA police said the death was not being treated as suspicious and that a report would be prepared for the coroner.

Krakouer described the parents as a strong, kind and solid couple and blamed poverty for the children’s removal. While there had been drug and alcohol issues, they had passed every test in the past year, she said.

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She said the “state have failed in their responsibi­lity to care for this young 10-year-old boy”, whom she described as “beautiful” with an “angelic face”.

Krakouer called for more support for families, a public register of deaths and self harm, and for the immediate return of the other children.

“They want their children back. And not in a box,” she said.

Gerry Georgatos, a social justice and human rights campaigner, has been helping the family. He said they were “devastated” and that their year of clean tests was a “powerful protective factor”.

“They should have been reunified a lot earlier,” he said.

He echoed Krakouer, saying there was not enough support for families, and said children should not be taken from families if they were not then supported.

He added that he hoped the coronial inquest would happen faster than usual.

Indigenous Australian­s minister, Linda Burney, tweeted that the boy’s death was shocking and heartbreak­ing.

Deputy prime minister, Richard Marles, said it was “unspeakabl­y tragic”.

“And it certainly does speak to the fact that we have enormous challenges going forward in relation to closing the gap,” he told ABC Breakfast.

“But we are completely determined to do this and we will – you know, news of this kind only adds to redoubling our efforts to make sure that we do everything we can to make inroads in respect to the gap.”

In WA, there have been two inquiries into spates of suicides among Aboriginal people in the Kimberley. One investigat­ed 13 deaths of young people over a three-and-a-half year period and blamed intergener­ational trauma and poverty. Of the 13, the youngest was 10.

An earlier inquiry into the deaths of 22 Aboriginal people around Fitzroy Crossing in 2008 found most were alcohol and drug related, and that there was “no real leadership or coordinati­on in the response to the disaster of Aboriginal living conditions in the Kimberley on the part of either the state or commonweal­th government­s”.

• In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Children, young adults, parents and teachers can contact the Kids Helpline on 1800 55 1800. Help for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people is available on13YARN on 13 92 76.

 ?? Photograph: ncox1585/Getty Images ?? The central law courts building in Perth in Western Australia. The 10-year-old Indigenous boy’s death has triggered a coronial inquest.
Photograph: ncox1585/Getty Images The central law courts building in Perth in Western Australia. The 10-year-old Indigenous boy’s death has triggered a coronial inquest.

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