I think people might not understand what happens when you put a child in prison - and how it can lead to a bright, hopeful future turning into whole life behind bars.

First, young kids are usually arrested and locked up on remand for minor, non-violent offences.
Theft, property damage, motor vehicle offences - I'm not saying these things aren't bad - but they're behaviours born of need, impulse and boredom. They are not malicious or cruel.

So these kids are picked up by police, not necessarily very gently either, locked up &
hauled before a court. Maybe they're granted bail, maybe not. if they're Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander they are less likely to be granted bail than if they are non-Indigenous.

If they get bail, chances are they'll be put on conditions they have no chance of complying with
E.g. stick to a curfew when they have no regular access to a car or public transport to get home, and someone's late to pick them up. Non-association orders that mean they can't see their friends, or neighbours, or cousins, which they invariably and predictably break.
If they don't get bail, or if they get sent to detention when they breach their bail, they are locked up in youth detention centres on remand.

That means being separated from their families, community, taken out of school and locked in a cell.
That's not good for a kid. It's even worse if you have trauma, mental health issues, disability, cognitive impairment or rly ANYTHING going on for you at all.

We know the majority of kids in detention have some form of disability - guess where there's no access to NDIS? Prison.
Youth detention centres are also notoriously understaffed so kids get subjected to long periods of "lock down" in their cells where they can't go outside, exercise, go to school. They get bored and angry and sad and agitated.

Like any of us would. Like kids do.
Guards / staff are not trained to deal with sad, traumatised kids or kids with disabilities; so they get frustrated and angry with the kids. They punish them for perceived misbehaviour. They lock them in their cells or in 'separation' (solitary confinement for kids)
So kids act up. They get so upset and frustrated by this absolute disaster of a system and the way that they are being treated that they break something, or push someone, or try to break out and all of a sudden they're charged with property damage or assault or inciting a riot
and BOOM there you have it. Kid gets locked up for shoplifting a baseball cap or going for a joyride... and now they're in prison facing charges of assault or tying to escape custody or starting a riot.

And that cycle happens again and again and again.
All because politicians decide to prioritise the political kudos they can get from 'tough on crime' measures that do nothing to keep anyone safe, over the humanity and futures of children who need our help.

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More from @SophieTrevitt

25 Apr
Head of NT News @DeniseCahill18 urges the NT Government to exercise caution when implementing youth justice law reforms that could impact generations of children to come.

It's not every day I agree with the NT News, but here we go.. #ntpol

Thread 👇 ImageImage
For decades, children around the country ~ but particularly First Nations kids ~ have been let down by Labor and Liberal Government's obsession with law-and-order state election campaigns. In fact, everyone has been let down - because our communities are none the safer for it.
This is not a problem unique to the Territory - although the NT Government's backflips when it comes to youth justice reform have been particularly monumental in recent years.

I've written about them here: theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
Read 11 tweets
23 Mar
I know everyone's fixated on Parliament House, and fair enough some horrific stuff is going down, but right now the Northern Territory Government is announcing reforms that will see the number of Aboriginal children thrown into prison cells SKY ROCKET. newsroom.nt.gov.au/mediaRelease/3…
These reforms are so regressive and harmful. They fly in the face of the Royal Commission, and will only drive more children into police and prison cells (and if you think conditions have improved in youth detention since the Royal Commission, my experience is that they have not)
There are 43 times the number of Aboriginal children locked up behind bars in the NT than non-Indigenous children. When I was a lawyer in Alice, there were ZERO non-Indigenous kids behind bars. Now the NTG wants to build new prisons to fill with more of kids - it is disgraceful.
Read 7 tweets
22 Mar
This is terrible. These knee-jerk, highly politicised, dangerous law reforms will take the NT back to pre-Royal Commission days, filling up youth prisons with Aboriginal kids the way they were prior to @4corners expose on the abuse in Don Dale. #ntpol

ntnews.com.au/news/politics/…
I don't know how to be any clearer: what didn't work then, is not going to work now. Making bail tougher, locking more kids up on remand, slapping on GPS devices.. is not going to keep people safe - it's going to criminalise more children and hurt everyone in the long run.
Final thing - youth prisons in the NT are pressure cookers of abuse, unmet physical, mental and emotional needs, overcrowding and harm. They are no place for children - particularly not kids who have tough stuff going on in their lives. These places break kids. I saw it.
Read 4 tweets
16 Sep 19
THREAD: Extremely grateful to be at this @Change_Record event today hearing from MPs, experts and an extraordinary Aboriginal woman Jess about her experience of incarceration #aisles #indigenousX #prison
Jess was made a ward of the state as a child, dad had schitziphrenia, mother had addiction issues, and Jess described “finding acceptance in all the wrong people and they made me feel safe”
“Everyone I trusted hurt me. Everyone in the system who should protect kids didn’t. The label the police give you is like you’re an animal.”
Read 9 tweets
1 Sep 19
Fascinating (and disturbing) to hear how Cambridge Analytica was set up as a front .org by a company undertaking social media research for military purposes. It then used the same kind of military techniques to target US citizens to influence US election @chrisinsilico #antidote
Incredible. Targeted people they’d identified as susceptible to their messaging, got them to turn out and meet up, until they created a political insurgency that could grow organically @chrisinsilico #antidote @IdeasattheHouse
Colonialism still exists, it’s just digital. Big powers still go into resource rich countries, they just undermine their democracy now, instead of invading them, so they can tap into their resources @chrisinsilico #antidote
Read 16 tweets
5 Jun 19
THREAD: We have the AFP raiding the offices of journalists, intimidating our free press, threatening our democratic right to know, because @AustralianLabor and @LiberalAus have spent the last half decade passing laws that erode these fundamental freedoms #auspol
Late last year Lib & Lab passed amendments to the Espionage Bill which included extremely concerning provisions that (you guessed it) criminalise journalists for publishing about national security matters - even when they are in the public interest
sbs.com.au/news/sweeping-…
Just before Christmas, Labor capitulated to the Liberal party and passed unprecedented, world-first encryption laws that would allow police to force providers to create weak points in encryption services (effectively created vulnerabilities that can be exploited by others)
Read 8 tweets

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