Is the Northern Territory government creating another Stolen Generation?

Northern Territory man Josh Poulson among protesters outside the child protection royal commission in Alice Springs

Northern Territory man Josh Poulson among protesters outside the child protection royal commission in Alice Springs Source: AAP

Witnesses at an inquiry into the territory's child welfare system say the continued practice of putting children into non-Indigenous has the hallmarks of another stolen generation.


Currently holding hearings in Alice Springs, the Royal Commission into the Protection and Detention of Children in the Northern Territory has heard evidence regarding the rates of forced removals of at risk Aboriginal children from their families.

 

By law, placement with extended family and the broader Indigenous community must be considered above other options.

 

But Territory Families senior child protection Officer Kirsten Schinkel has admitted her department didn't prioritise placing Indigenous children with kinship carers.

 

The prevailing situation is generating angst and concern within Indigenous communities. They say their peoples connection to Culture and Country is in great danger.

 

The grandfather of a boy who was taken into care says his grandson lost his cultural identity after being removed when he was just seven years old.

 

Appearing before the Commission as C-O, he's described how difficult it's been to introduce the boy, now aged 18, to a culture he doesn't understand.

 

Arrernte elder Margaret Kemarre Turner told the inquiry Indigenous children are raised by all members of a community, not just their biological relatives.

 

She argues kinship care should be looked at more closely when considering where to place vulnerable youngsters.

 

Ms Turner says once a person leaves a community, it's very difficult for them to re-join.

 






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