The Manila Times

Australian charged with tying up Indigenous kids

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Police in Australia have charged a 45-year-old man with “aggravated assault” for allegedly binding three young Indigenous children with cable ties after they swam in a pool without permission.

Social media images appeared to show the tearful children — a 6-year-old girl and two boys ages 7 and 8 — with their hands tied together outside a home in Broome town, Western Australia state, during the incident on Tuesday.

One video on social media, widely broadcast by Australian media, showed locals shouting at a white man on the property, demanding in vain that he release the two youngest children after the 8-year-old had already fled.

“That was a very distressin­g piece of video that we all saw yesterday,” Western Australia Premier Roger Cook told a news conference on Wednesday.

“I understand that raises very strong emotions in everyone, but just please, everyone, let the police get on and do their job,” Cook said.

“Obviously, the police will monitor the situation in terms of the community emotions up there and deploy resources appropriat­ely,” he added.

The treatment of Indigenous children is particular­ly sensitive in Australia.

Thousands of Indigenous children were taken from their families and put into foster care with white families or institutio­ns under assimilati­on policies that continued into the early 1970s.

Police in Broome told reporters they had received a report that children were swimming in an “unoccupied pool” at a home in Broome’s Cable Beach suburb.

They arrived to find two of the children still “cable-tied,” said Ron Wilde, Western Australia police’s regional acting assistant commission­er.

They later located the 8-year-old who had fled before they arrived, police said in a separate statement.

The man was taken into custody, charged and released on bail ahead of a court hearing in the Broome Magistrate­s Court on March 25, they added.

Police said they acknowledg­ed the “challengin­g circumstan­ces” of the incident but urged the community to “allow the court process to run its course.”

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