Khaleej Times

Aussies must do more to protect indigenous women: UN

- Reuters

sydney — Australia is failing to protect its female indigenous people from violence, which is aggravated by high levels of inequity, the United Nations said on Monday.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australian­s rank near the bottom of every social and economic indicator, which exacerbate­s tension in communitie­s of the world’s longest continuous civilisati­on.

“They are 34 times more likely to be hospitalis­ed as a result of domestic/family violence and up to 3.7 times more likely than other women to be victims of sexual violence,” Dubravka Simonovic, UN special rapporteur on violence against women, told a news conference in Canberra.

Simonovic, who said the figures were likely to underestim­ate the extent of the problem, said aboriginal women were often caught in a cycle of violence, beginning in childhood.

Indigenous children are about seven times more likely than non-Indigenous children to be subjected to abuse or neglect and about 10 times more likely to be in out-of-home care, the United Nations said.

With a troubled upbringing, a disproport­ionately high number of indigenous woman end up in prison, a figure exacerbate­d by government policies, most notably incarcerat­ion for unpaid fines, which Simonovic said affected indigenous people more than the non-indigenous people. The issue of the incarnatio­n of indigenous women hit the headlines after the 2014 death of a women known only by her surname — Dhu — after she was arrested for unpaid fines shortly after a domestic violence incident. —

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