AIDA urges NT Government to maintain or increase current age of criminal responsibility  

09 Sep 2024
Media Release

The Australian Indigenous Doctors Association (AIDA) is deeply concerned at the new Northern Territory CLP government’s plan to lower the age of criminal responsibility back to 10 years old.   

The medical evidence is clear that children of this age have age related brain development and therefore, immature higher functions such as planning, reasoning, judgement and impulse control will not be fully developed until they are into their 20s

Children aged 10 to 12, are physically and neurodevelopmentally vulnerable and require a different response to behavioural issues than older children. 

These are primary school aged children who should be receiving additional health care, social and wellbeing support, not being incarcerated in prison. Children in detention have high levels of complex health issues which worsen in detention, which is a non-therapeutic environment.   

“This issue disproportionately impacts Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children in the most harmful ways” AIDA CEO, Donna Burns stated. 

 “The higher rates of detention for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children impacts on social and emotional wellbeing.” 

“Why not use the opportunity to support a child in distress rather than punish them with prison?” CEO Donna Burns asks.   

Providing services and structures to support children and families will have positive impacts. We do not want to go back to the very recent past with the brutal and inhumane practice of imprisoning 10 – 12 year old children  – who made up a significant 7% of the total NT youth detention population. This flies in the face of human rights obligations, as we should be affirming the rights of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and families under the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) .   

The trend in detention rates in the NT has been alarming. Over the past few years, the NT has seen an increase in the proportion of Aboriginal children in detention. We know that child-removal policies and out of home care, policing practices, and systemic disadvantage all intersect to impact on the rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children being detained. Incarceration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and young people results in denial of connection to culture and Country, changes in familial structures, underdevelopment and failure to thrive, and the child entering a cycle of trauma and re-traumatisation.  

Despite recommendations from inquiries and commissions such as the Royal Commission into the Protection and Detention of Children in the NT, meaningful reductions in detention rates have not occurred and rates among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people have increased. This reflects the ongoing systemic racism and discrimination faced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and young people. 

If we are to reach the Closing the Gap target #11 – to reduce the rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people (aged 10-17) in detention by at least 30% by 2031, then we must listen to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, along with other health experts, and raise the age of criminal responsibility to 14 years old.  

ENDS

The Australian Indigenous Doctors’ Association (AIDA) is the peak body representing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander medical students and doctors in Australia. Our purpose is to grow ethical and professional Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander doctors who will lead and drive equitable and just outcomes for our people. 

09 Sep 2024