
Police feature in complaints to territory ombudsman
Some prisoners can't even lay complaints due to prison lockdowns or being held in watchhouses, Northern Territory Acting Ombudsman Candice Maclean has told a parliamentary estimates hearing.
Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro defended the reintroduction of spit hoods for youths in custody at the hearing on Tuesday, saying her government was delivering on an election process to crackdown on crime and protect officers.
Ms Maclean said that in 2023-24 there were 2010 approaches to the ombudsman's office, including 369 complaints against police and 453 against correctional services.
As of March 31, 2025, there had been 1820 approaches, including 498 police complaints, 327 against correctional services, 521 against government departments and 39 involving local councils.
"Towards the end of this financial year we expect over 600 police complaints which we consider may be due to increased police presences and operational activity," the Ombudsman said.
The ombudsman's office worked closely with the NT Police professional standards command to ensure fairness of process to both complainants and accused officers, she said.
Around 430 correctional services complaints were predicted towards the end of the financial year, a slightly reduced total than expected.
"We consider this decrease may be due to a number of factors including inability of prisoners to access our office potentially due to lockdowns and being accommodated in watchhouses," the ombudsman told the hearing.
Ms Maclean said her office was engaging with NT Corrections on how things could be improved.
Opposition Leader Selina Uibo asked if the government accepted the previous ombudsman's findings on the risks and lack of evidence supporting the reintroduction of spit hoods for children.
The previous Labor government banned their use but the Country Liberal Party government allowed police and correctional officers to use them again after winning power last year.
The previous NT ombudsman, Peter Shoyer, had recommended the devices not be used in any settings.
In response to Ms Uibo's question Ms Finocchiaro made no apologies for their reintroduction, saying it was an election commitment so "the provision of that tool for police had been provided".
In 2023 the United Nations committee against torture recommended Australia "take all necessary measures to end the use of spit hoods in all circumstances, across all jurisdictions".
The Australian Federal Police and the NSW, Queensland and South Australian police forces all ban the use of the hoods.
Ms Finocchiaro said her government had made law and order the cornerstone of its first budget with a record $1.5 billion investment in corrections, courts and police.
The NT government has also lowered the age of criminal responsibility from 12 to 10 and introduced tougher bail laws.
13YARN 13 92 76
Lifeline 13 11 14

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
2 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Albanese has a ‘narrow conception' of Australia's interests ahead of meeting with Xi Jinping
Sky News host James Morrow says Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's trip to China to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping is 'commercially based'. 'Labor and the Albanese government pulling further and further away from the United States and moving closer and closer to China,' Mr Morrow said. 'The excuse that Albanese gives for this is he says, 'I'm acting in Australia's interest', but he has got now such a narrow conception of what Australian interests are that they are entirely commercial and economic, and they have no idea about principle. 'The great failure of this government has been that it has thought that we could shelter under the security umbrella of the United States while still maintaining trade with China.'

