麻豆社madou

Young unidentifiable teenage boy holding hes head at the correctional institute in black and white, conceptual image of juvenile delinquency, focus on the wired fence. Young unidentifiable teenage boy holding hes head at the correctional institute in black and white, conceptual image of juvenile delinquency, focus on the wired fence.

People with disability suffer cruelty and maltreatment in detention: report

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Ben Knight
Ben Knight,

The extent of neglect and abuse suffered by people with disabilities in prison and custody systems in Australia has been revealed.

People with disability听are subjected听to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment in incarceration. Those are the findings of a new report led by researchers from 麻豆社madou Sydney, which unveils the systemic and ongoing maltreatment and harm that occurs when people with disability听are detained听in Australia.

Vulnerable people are held in solitary confinement, are detained indefinitely, have their medications withheld, suffer physical and sexual assault, and are regularly humiliated, the report finds.听It also uncovered the demeaning and dehumanising practices听that people听with听disability听regularly experience in places of detention, including being strip searched and having to beg for sanitary products.

鈥淚鈥檓 aware of disabled children put into solitary confinement and people with intellectual disability strapped into restraint chairs and injected with tranquillisers,鈥 says Mr Patrick McGee,听Churchill Fellow and Coordinator Australians for Disability and Justice, who is the first author of the report. 鈥淭hey are scared, they are fearful, there is no one to tell them what is happening or when it might end.鈥

shines a light on the lived experience of people with disability in institutional detention settings.听It details the findings of a National Forum attended in 2023 by academics, researchers, and advocates to produce a blueprint for state and territory governments to safeguard people with disabilities in detention and protect them from institutional ill-treatment and abuse.

鈥淎ustralia regularly detains young people and adults with disability every year,鈥 says Dr Maree Higgins, Senior Lecturer at the School of Social Sciences at 麻豆社madou Arts, Design & Architecture, and co-author of the report. 鈥淪ome听are held听indefinitely; others cycle in and听out of prisons and other places of detention.

鈥淢any are subjected to traumatic, cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment.鈥

Media enquiries

For enquiries about this story and interview requests, please contact听Ben Knight, News & Content Coordinator, 麻豆社madou Arts, Design & Architecture.

Phone:听(02) 9065 4915
Email:听b.knight@unsw.edu.au


People with disability are dramatically overrepresented in detention. Photo: Adobe Stock.

鈥淢ost Australians would be horrified to know the extent of the treatment meted out to vulnerable people in our detention centres,鈥 says 麻豆社madou Professor Emerita Eileen Baldry AO, a co-author of the report.听

The report was launched last week by Commonwealth Ombudsman,听.听

鈥淩eports such as this are crucial for effective monitoring of detention environments. They help inform the work of oversight bodies such as my Office, what issues require closer scrutiny, and how monitoring could听be done听better,鈥 Mr Anderson says.

Cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment

People with disability, particularly those with cognitive impairment and psychosocial disability, are dramatically overrepresented in detention. According to the , almost 39 per cent of people entering prison have a disability. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with disabilities also represent 32 per cent of the prison population.

Ms Taylor Budin, an Indigenous person with a disability and justice advocate with the Intellectual Disability Rights Service, has experienced humiliating treatment first-hand while in detention.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just not safe for people with disability in detention,鈥 Ms Budin says. 鈥淚 was vulnerable to听both听degrading treatment from the prison鈥檚 guards who treated me like a dog, but I was also humiliated and hurt by other prisoners.鈥

Mr Phillip Jenkins, a disability and justice advocate, is also a person with听a disability who has lived experience of detention.听

鈥淚 soon learnt that I was a problem for wanting my health needs met,鈥 Mr Jenkins says. 鈥淭his treatment leaves you without dignity,听it听exacerbates听your vulnerability, and blatantly ignores your fundamental human rights.鈥

Most Australians would be horrified to know the extent of the treatment meted out to vulnerable people in our detention centres.
Emeritus Professor Eileen Baldry

Australian governments are signatories to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with听Disability and have听obligations to ensure that people with disability听are not deprived听of freedoms. In October 2022, the , citing a lack of cooperation from the authorities detaining people with disability.听

Prolonged detention contributes to and exacerbates mental health problems. Many people in detention have traumatic pasts and poor care makes things worse.

鈥淭here is a lack of听basic听services,听high听risk of verbal abuse, physical and sexual violence, and a lack of cultural safety,鈥 Mr McGee says. 鈥淧eople deemed unfit for trial due to cognitive impairment may听be detained听indefinitely.鈥

Systemic reforms needed

Dr Higgins says it is vital to centre and acknowledge the lived experiences of those with听disability听who have experienced detention and develop a National Report Card to make a difference.听

鈥淭his report is unique because little work has been done to give a prominent voice to those听directly affected,鈥澨鼶r Higgins says. 鈥淚t鈥檚听vital that we hear them and include them in the听decision-making听process to find solutions that work.鈥澨

The report details several recommendations for governments to protect people with disability in detention, including abolishing indefinite detention and听establishing听a well-funded, independent听body to advocate for forensic patients and their families.听

鈥淭he听recurring听message听was the need for greater oversight, monitoring, and accountability in places of detention,鈥 Dr Higgins says. 鈥淲e have a proactive obligation to prevent people with a disability听suffering听ill-treatment听which听extends to places of detention.鈥澨

Legislative reform to address shortcomings of the legal system, including ensuring access to Medicare in detention and legislating requirements for appropriate medical and disability assessment for all people entering detention, was also recommended.听

鈥淭his is a call for care and love that is desperately missing from the system to date,鈥 Dr Higgins says. 鈥淲e hope this report stimulates meaningful action and fosters a deeper understanding听both听of what is happening and what must change.鈥