Two of the six aboriginal children teargassed by police while in custody in Australia
are being counter-sued by the Northern Territory government for
damaging the prison in an escape attempt, according to court documents.
Prison
footage broadcast by the Australian Broadcasting Corp this week showed
the boys stripped naked, hooded and strapped to a chair, thrown by the
neck into a cell and held in solitary confinement. The video
from a
juvenile detention centre near Darwin in the Northern Territory was shot
between 2010-2014.
Documents from the Supreme
Court of the Northern Territory lodged in June by the boys, whose names
were redacted, outline in vivid detail mistreatment by staff at the
facility, including beatings with batons and the use of teargas.
The documents were part of a lawsuit filed by the prisoners against the Don Dale Youth Detention Centre and its guards, seeking damages for the abuse they suffered while in custody.
In
a July 4 response to those claims, the Northern Territory government
counter-sued, seeking more than A$160,000 ($120,400.00) in damages for
an escape attempt in which two of the boys stole a car, before using it
to ram a roller-door and re-enter the prison.
The government is seeking interest on the damages and the reimbursement of its legal costs.
Lawyers for the two boys named in the escape, Jake Roper and Dylan Voller, declined to comment on the case.
Prime
Minister Malcolm Turnbull ordered a Royal Commission in the treatment
of children in the detention centre, the most powerful inquiry in the
country, although he has rejected calls for a broader national inquiry.
U.N.
Special Rapporteur on Torture, Juan Mendez, said that the use of hoods,
restraints and teargas on Australian aboriginal children in youth
detention centres by police could violate the U.N. treaty barring
torture.
The Northern Territory's corrections
minister was sacked on Tuesday, just hours after the broadcast, and has
since suspended the use of hoods and restraints on children.
The
case highlights concern about the disproportionate numbers of
aboriginal youth in custody, with indigenous leaders calling for
politicians to deal with the wider issue of the treatment of Aborigines
in Australia.
Aborigines comprise just three
percent of Australia's population but make up 27 percent of those in
prison and represent 94 percent of the Northern Territory's juvenile
inmates.
Australia's roughly 700,000 indigenous
citizens track near the bottom of almost every economic and social
indicator for the country's 23 million people. ($1 = 1.3289 Australian
dollars)
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