Townsville Bulletin

Calls for end to jailing of children

-

LEGAL services are calling for the age of criminal responsibi­lity to be raised from 10 to 14 across Australia, saying the vicious cycle of incarcerat­ion among the nation’s most vulnerable must end.

Children as young as 10 are being arrested, charged and detained, but experts say doing so is setting them up for a lifetime in the justice system with almost no way out.

A working group set up by the Council of Attorneys-general and tasked with reviewing the law is expected to discuss if it can reach a national agreement to raise the age when it meets next month.

Advocacy groups and legal services are urging it to lift the age of criminal responsibi­lity to 14, in line with the median global age.

Change the Record is an Aboriginal-led organisati­on fighting to end mass incarcerat­ion of First Nations people.

Executive officer Sophie Trevitt said lifting the age would change the lives of thousands of children.

“These are tiny children who don’t have the capacity to take criminal responsibi­lity for their actions,” she said.

“Most of the time they grow out of behaviour that might have attracted the attention of police, but putting them in prison cells is ultimately extremely harmful for these children, for their families and for the whole community.”

More than 8300 children aged 10 to 13 went through the criminal legal system between 2018 and 2019, while another 573 were in detention.

Indigenous children made up the majority.

Human Rights Law Centre senior lawyer Shaleena Musk said many of the Aboriginal children she had worked with in the Northern Territory were from disadvanta­ged background­s and often had mental health issues, a disability or were pushed out of school.

PUTTING THEM IN PRISON CELLS IS ULTIMATELY EXTREMELY HARMFUL FOR THESE CHILDREN

SOPHIE TREVITT

“They were kids who were disengaged from society and were in need of help, and were being criminalis­ed and pushed through a system that’s very much designed to control and punish,” she said.

“You’re basically creating a vicious cycle of disadvanta­ge and you force these kids to become entrenched in the criminal legal system.”

Younger children have a higher likelihood of more serious offending, while losing contact with supportive mechanisms like their family and community, Ms Musk added.

Early criminalis­ation also leads to early and preventabl­e death, drug and alcohol misuse, the inability to get or keep a job and broken relationsh­ips.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia