NT Country Liberal Party demonises incarcerated youth

November 12, 2024
Issue 
The Northern Territory Country Liberal Party issued a media release with this image, demonising six young people. Photo: Northern Territory Government

The Northern Territory Country Liberal Party (CLP) issued a on November 8, demonising six children inside Darwin鈥檚 Holtze Youth Detention Centre.

Deputy Chief Minister and Minister for Corrections Gerard Maley MLA said: 鈥淚n a deliberate act of vandalism, six youth detainees aged between 13 and 17 damaged seven individual bedrooms 鈥 it is calculated destruction.鈥

Maley listed a string of accusations against incarcerated children from the week, including that two children had spat on and bitten a youth justice officer in Alice Springs.

His government鈥檚 to forcibly transfer incarcerated children from Alice Springs to Darwin, more than 1000 kilometres away from their families, may have had something to do with this behaviour.

indicate that, in all likelihood, these children are First Nations. Describing them as deliberate vandals interested in causing calculated destruction deploys a racist trope and obscures the role state violence plays in their behaviour.

The government鈥檚 media release included a photo of an alleged injury to an officer and a trashed room 鈥 a ploy to help the government鈥檚 destructive 鈥渢ough on crime鈥 campaign. Maley pledged to 鈥渆nsure offenders know there is a consequence for their actions鈥.

The CLP, elected in August, gave itself a mandate to push 鈥渓aw and order鈥. In the first two weeks of sittings, it of criminal responsibility back from 12 to 10, made bail for children harder to obtain and reintroduced mandatory sentencing for assaulting or spitting on frontline workers.

The punitive measures will lead to more First Nations children and adults being placed in a prison system that is already and with First Nations people聽over-represented.

The more people incarcerated, the more entrenched the cycle of poverty and trauma that preclude community safety becomes.

The Royal Commission into the Protection and Detention of Children in the Northern Territory more than 75% of children in detention centres had a diagnosable psychiatric disorder.

Maley acknowledged that 鈥測outh detainees can have significant behavioural problems鈥. But instead of allocating funding and support for these young people, he made it clear the CLP is not interested in rehabilitation. 鈥淔or too long, the previous Labor government put ideology ahead of victims and public safety. Labor focused too heavily on the therapeutic model.鈥

This is the opposite of what the NT Children鈥檚 Commissioner said when Labor was in government. It found that Don Dale Youth Detention Centre 鈥渓ack[ed] a therapeutic framework鈥 to guide its operations and staff.

Both major parties in the NT are wedded to a 鈥渢ough on crime鈥 agenda, ignoring desperate pleas to empower First Nations voices and solutions to the mass incarceration crisis.

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