
Prime Minister听 Labor is 鈥渄elivering record funding in health, education and housing鈥 to First Nations communities, but听, Member of the Order of Australia and Lead Convenor of the听Coalition of Peaks, admits that only 5 out of 19听听targets are 鈥渙n track鈥.
As Labor tabled its听Commonwealth听Closing the Gap 2024 Annual Report听and 2025 Implementation Plan on听February 10, it said it听is 鈥渂uilding on investments鈥 to听close the gap.
Albanese talked up delivering 鈥渞ecord funding in health, education and housing, as well as $842 million to fund essential services in remote communities鈥.
Minister for Indigenous Australians Malarndirri McCarthy talked up 鈥渃reating jobs with decent conditions in remote Australia, addressing housing overcrowding, supporting healthy children and safe families, and community-driven responses to address the causes of crime鈥.
The proportion of First Nations babies born at a healthy weight and the rise in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander control of land and sea country are some overdue improvements.
鈥淲e鈥檝e got far too many children in out-of-home care,鈥澨.
Turner emphasised that more than 80% of children who are in juvenile detention are on remand. 鈥淭hey have not been charged with an offence yet.鈥
鈥淲e see a significant correlation between children in out-of-home care and children who then progress into the juvenile justice system. I wouldn鈥檛 say justice, but into the juvenile detention centres.鈥
Lidia Thorpe, Gunditjmara woman and independent Victorian Senator, said the Closing the Gap partnership is 鈥渃ollapsing鈥.
鈥淭his time last year, the听听delivered a damning assessment of Closing the Gap and called for an overhaul of how First Nations policy is developed and implemented,鈥 Thorpe said.
, released in January,听showed a rise in the number and rate of Indigenous children jailed.
On an average day, 65% of children imprisoned are First Nations. Indigenous children between the ages of 10鈥13 are imprisoned 45.5 times more than their non-Indigenous cohort.
Overall, state and territory governments imprison First Nations children at almost 27 times the rate of non-Indigenous children.
The cost of imprisoning children has risen to more than $1 billion annually, the commission said.听
Thorpe said it has been 鈥渁 year of betrayal, delay and deflection鈥. The gaps are being intentionally widened, with government attacks on First Peoples 鈥済rowing by the day鈥.
She cited 鈥渟hamefully high rates of unsentenced First Nations children in prison鈥 and criticised Victoria and New South Wales Labor for introducing policies to 鈥渉old听more听children on remand鈥.听
鈥淚n Queensland it is now harder to get bail as a child than as an adult,鈥 Thorpe said.
鈥淲e are also seeing moves in the NT to dismantle the child placement principle, which is in place to keep our children connected to family, culture and kin.鈥
Thorpe pointed out that, of the $842 million federal funding package announced by the PM,听$205 million will go to a policing program in remote communities.听
鈥淭his will just funnel more of our people into the court and prison system at a time where courts are crumbling, as many people are unable to access legal assistance or even an interpreter.鈥
Thorpe said Labor has the constitutional power to hold the states and territories to account, as it does with the听Sex Discrimination Act.
It has the power to 鈥渆nforce standards鈥澨齛nd it needs to 鈥渂ring this country into line with our international human rights obligations鈥.