Removal Of Aboriginal Children At Crisis Point And Rising

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The rates of Aboriginal children removed from their families have increased each year since Kevin Rudd said sorry to the Stolen Generations, and more and more are being placed with non-Indigenous carers, a new report into Indigenous disadvantage has revealed.

In 2008, Labor Prime Minister Kevin Rudd apologised to the victims of past policies of forced removal that lead to the Stolen Generations, promising that the “injustices of the past will never, never happen again”.

But a new report card reveals every year after that promise, the rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children placed on ‘care and protection’ orders, which can lead to removal from their homes, increased, widening the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous rates.

The Productivity Commission into Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage yesterday released its findings into government attempts to ‘close the gap’ between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australia.

It has been almost three years since the last Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage (OID) report was handed down, and the commission says there are “positive” signs. In its official statement, the commission claimed economic outcomes have improved over the long-term, life expectancy has increased and child mortality rates have lowered.

But Australia still jails Aboriginal people at worsening rates, with no change in rates of juvenile detention.

Aboriginal people had rates of suicide almost two times higher than non-Indigenous Australia, and the rates of hospitalisation for self-harm has increased over the past 9 years by nearly 50 per cent.

But the report reveals startling figures on the rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children placed on ‘care and protection orders’, which lead to their removal from their families.

The number has jumped dramatically, from 11.3 per 1000 children in 2003-04 to 49.3 per 1000 children from 2012-2013.

Child care and protection orders. Source: Productivity Commission.

When a notification is substantiated, and a further intervention required, child protection departments can apply to courts to place the child on a care and protection order, which can lead to their removal from their homes.

The rate for non-Indigenous children increased from 2.6 per cent to 5.7 per 1000 children over the same period.

That means the gap between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children jumped from 8.7 to 43.6 care and protection orders per 1000 children.

While the most common cause for child protection notifications for non-Indigenous children was ‘emotional abuse’, the majority of notifications for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children was for ‘neglect’, with 40.1 per cent of substantiations due to this reason, and 33.8 per cent due to emotional abuse. In comparison, 40.1 per cent of substantiations for non-Indigenous children were for emotional abuse.

The report finds substantiated child protection notifications for Aboriginal children aged 0-17 years had increased from 29.5 per 1000 children in 2009-10 to 37.9 per 1000 children between 2012-2013.

That’s despite the substantiation rate of non-Indigenous children remaining at 5 per 1000 children over that same period.

The report also found more Aboriginal children are being placed with non-Indigenous carers, against the Aboriginal Child Placement Principle.

Nationally, the number of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander children who were placed with non-Indigenous carers had increased, fluctuating between 23.3 per cent and 31.2 per cent from 2004 to 2013.

It found the number of Aboriginal children placed with other Aboriginal families had decreased from 27.5 per cent to 16.3 per cent.

About 52.5 per cent of removed Aboriginal children were placed with other relatives or kin.

State and Territory breakdowns were not included in the report, but the Productivity Commission noted the different definitions of child abuse and neglect made “it difficult to obtain consistent and comparable national data”.

Launched in 2004, New Matilda is one of Australia's oldest online independent publications. It's focus is on investigative journalism and analysis, with occasional smart arsery thrown in for reasons of sanity. New Matilda is owned and edited by Walkley Award and Human Rights Award winning journalist Chris Graham.

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