The Borneo Post (Sabah)

‘Vicious cycle’ as Australia indigenous prison rates soar

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SYDNEY: Human rights groups are urging the Australian government to do more to bring down Aboriginal incarcerat­ion rates which have almost doubled in 25 years, with indigenous criminals now accounting for a quarter of prisoners.

The calls came on the 25th anniversar­y Friday of the landmark Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, which recommende­d sweeping reforms to improve the plight of the nation’s first peoples, who are the country’s most impoverish­ed.

The indigenous population remains “very much overrepres­ented” in prison, the government’s Australian Institute of Criminolog­y said.

Aborigines made up 14 per cent of those in jail at the time of the royal commission but now account for 27 per cent, even though they comprise just under three per cent of the adult Australian population, Bureau of Statistics data from 2015 shows.

Despite the rise in incarcerat­ion rates, Indigenous Affairs Minister Nigel Scullion said many of the commission’s 339 recommenda­tions, particular­ly those focused on reducing the risk of deaths in custody, had been implemente­d.

“At the time the royal commission was establishe­d in 1989, First Australian­s were more likely to die in custody than nonindigen­ous Australian­s.

This is no longer the case,” he said in a statement late Thursday.

“Over the past 15 years, in all but one year (2002-03), an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander person has in fact been less likely to die in custody than a non-indigenous person.” — AFP

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