A grassroots campaign group, Justice not Jails, has been formed to counter the Northern Territory’s Country Liberal Party’s (CLP) punitive “tough on crime†approach.
The CLP’s regressive agenda, which include , came into force on January 6. They make it harder for First Nations children aged 10-17 to obtain bail when charged with certain offences involving violence. They also categorise stealing as a “serious offenceâ€.
, at any given time, are First Nations people.
The CLP’s bail reforms are part of a suite of punitive measures, introduced in haste last October. The government has also lowered the age of criminal responsibility from 12 back to 10.
Nyikina woman and long-time Close Don Dale campaigner Natalie Hunter is Justice not Jails’ spokesperson. “In the Northern Territory, Black children are dehumanised at every turn,†she said on January 7.
“They are stolen from their families and severed from their culture. They’re left out of education. They’re locked up and treated like animals.â€
The CLP’s social policy which $370 when their children do not go to school is based on a flawed ideology of individual responsibility that only serves to entrench vicious cycles of poverty, trauma and criminalisation, she said.
“For years, we have stood up to the NT government,†Hunter continued. “We have tried to make them see sense; repeated the same facts and statistics and explained the evidence. We have told our own harrowing personal stories, hoping someone would listen.â€
The same urgency with which the CLP has cracked down on what it calls “anti-social behaviour†has not been afforded to addressing the structural drivers of crime.
The in the NT are almost 12 times the national average and the social housing are between 6-10 years.
Tiwi woman Yvonne Dunn, another member of Justice not Jails, said: “Most of these kids are experiencing poverty, disability, removal, poor health, low education, and trauma, all before 10 year’s old.
“And we expect a 10 year old to be the bigger person, to always regulate their feelings, to never step out of line. Many children in remote communities also have a lack of understanding about the new laws. They believe it doesn’t affect them.â€Â Â
Meanwhile, the CLP is promoting its carceral approach to community “safetyâ€. Deputy Chief Minister Gerard Maley on December 30 that prisoner numbers had increased by 84 (3.3%) in just six days, bringing the total to 2598 prisoners.
With characteristic cruelty, the CLP is also pushing ahead with plans to youth from the Alice Springs Youth Detention Centre, over 1500 kilometres to the Holtze Youth Justice Centre.
Dunn said it “will make it harder for family to visit, separating children from crucial family support and from their spiritual lineage.
“These new laws directly target Black children, especially those that come from remote communities. You have to be racist or ignorant to think these laws will benefit the community.â€
Justice not Jails is calling for those funds currently being poured into the police force and new jails to instead be spent on helping communities lead changes that will make a long-term difference for community safety.
The advocacy organisation Justice Reform Initiative in 2022 that the NT is spending $122,496 a year or $335.88 a day for each adult prisoner. For each child prisoner, the real cost is significantly higher — $1.4 million a year or $3,852 a day.
It called for “greater investment in policies and programs to break the cycles of disadvantage which kept bringing people back to prison at enormous cost to taxpayersâ€.
“Thirty years on from the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, and five years on from the Royal Commission into the Protection and Detention of Children in the NT, the lack of action in reducing over-representation is unacceptable.â€
The Justice Reform Initiative said while there is no single “reform fix†to reduce prison numbers, “there are multiple proven, cost-effective alternatives that can both effectively reduce incarceration and improve community safetyâ€.
The “tough on crime†rhetoric does “not make the community safer, nor does our current over-use of imprisonmentâ€, it said.
It said First Nations organisations and communities want mandatory sentencing ended, the age of criminal responsibility raised to 14 — the minimum age, developmentally and neurologically, that children could or should be held criminally responsible and other evidence-based reforms “outside the justice system†including addressing homelessness, social and cultural community connection and providing  access to services and supports including for mental health, cognitive impairment and problematic drug and alcohol use.
Justice not Jails supports grassroots initiatives to raise awareness about the destructive impacts of the CLP’s “tough on crime†agenda.
One such initiative is from frontline workers which calls for an end to mandatory sentencing for assaults and spitting. All NT workers are urged to sign it and share around.
Hunter and Dunn urged “everyoneâ€, including peak bodies, service providers and organisations funded to support children “to stand up to this governmentâ€.
[Sign the open letter to NT Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro and CLP MLAs against mandatory sentencing .]