Patrick Dodson condemns decades of inaction on suicide hanging points in Australian prisons

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"Patrick Dodson Calls for Urgent Action to Address Hanging Points in Australian Prisons"

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Patrick Dodson, the former Labor senator and Aboriginal deaths in custody royal commissioner, has expressed deep concern over the inaction regarding known hanging points in Australian prisons, labeling it as 'totally unacceptable.' This condemnation follows a report revealing that 57 Australians have died by suicide using hanging points that prison authorities were aware of but failed to eliminate, despite repeated coronial warnings. The persistence of these hanging points in facilities like Brisbane's Arthur Gorrie prison, where ten hanging deaths occurred between 2001 and 2020, highlights a disturbing trend of negligence. Even newer facilities, such as the Darwin Correctional Centre, which opened in 2014, have been designed with such hazards, leading to hanging deaths shortly after its operation commenced. Dodson emphasized that authorities have a responsibility to act on these issues, a duty that has been overlooked since recommendations from the 1991 royal commission were made to remove such dangers from prisons.

The overrepresentation of Indigenous Australians in prisons and the alarming rate of Aboriginal hanging deaths, which have reached a 17-year high, further complicate the situation. Dodson, along with other crossbenchers, is advocating for a national leadership response to address these issues, including the establishment of a national Aboriginal justice commission to ensure state governments adhere to the 1991 royal commission's recommendations. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander social justice commissioner Katie Kiss echoed this sentiment, pointing out that the failure to implement these recommendations contributes to a national shame regarding Aboriginal deaths in custody. She called for immediate actions to enhance the safety and wellbeing of incarcerated individuals and to prevent unnecessary detentions. The Attorney-General's office has acknowledged the tragedy of any death in custody and is reportedly working with state and territory governments to improve justice outcomes. However, advocates stress that a more coordinated and robust approach is urgently needed to stop the cycle of injustice and trauma affecting Indigenous Australians in the justice system.

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The former Labor senator and Aboriginal deaths in custody royal commissioner Patrick Dodson has condemned inaction on known hanging points as “totally unacceptable” and joined calls for national leadership on justice reform.

Guardian Australiarevealed last weekthat 57 Australians had died using hanging points that prison authorities knew about but failed to remove, often despite their use in repeated suicides and explicit warnings from coroners.

Dodson, a Yawuru elder often referred to as the “father of reconciliation”, was one of the royal commissioners who worked on the 1991 Aboriginal deaths in custody royal commission. That royal commission told state governments to remove obvious hanging points from their prisons, a recommendation that was universally accepted.

Despite this, Guardian Australia has revealed how obvious hanging points have been allowed to remain in prisons like Brisbane’s Arthur Gorrie, where 10 hanging deaths occurred using the same type of exposed bars between 2001 and 2020, despite repeated, early coronial warnings that they be removed.

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Even at the relatively new Darwin Correctional Centre, which opened in 2014, more than 20 years after the royal commission, cells were designed with an obvious and well-known hanging point, which was used in two hanging deaths in its first two full years of operation. The hanging point was not fully removed from cells until 2020.

“It’s totally unacceptable and this is where people need to be empowered and take action against those agencies based on their duty of care,” Dodson told Guardian Australia.

“They have a duty of care. They’ve been told 30 years ago to get rid of these things.”

Indigenous Australians remain vastly overrepresented in prison populations and hundreds have died in custody – 101 of those by hanging – since the 1991 royal commission.

Official data shows the rate of Aboriginal hanging deaths is at a 17-year high, correlating with Australia’s surging prisoner population.

Guardian Australiarevealed last weekthat in 2020, after the hanging death of young Indigenous man Tane Chatfield, the New South Wales government told a coroner it had audited Tamworth prison for hanging points but could find none. An independent inspection of Tamworth prison less than 12 months later found “multiple hanging points” including some that had been purportedly removed.

Guardian Australia asked every state government what has been done to address the problem. You can readtheir responses in full here.

Dodson said the federal government, through the standing council of attorneys general, should take a national leadership approach on reforms that reduce Indigenous incarceration rates and reduce deaths in custody, including by removing hanging points. His voice adds tothat of a group of crossbenchers, including David Pocock, David Shoebridge, Lidia Thorpe and Zali Steggall, calling for federal leadership on the issue of hanging points after the Guardian’s investigation.

Dodson said the federal government should establish a national Aboriginal justice commission to progress nationally coordinated reforms and ensure state governments are responding the recommendations of the 1991 royal commission, many of which remain unmet.

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He said the attorney general, Michelle Rowland, should ensure the issue is listed on the next agenda of the standing council of attorneys-general.

“The other thing that the attorney general should be doing is convening a group of the Aboriginal leadership in this space to discuss, have a discussion with them about the need for [an Aboriginal justice commission] and its importance,” he said. “I think we need a structure, otherwise, where does it end, you know?”

The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander social justice commissioner, Katie Kiss, said that the removal of hanging points from prison cells to reduce self-harm was a “key recommendation” from the 1991 royal commission“The failure to implement this – and all other – recommendations exacerbates the ongoing national shame that is Aboriginal deaths in custody,” she said.“The treatment of our people, particularly when it comes to the administration of the justice system, is a deep stain on this country. They are being failed by an oppressive system that continues to deny their rights.”Kiss said “immediate, tangible steps” must be taken to ensure that incarceration is a last resort, including investment in preventive measures to stop people from being detained in the first place and to ensure their safety and wellbeing if they are detained.“We need to end this cycle of abuse, injustice, and trauma. In many cases, duty of care is not being administered – from the point of arrest, within police custody, in prisons, and detention facilities,” she said. “People’s lives are at stake and their human rights must be upheld.”

A spokesperson for Rowland said any death in custody was a tragedy.

The spokesperson said the attorney-general was working with her state and territory counterparts to “accelerate progress on justice targets and achieve government commitments under the National Agreement on Closing the Gap”.

“The Attorney-General strongly encourages state and territory governments to review their practices and continue to work toward effective solutions that ensure the safety and dignity of all Australians in the justice system,” the spokesperson said.

In Australia, the crisis support serviceLifelineis 13 11 14. In the UK and Ireland,Samaritanscan be contacted on freephone 116 123, or emailjo@samaritans.orgorjo@samaritans.ie. In the US, you can call or text theNational Suicide Prevention Lifelineon 988, chat on988lifeline.org, ortext HOMEto 741741 to connect with a crisis counsellor. Other international helplines can be found atbefrienders.org

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Source: The Guardian