Easier to steal kids than to solve the problem: Former children and families minister

Welfare heads, lawyers and academics will front the Northern Territory child protection royal commission as hearings continue in Alice Springs.

Hands off Aboriginal kids

The disproportionate rate of Indigenous kids in care has previously sparked rallies across the country. Source: NITV News

The inquiry is hearing evidence about the the rising rates of forced removals of Aboriginal children at risk of abuse from their families as National Reconciliation Week continues.

On Thursday, the commission heard welfare workers removed an Aboriginal baby from hospital immediately after she was born, and took her interstate.

The child's grandparents, known as CS and CT, told the inquiry through a translator they were already caring for two granddaughters when the girl was born.
They took her away without permission. That's kidnapping.
CS and CT said they were devastated to discover "white man" government workers had taken the baby without warning, explanation or interpreters.

"She was gone. We didn't know where they took her," they said.
  
"They took her away without permission. That's kidnapping."
  
Former children and families minister Kon Vatskalis lamented strong community distrust and suspicion due to historical and contemporary government mistakes.
  
"It was easier to grab the kid and run, than actually spend time with the family... why didn't we spend six months before helping the family to keep the kid there?" he said.
  
"The Territory has got a sad history of the Stolen Generation... I'm familiar with the trauma and the pain."
Stolen Generations Testimonies
Members of the Stolen Generation Source: http://stolengenerationstestimonies.com/index.php
The former Labor politician said he took over the "poison chalice" child welfare portfolio in 2009, noting notifications of abuse or neglect had grown 400 per cent in the previous eight years while under-resourced staff were burning out at a rapid rate.

Co-commissioner Margaret White praised successful New Zealand child protection government policy that has achieved bipartisan support under that belief that kids are "too important to be a political football".
  
Mr Vatskalis said a commissioner should independently oversee child welfare issues, adding that government policy should look beyond four-year election cycles.
  
"We have to start thinking 10, 20 years, a generation (ahead)," he said.


 

AAP

Share
2 min read

Published

Updated



Share this with family and friends


Subscribe to the NITV Newsletter

Receive the latest Indigenous news, sport, entertainment and more in your email inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to SBS’s terms of service and privacy policy including receiving email updates from SBS.

Download our apps
SBS News
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
Interviews and feature reports from NITV.
A mob-made podcast about all things Blak life.
Get the latest with our nitv podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on NITV
The Point: Referendum Road Trip

The Point: Referendum Road Trip

Live weekly on Tuesday at 7.30pm
Join Narelda Jacobs and John Paul Janke to get unique Indigenous perspectives and cutting-edge analysis on the road to the referendum.
#ThePoint