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UN Human Rights Delegation Denied Access to NT Prisons and Youth Detention Centers

UN Human Rights Delegation Denied Access to NT Prisons and Youth Detention Centers

A photograph of cell M3 at Palmerston Watch House in the Northern Territory, showing approximately 17 inmates, was taken on February 12, 2025. Source: Supplied / NT Police

The human rights organization announced plans to engage with government officials, independent oversight bodies, civil society groups, and other key stakeholders.

An NT ombudsman investigation into watch houses, tabled for public view on 27 November, described the housing of prisoners in police watch houses as “unreasonable and oppressive”.

In their statement, they noted that a delegation of two experts would be collecting data from prisons, police stations, as well as from migrants and individuals with psychosocial disabilities.

“The conditions for Territory prisoners held in police watch houses during this period was unacceptably poor in several key regards,” reads Haack’s foreword.

“No prisoner, regardless of their offence, should be held in such conditions.”

NT Deputy Chief Minister and Minister for Corrections Gerad Maley answered one question about the UN visit during a press conference to announce a gas agreement on Tuesday. Source: SBS News / Josh van Staden

Lia Finocchiaro’s CLP government said it welcomed the ombudsman NT’s Investigation Report into conditions for prisoners in NT Police watch houses.

In a statement, Maley said the report reflected “years of neglect by Labor”.

“But I want to make clear — we will continue to do what it takes to ensure we reduce crime across the Territory.

“We make no apologies for restoring the rights of victims and the community and I’ve said many times, if you do the wrong thing, we will find you a bed.”

Keeping staff ‘safe’

At a press conference about a significant gas agreement with Beetaloo Energy Australia on Tuesday, Maley would only answer one question about the UN visit, saying the move to block the human rights observer’s was about ‘safety’.

“We worked hard, and we’ve got the prison up to a capacity now where we think it’s operational,” he said.

“This is about keeping the staff safe, and I have got full confidence in the staff with corrections officers [to] do their job, and we’re focusing on keeping Territorians safe.”

NT independent MP Justine Davis. Source: supplied.

Independent MP says it’s ‘really frightening’

NT Member for Johnston Justine Davis told SBS if the government was confident its prisons met baseline standards they’d let the UN inspectors in.

According to the latest annual report published by NT Corrections, the average prison population has spiked by 15 per cent over the past year.

“For any government to say that United Nations Human Rights inspectors cannot come into prisons in those circumstances is just outrageous, and it’s really frightening,” she said.

“We are the most imprisoned population in Australia, and we have the highest rate of Indigenous people imprisoned in the world, per capita.”

NT Court remand statistics show more than 1,000 Territorians were being held without a guilty finding in November.

Davis has called on the government to allow immediate UN access and for their findings to be treated seriously.

The Working Group on Arbitrary Detention plans to release its preliminary observations from its Australian trip on December 12, with a final report presented to UN Human Rights Council in September 2026.

Source: NewsFinale | Read the Full Story…

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