Now is the time for First Nations justice and systemic change

by PAUL GREGOIRE

Sydney Stop Black Deaths in Custody-Black Lives Matter rally on June 6. PHOTO/Zebedee Parkes

As protests against continuing First Nations deaths in custody began in June, Prime Minister Scott Morrison appeared on AM talkback radio stating that the nation “shouldn’t be importing the things that are happening overseas”.

He was alluding to the Black Lives Matter uprisings sweeping the United States that are calling for an end to police brutality against Black, Brown and Indigenous peoples that have laid bare the travesty of law enforcement in this neck of the woods.

Morrison said that Australia has “issues in this space that we need to deal with but, the thing is, we are dealing with it”.

However, the 437 First Nations deaths in custody since the royal commission tabled its recommendations in 1991 don’t indicate any meaningful dealings. Nor do the countless pieces of footage capturing incidents of police violence against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples that continue appearing on social media platforms. A man was bashed in South Australia last week. A teen was thrown to the ground face first in New South Wales several weeks ago

Indeed, the PM’s reaction to the Stop All Black Deaths in Custody rallies that brought cities to a standstill in early June, indicated that not only are the nation’s policing systems weighed down by the shackles of colonialism, so too is the government.

Activist Bruce Shillingsworth told the June 6 protest in Sydney, which completely covered Belmore Park and its surrounding streets, that his reason for being present was for “his grandchildren and their children’s children”.

The Muruwari and Budjiti man asserted that those who had gathered were there to stand up against injustices around the world, including those suffered by First Nations people locally, and to call for a change to systemic racism.

The global focus on police brutality against people of colour was sparked by the killing of African American man George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers. It has heightened the attention on the same racist violence by Australia’s police.

Melbourne Law School senior fellow Amanda Porter told Sydney Criminal Lawyers on June 11 that the NSW Police Force was established via the incorporation of various colonial policing bodies that were charged with quelling the Aboriginal resistance and this confrontational stance continues.

“For 250 years now, my people have been suffering from the injustices,” Shillingsworth told the June 6 rally. “We now stand and say ‘Enough is enough’. So, stop. We are all humans.”

Mass incarceration

A coalition of Aboriginal and non-Indigenous law and social justice organisations put together a list of recommendations to guide federal, state and territory governments on how to prevent future Black deaths in custody. The civil society organisations include Change the Record, the Human Rights Law Centre and the Law Council of Australia.

The recommendations came in response to a federal government announcement that it would add a justice component to its Closing the Gap framework which, for many, seems to be a sure-fire way that nothing substantial will be achieved.

The first recommendation is to “end the mass imprisonment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples”. Currently, 29% of the adult prisoner population is made up of First Nations people, yet they only account for less than 3% of the overall populace.

An end to the incarceration of First Nations children and the lifting of the age of criminal responsibility from 10 to 14 years old is the second recommendation. Right now, 53% of incarcerated youths are First Nations kids, yet they constitute just 6% of those aged between 10 and 17.

Make authorities accountable

Recommendation three calls for the establishment of independent bodies to investigate deaths in custody and to provide police oversight. As Indigenous Social Justice Association (ISJA) secretary Raul Bassi has long been at pains to point out, the current system of sending Aboriginal custody deaths cases over to the Coroner’s Court usually results in no substantial recommendations being made and no criminal convictions.

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