The Guardian Australia

Leaked audio reveals cultural problems in Queensland police force, human rights commission­er says

- Joe Hinchliffe

Queensland’s human rights commission­er, Scott McDougall, says “clear” and “pervasive” cultural problems are plaguing the state’s police force after leaked audio revealed violent and racist conversati­ons by Queensland police staff.

Police service officers at the Brisbane city police watch house can be heard using racist slurs and offensive language while working in the holding cells, referring to Nigerians as “jigaboos”, and raising fears that Australia “will be fucking taken over” in a series of leaked tapes published by the Guardian Australia on Sunday.

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A spokespers­on for the police minister, Mark Ryan, responded to the story by saying racist and violent language was “totally deplorable and unacceptab­le”.

“Any such behaviour is rightfully condemned both by the government and by the Queensland Police Service,” the spokespers­on said. “The minister has previously said that such behaviour is totally inconsiste­nt with the values of the QPS.”

Human rights commission­er Scott McDougall, said it was “clear that there is a pervasive cultural problem within the Queensland police service”.

McDougall called on the government to prioritise independen­t scrutiny of the police including a “thorough examinatio­n of recruitmen­t, training, supervisio­n and disciplina­ry procedures, and ongoing evaluation of the practices and organisati­onal culture of the service.”

“Watch houses are high-risk environmen­ts requiring a level of profession­alism from QPS officers to ensure the safety of both those detained and their fellow workers,” he said.

The leaked recordings come after horrendous stories about the alleged treatment of women within the police force and the racist attitudes of officers that emerged in recent weeks during an inquiry into Queensland police responses to domestic violence.

First Nations writer and academic Chelsea Watego said the leaked recordings “shouldn’t come as a surprise to anybody”.

“This is not bad apples and lone wolves – this is systemic,” she said. “Clearly, there’s a culture here that has been fostered for some time that has enabled people to express so freely such overt, racist views.”

Watego said the kind of attitudes expressed in the leaked recordings “informed the actions” of police staff, sometimes with violent and deadly consequenc­es. The Munanjahli and South Sea Islander woman recently brought a racial discrimina­tion case against the state of Queensland after she was arrested outside a nightclub in 2018 and taken to the city watch house. Her case ultimately proved unsuccessf­ul.

“I guess if it doesn’t happen to you, you can be indifferen­t to it, but too many blackfulla­s have stories about this and the tragic end to all of this is the increasing rates of black deaths in custody,” she said.

“Our people are dying in these places.”

Brisbane city councillor Jonathan Srirangana­than was held in the same Brisbane city police watch house in 2020 after being arrested while protesting for refugee rights. He was denigrated by the staff in the leaked tapes, in which a police officer describes him as “a piece of crap and a halfwit”.

“Roma Street watch house is a rats’ nest of racist bigotry and systematis­ed abuse,” Srirangana­than said. “It turns decent people who start working there into power-tripping thugs. It’s a really dark place.”

The Greens councillor said watchhouse staff had treated him “like I was scum to them” despite the fact he was yet to face trial and charges were later dropped. He said more systemic reform was needed to “get to the heart of the problem”.

“Some of the commentary in the recordings, such as the implicatio­n that a watch house officer might have been pressuring an Aboriginal woman for a blowjob, are so shocking, disgusting and outrageous that we really should be seeing a widespread inquiry into abuse and exploitati­on of people held at any of the watch houses across Queensland,” he said.

“The very way watch houses operate needs to be completely restructur­ed.”

 ?? Photograph: timstarkey/Getty Images ?? Greens councillor Jonathan Srirangana­than says there is a need for ‘a widespread inquiry into abuse and exploitati­on of people held at any of the watch houses across Queensland’.
Photograph: timstarkey/Getty Images Greens councillor Jonathan Srirangana­than says there is a need for ‘a widespread inquiry into abuse and exploitati­on of people held at any of the watch houses across Queensland’.

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