
Megan Krakouer, Menang woman of the Noongar Nation, told the Ecosocialism 2024 conference recently that not only is the rate of incarceration 鈥溾, First Nations suicides are also rising at an alarming rate.
In Victoria from 2018鈥2023, 134 Indigenous people died by suicide compared to 4183 non-Indigenous people. The highest proportion was young people aged 25鈥34 (29.2%), followed by 45鈥54 (26%) and 35鈥44 (21.9%).
showed this is a rate of approximately 28.4 suicides per 100,000 First Nations people, compared to 10.8 per 100,000 non-Indigenous people 鈥 almost three times higher聽
These are sobering facts to reflect on during this year鈥檚 (National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee) week.
The said on July 2 that suicide is now an 鈥渋ssue of major concern鈥 for both First Nations communities and governments.
The Australian government acknowledges on its website that suicide and self-harm behaviours 鈥渁rise from a complex web of personal, social, and historical factors鈥.
However, it also said 鈥渢hey can be prevented鈥.
shows the rate of suicide deaths among First Nations people nationally was more than twice that for non鈥慖ndigenous people.
Deaths in custody
Krakouer, the , told the Boorloo/Perth conference the current rate of First Nations people being incarcerated is 鈥渙ut of control鈥.
She said there is a link between incarceration rates and the number of First Nations people committing suicide.
鈥淪o many people take their lives in a prison setting: Three times more [than] non-Indigenous people.
鈥淥ne in 12 Aboriginal men are in prison today in Western Australia,鈥 Krakouer said. "One in six [Aboriginal men] across this country have been to prison."
Krakouer said in just the past 10 years, First Nations suicides have gone from one in 23 people to one in 16.
鈥淭his means that [suicide] is a leading cause of death for our people.
鈥淲e鈥檝e had two people in the last two weeks, bless their souls, take their lives in Noongar country.
鈥淏ut it鈥檚 not just happening in Noongar country, it鈥檚 happening in Yamatji country. It鈥檚 happening in Yaree country. It鈥檚 happening in Koori country. It鈥檚 happening right across the country.
鈥淚s it getting better? Absolutely not! That鈥檚 the truth of it.鈥
Governments not listening
Krakouer criticised governments for not listening.
鈥淭hey say they want to 'truth tell'. The thing is when we talk about truth, and a lot of our people have been truthful from the very beginning, there has been deaf ears.鈥
Governments don鈥檛 want to hear the truth, or 鈥渓earn the truth鈥, she said.
This has a deadly flow-on effect. As long as governments do not want to 鈥渆nsure that those that are telling the truth are being validated, so that traumas can be disabled鈥, things will continue to worsen.
To illustrate this, she said there were 2000 First Nations children in care in 1997. When former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd apologised to the Stolen Generation in 2008, 鈥8000 Black kids in care 鈥 a bit of an increase. Today there are 24,000 Black kids in care.鈥
鈥淭he statistics do not lie.鈥
Krakouer said governments must 鈥渕assively invest鈥 in the most marginalised and vulnerable communities, in ways that communities decide.
鈥淲hen you see lives being lost unnecessarily, prematurely, it does nothing but break your heart because things could have been done better.鈥
Referring to the death of 16-year-old Cleveland Dodd, who died in the controversial Unit 18 youth detention wing of Casuarina Prison last year, Krakouer said the inquest finding of on behalf of the authorities was a 鈥渏oke鈥.
She said Cleveland鈥檚 grandmother, Aunty Glenda, had told her the community would mobilise from Meekatharra to fight this.
Cleveland died after he had threatened to kill himself eight times on the night he was found dead in the cell. The teenager was being held in an adult section of the maximum security adult prison, despite not being convicted of any crime.
鈥淭he rule of law has to be equal for everyone: but it was not.
鈥淢oney speaks; as do position and titles. They choose not to listen. But what do we do? We stand up. We fight back and we change the narrative.鈥
The Australian government website states that life expectancy is 鈥渨idely used as an indicator of population health鈥.
If we understand 鈥渉ealth鈥 as being more than the absence of illness or disease, but includes physical, social, emotional, cultural and spiritual wellbeing, for both the individual and the community, there is an urgent need to listen to and act on the advice of truth-tellers such as Krakouer.聽