The Guardian Australia

Alice Springs youth curfew: state of emergency called after violence in town centre

- Caitlin Cassidy and Australian Associated Press

The Northern Territory chief minister, Eva Lawler, has announced a two-week curfew for young people will begin on Wednesday night in Alice Springs after a violent incident outside a town pub the previous day.

Speaking at a press conference on Wednesday, Lawler said the state of emergency had been declared and those aged under 18 would be subject to the curfew between 6pm and 6am.

More than 50 additional police and liquor inspectors will also be deployed in the town after a series of violent incidents after the commemorat­ion of the death of a teenager.

“We want people in Alice Springs to be able to walk down the street, feel safe, be able to go to the shopping centre, pick up their kids from school and not be concerned about their own safety,” Lawler said.

“If someone under 18 years old is in the CBD past 6pm and before 6am without a valid reason they will be taken home or to a safe place.”

The curfew, which was welcomed by the federal government, comes after chaos descended on the town on Tuesday afternoon, when up to 70 people attacked the local pub, the Todd Tavern. The Northern Territory police commission­er, Michael Murphy, alleged some of the violence was related to the death of an 18-year-old man in a car accident earlier this month.

The 18-year-old died on 8 March when an allegedly stolen car rolled over in the CBD.

Murphy said the government had listened to his advice, warning there would be an “increase in tempo and visibility” of officers to drive down crime.

“We saw … really violent behaviour yesterday associated with the death of an 18-year-old male,” he said.

“That’s led to family feuds and that’s what erupted in Alice Springs yesterday.”

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Footage of the incident has been shared widely on social media, and depicts several young people throwing themselves at the glass doors of the pub.

Cars in the area were also smashed and hit with rocks and bricks and a 16 and an 18-year-old were arrested at the location.

Later on Tuesday evening, the ceremony was continuing at Hidden Valley town camp outside Alice Springs when more than 150 people were allegedly involved in a violent brawl.

The brawl resulted in broken windows, smoke damage to a house and a car set on fire.

Three people, aged 19, 31 and 50, have been arrested, while more than 50 weapons were seized.

Murphy said he was fed up with the rising crime rates in Alice Springs.

“People have had a gutful, and frankly so have I, around some of the behaviours we’re seeing in town, unacceptab­le behaviours, or lack of authority or lack of respect for authority,” he said.

The NT minister for police, Brent Potter, said the town had been subject to “unacceptab­le, abhorrent behaviour”.

“This is not just a policing issue, we must collaborat­e with community leaders to keep Alice Springs safe.”

The Alice Springs mayor, Matt Paterson, took to social media to express his frustratio­n with the violence.

“Horrendous doesn’t cut it, but I have run out of words,” he said.

“I don’t know if there is a big enough rooftop to scream from – that we need help.”

Paterson has previously called for federal assistance or a military interventi­on in the desert town, as has Senator Jacinta Price.

The Indigenous Australian­s minister, Linda Burney, welcomed the temporary curfew. “I hope this is a circuit breaker that will improve community safety,” she said.

The opposition leader, Peter Dutton, asked the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, during question time why the federal government hadn’t

done more to stem the crisis.

Albanese said he had visited the NT and the town “more than the three previous Liberal prime ministers combined, in two years” and had recently boosted funding for remote housing by $4bn.

But the NT’s Australian of the Year, Blair McFarland, warned the curfew was a “kneejerk reaction”, adding the announceme­nt was equivalent to “closing the door after the horse was bolted”.

“It’s really clumsy – this is not going to help. It’s just another thing that will make kids angry and disaffecte­d because people will feel they’re being punished,” he said.

McFarland said calls for the ADF to come were “craziness” that would do nothing to address rising crime rates.

He also pointed to concerns over vulnerable youth who may not have a safe residence during the curfew. According to the NT Shelter, the Territory has 12 times the national average rate of homelessne­ss. 16.5% of people under 18 are without a place of residence.

“Grinding poverty and absolute food insecurity is [an] underlying driver,” McFarland said. “This generation grew up when the army invaded. It didn’t work. We need to intervene based on a hierarchy of needs.”

The Central Land Council met in

Alice Springs on Wednesday afternoon and confirmed they would support community leaders to help families resolve the underlying disputes.

“Cultural processes are best dealt with on country, under the guidance of the elders and senior community leaders,” deputy chair Warren Williams said.

 ?? ?? NT police say the government has listened to its advice after chief minister Eva Lawler announced a curfew for young people in Alice Springs. Photograph: Neve Brissenden/AAP
NT police say the government has listened to its advice after chief minister Eva Lawler announced a curfew for young people in Alice Springs. Photograph: Neve Brissenden/AAP

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