
Northern Territory Courts cut the after-hours bail service on March 7, creating more danger, particularly for minors.
The NT News a 15-year-old girl was detained in the Palmerston Watch House for more than 48 hours because she was arrested on a Friday and there were no on-call judges to hear an after-hours bail application.
鈥淧olice watch houses are terrible places,鈥 Justice not Jails member Cam McNaughton told 一品探花.
鈥淐hildren don鈥檛 belong there. You can鈥檛 shower. You can鈥檛 use the toilet without being observed. The lights are always on. They have no right to see their family. It鈥檚 solitary confinement.鈥
Solitary confinement violent behaviours, as well as a host of negative physiological and psychological reactions.
Before it was repurposed, children inside the Don Dale Youth Detention Centre were being locked in their cells sometimes for more than 20 hours a day. That led to a spike in self-harm and suicide attempts.
Allowing children to be detained in isolation for days in police watch houses breaches several international conventions.
The 1990 United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, article 37,聽states: 鈥淓very child deprived of liberty shall be treated with humanity and respect for the inherent dignity of the human person, and in a manner which takes into account the needs of persons of his or her age鈥.
Police treat children, who they arrest, as if they were already guilty. NT Police spit hoods to be used in police watch houses, meaning that the longer that children are detained, the greater the risk that they will be put in spit hoods, exposing them to severe trauma.
鈥淭he use of spit hoods is torture,鈥 said McNaughton. 鈥淚t should be avoided at all costs. We should keep children away from situations where there鈥檚 a greater risk that they will be used.鈥
Keeping children in isolation in an alienating environment entrenches the vicious circle of trauma and criminalisation.
鈥淚f the courts are so under-resourced that they can鈥檛 provide an after-hours bail service, that鈥檚 the government鈥檚 problem. The kids should not be punished for that,鈥 McNaughton said.
鈥淭he absence of strict time limits on how long children can be detained by police is unacceptable.鈥
The Royal Commission into the Protection and Detention of Children in the Northern Territory found that NT Police 鈥渙ver charge鈥 children and young people with offences.
Since its election last year, the Country Liberal Party (CLP) has unleashed an assault on First Nations children and families via its 鈥渢ough on crime鈥 measures, including lowering the age of criminal responsibility from 12 back to 10, and for their children not going to school.
The CLP announced on March 20 it would public housing tenants who fall behind on rent, despite the connection between homelessness and incarceration.
Justice not Jails is concerned that the government鈥檚 turbocharges its power to destroy the Territory鈥檚 environment and livelihoods, increasing the imprisonment rate while doing nothing to produce safer communities in the long term.