Dylan Voller asks Adam Giles for personal apology

2016年07月29日 澳洲华人俱乐部


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The boy in the chair is Dylan Voller, who was a detainee at the Youth Detention Centre in Alice Springs at the time, on July 25, 2016.


Dylan Voller, who was subjected to abuse in Don Dale Youth Detention Centre, has asked the NT Chief Minister and former Corrections Minister to personally apologise to the youths mistreated in custody and to their families.


Voller delivered the message via his lawyer on the day terms of reference were announced for a royal commission into the juvenile justice system in the Northern Territory.


The North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency (NAAJA), which has represented many of the youths, has called for Don Dale's High Security Unit to be closed immediately.


"It is a barbaric and draconian facility which has no place in a justice centre" NAAJA senior youth lawyer Jared Sharp said.


The ABC's Four Corners program on Monday night documented the physical and emotional abuse of Dylan Voller and other teenage boys in the NT's corrections system since 2010.


Images of Voller strapped to a chair while hooded were among the most confronting broadcast on the program, which has gained international attention.


A former youth detention worker this week claimed Voller had been put in the restraint chair on at least three occasions — once when he was under 13 years old.


Voller is serving almost four years jail for attempted robbery, aggravated robbery and recklessly endangering serious harm. He is due for release in October 2017.


Former NT chief justice Brian Ross Martin will head the Royal Commission, which will examine child protection and youth detention over the past decade, look at what violates were committed, what safeguards were in place and if the Northern Territory Government did enough to address issues in the system.


"The royal commission will conduct a thorough and thoroughly independent inquiry into the specific systemic problems identified within the Northern Territory, how those problems arose, the failure to identify and correct them, and appropriate reforms," Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said.


Pressure has been growing on NT Chief Minister Adam Giles to explain his Government's lack of action.


Details of the abuse have been public in the Territory for at least the last two years.


Giles says Government has 'taken responsibility'


Speaking in support of the royal commission on Thursday, Mr Giles softened his rhetoric on young offenders.


"I want to get to the bottom of identifying if there are other youth detainees who have suffered injustices in the system," he told ABC local radio in Alice Springs.


But he would not meet Voller's request.


When asked if he was prepared to provide Voller and other inmates with a personal apology, the Chief Minister said: "I'm sorry that there are too many kids that find their way into the child protection system."


Later in an interview with 7.30, Mr Giles said his Government had "taken responsibility" for the situation in the juvenile detention centre.


"Certainly since we saw the Four Corners report, we moved very quickly to seek to establish a royal commission," he said.


"It's great to be working with both Malcolm Turnbull and George Brandis in how we can jointly run that royal commission."


Don Dale's history of trouble

  • August 2014 - Tear gas used on six juveniles at Don Dale, five of whom were inside their cells. At the time it was reported the juveniles were rioting.

  • October 2014 - The NT Government ordered an independent review of the incident.

  • February 2015 - The NT Government pledged to adopt the review's recommendations. The report found staff used excessive use of force and relied on confinement in Don Dale.

  • September 2015 - The NT's Children's Commissioner detailed gross human rights violations at Don Dale and said the use of tear gas was unnecessary. The Government and then-head of corrections, Ken Middlebrook, dismissed the report.

  • November 2015 - The ABC detailed how Dylan Voller had been hooded and strapped in a restraint chair for almost two hours in March 2015 while in the care of juvenile justice. Adam Giles said at the time that he would investigate. Mr Middlebrook publically defended Voller's restraint.

  • May 2016 - The NT Government amended the Youth Justice Act to specifically allow the use of "mechanical restraints" including chairs and cable ties on children in juvenile custody. During parliamentary debate, frequent references were made to the conditions at Don Dale.


-来自 ABC NEWS


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