After attempted suicide, calls strengthen to shut Don Dale Youth Detention Centre

June 9, 2022
Issue 
Donna Hunter addresses the emergency protest outside Don Dale Youth Detention Centre. Photo: Stephen W Enciso

Protesters gathered outside Don Dale Youth Detention Centre (DDYDC) on June 8 following reports of an attempted suicide by a child detainee.

According to the Northern Territory News, a 16-year-old boy in DDYDC stabbed himself after being placed in isolation, was hospitalised and聽then returned to DDYDC.

Incidents of self-harm and suicide attempts have been on the rise in DDYDC, with data released in March revealing there had been 54 incidents from July to December last year, compared with eight over the same period in 2020.

The 狈罢听狈别飞蝉聽later reported, on June 9, that聽last weekend four children were taken to Royal Darwin Hospital because of 鈥渁t risk鈥澛爄ncidents.

Donna Hunter told protesters that DDYDC is no place for children. Speaking about her 11-year-old grandson, who spent three months in DDYDC on remand last year, she said: 鈥淭he fact is that if he ever goes back in there my fear is that this could happen to him and it terrifies me鈥.

鈥淚 am pleading that the minister stops this, not only for my grandson, but for the children that are already in there. My heart goes out to the mothers and grandmothers whose children are currently in there and what they must be thinking.鈥

don_dale_stephen_w_enciso.jpeg

Don Dale Youth Detention Centre which a royal commission has found to be unfit for detaining young people. Photo: Stephen W Enciso

The Royal Commission into the Protection and Detention of Children in the Northern Territory found that DDYDC was 鈥渘ot fit for accommodating, let alone rehabilitating, children and young people鈥 due to its 鈥渟evere, prison-like and unhygienic conditions鈥.

DDYDC is not a purpose-built juvenile facility. It is a condemned adult prison from the 1970s that was deemed聽聽by the CEO of Correctional Services聽in 2011.

Children, nearly all of whom are First Nations people on remand, have been kept in DDYDC since 2014.

The royal commission in 2017 DDYDC be closed. Since then, the NT government 聽the prison and聽聽to the Bail Act and the Youth Justice Act designed to make it harder for young people to access bail.

The number of children in youth detention in May was at since the royal commission delivered its final report.

John Lawrence SC told the protest that going through the traditional channels had failed to deliver justice for First Nations children.

鈥淲e have lobbied and demonstrated and protested and did everything within our means. We鈥檝e even met the minister, and she has insisted that it will remain as it is.

鈥淒o we really have to wait for the inevitable? And let鈥檚 face it, we are so without care now that perhaps the inevitable won鈥檛 have the effect we are assuming as human beings it should have. This message, I hope, will be spread as far as possible and I sincerely ask anybody who is aware of this to lend a hand to stop this barbarism, this backward behaviour by our government.鈥

The Northern Territory Children鈥檚 Commissioner聽聽that DDYDC 鈥渓ack[s] a therapeutic framework鈥 to guide its operations and that staff are not being educated in developmental trauma.

滨迟蝉听聽also found that children were denied adequate access to basic educational and medical services, with some at risk of self-harm being kept in their cells for up to 23 hours and 45 minutes a day.

Hunter and Larrakia woman Tanya Williams personally handed Anthony Albanese a petition in February calling for urgent federal intervention to close Don Dale. Labor has yet to provide an official response to the petition.

US-Australian singer-songwriter Toni Childs told the protest she was聽鈥渧ery sad to be standing here.

鈥淭hese kids don鈥檛 deserve to be in there. They deserve to be valued. These children do not see their value because of the wounds of their families.

鈥淒o we take those children from those families and then stamp and brand it on them that they are truly unvaluable? That they do not matter? I say they matter.鈥

[The 聽holds demonstrations outside the gates of DDYDC every Friday at 5pm. The group has information stalls at the Nightcliff and Palmerston Markets, and is organising a public forum on crime and youth justice at the聽 in July.]

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