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Lidia Thorpe puts forward motion on ‘shameful’ deaths in custody numbers

Sarah Basford Canales

Independent senator Lidia Thorpe has put forward a motion in the Senate this morning, extending sympathies to the families of the 17 First Nations people who have died in custody this year, including 24-year-old Walpiri man Kumanjayi White who died in May after being restrained by officers at an Alice Springs supermarket.

Labor and the Greens have agreed to pass the motion acknowledging White’s death while extending its sympathies to the families of the 602 Indigenous deaths in custody since the release of the 1991 Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody.

The motion also called on all parliamentarians to work constructively together to address the over-incarceration and deaths of First Nations people in custody.

While moving the motion, Thorpe said:

These are not just statistics. They are sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, cousins, siblings, grandchildren – lost to a system that continues to harm our people … This motion is about preventing that pain from continuing. It’s about doing what we can, here and now, to ensure that Kumanjayi’s death is not just another entry in a long and shameful list. It must be a turning point.

Thorpe also spoke of the impact on her family after the death of her cousin, Joshua Kerr, a 32-year-old Yorta Yorta and Gunaikurnai man who died in custody in August 2022.

The motion this morning coincides with the release of the latest Closing the Gap report, which revealed only four of 19 targets were on track to be met by 2031. The 2023-24 data showed the national rate of Indigenous youths in detention had increased compared with the previous year.

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Andrew Messenger

Andrew Messenger

96 homeless Queenslanders banned from emergency accommodation under crackdown

96 homeless Queenslanders have been banned from emergency accommodation for six months within the first two months of a new crackdown.

Director-general Mark Cridland revealed just under 4000 people were currently living in a hotel or motel paid for by the department under its ‘immediate housing response’ scheme.

Of the 96 people evicted under a new policy implemented in May, 59% had been evicted as a result of bad behaviour or a breach of hotel rules, he said.

He said no people had yet been banned from both social housing and emergency accommodation, under the government’s new three-strike policy.

Four “first and final notices were issued for dangerous and severe behaviors” have been issued since the policy came into effect in July, according to minister Sam O’Connor.

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