News.com.au
3 hours ago
- News.com.au
‘Oblivion': Graph shows truth we all missed
When the Abbott government was elected in a landslide at the 2013 election winning 90 out of 150 lower house seats, it represented a level of numerical ascendancy in the lower house of parliament seen only once in the last 40 years of politics prior to the recent federal election. The previous instance occurred in 1996 at the election of the Howard government, when the Coalition won 94 out of 148 lower house seats. Since then, to say that things have gone wrong for the Coalition would be an understatement. Their total ranks in the lower house have been more than halved, with the Coalition winning just 43 seats at May's federal election. Exactly why the Coalition failed so spectacularly when their strong belief within the party was that they would be returning to power less than a week before election day, remains a matter of great debate. But there is one factor that is definitively not the Coalition's ally, demographics, with one avenue in particular going against them. When it comes to the various demographic breakdowns whether they be by income, social class or education, the scales get tilted toward the Coalition or toward Labor. For example, at the 2022 election, the primary vote of Australians with a tertiary education favoured Labor over the Coalition by 9 percentage points, 35 per cent to 26 per cent. If we shift the focus to members of the electorate earning $140,000 per year or more, Labor is favoured by 5 percentage points, 35 per cent to 30 per cent. But the greatest divide is not defined by education, income or social class, it's by home ownership. This echoes the findings of studies done on elections in Britain and elsewhere, which concluded that if a voter owns a home, they are significantly more likely to vote for a conservative party than a renter. To paraphrase the commentary of Sydney barrister and writer Gray Connolly: Why would young people vote conservative if they have nothing to conserve? According to the findings of the 2022 Australian National University Election Study, 26 per cent of renters gave their first preference vote to the Coalition, with 37 per cent giving their vote to Labor. On the other in the ranks of homeowners, 38 per cent gave their first preference to the Coalition, with 32 per cent going to Labor. On balance a homeowner was 46.2 per cent more likely than a renter to give their first preference vote to the Coalition. Home Ownership According to census figures analysed by AMP, the overall home ownership rate peaked almost 60 years back in 1966. It has since declined significantly, but the fall in overall ownership masks vast differences between different age demographics over time. In terms of a breakdown by age demographic, figures from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) reveal what proportion of households were homeowners, starting with Australians born 1947 to 1951 at the 1976 census. The AIHW has since measured each subsequent five-year block in births for home ownership at each Census, with the latest measured at the 2021 census those born between 1992 and 1996. The figures reveal that despite pandemic-related distortions at the latest data point making things appear more favourable, the households of Australians aged 25 to 29 had the lowest home ownership rate for any five-year age demographic block on record. But it's not just young people who are doing worse than their predecessors. Almost every generation that has come after the eldest Baby Boomer cohort, who were born 1947 to 1951, has had a worse rate of home ownership than the generation that came before it. For example, for Australians born in 1967 to 1971 who were aged 50 to 54 at the last census, the home ownership rate was 72.4 per cent, compared with 79.6 per cent when those born 1947 to 1951 were that same age. For people aged 35 to 39 at the 2016 census, the home ownership rate was 59.2 per cent, compared with 69.1 per cent for those born 1952 to 1956 and 72.3 per cent for those born 1947 to 1951. This downward trend in home ownership rates repeats itself again and again across the last five decades and all the various age demographics. The Current State Of Play According to recent Redbridge polling, the Coalition is behind Labor in the 18 to 34, 35 to 49 and 50 to 64 age demographics, falling to third in the 35 to 49 age demographic, behind Labor and others, a collection of third-party candidates outside of the Greens. Meanwhile, the Coalition leads in primary vote in just one age demographic, voters aged 65 and over. Looking Ahead From a self-interested perspective based purely on electoral demographics, deteriorating rates of home ownership are not a problem for Labor or the Greens, with renters significantly more likely to vote for them than they are for the Coalition. But for the Coalition, they are a political time bomb. The average age of a rank-and-file member of the Liberal Party is 68 and their ranks continue to dwindle, as existing members pass on and there is increasingly little interest from younger demographics to replace them. A further deterioration in home ownership and household formation rates would be an electoral demographic disaster for the Coalition and there is little evidence of the current downward trend being arrested. In a vacuum it would seem the Coalition has three choices, align itself more strongly with renters as it did relatively successfully in the decades following World War 2, commit to policies that will credibly dramatically raise rates of home ownership or continue on its march toward electoral demographic oblivion.

ABC News
3 hours ago
- ABC News
Environmental issues sidelined in Tasmanian state election
Less than a week out from the Tasmanian election, the Liberals and Labor have steered clear of announcements for stronger environmental protection, instead focusing on industries and "brands". The snap election comes after the State of the Environment report was tabled in parliament last September — the first such report in Tasmania for 15 years, despite it being required every five years. It showed that out of 29 environmental indicators, 16 were deteriorating, six were stable, two were improving and five lacked enough data to be fully known. This included a worsening situation for threatened flora and fauna, the increasing fragmentation of native vegetation, the spread of invasive weeds and animals, and a lack of reliable data for water quality. The report made 16 recommendations, the Liberal government accepted six in full. At last year's state election, the Liberals' environment promises — under the title "keeping our parks and environment strong" — listed a range of funding for visitor infrastructure in state and national parks. The only part that referenced environmental outcomes was for captive breeding programs for the endangered Maugean skate, and for the critically endangered swift parrot and the orange-bellied parrot, each of which face ongoing pressure from industry. On Friday, Premier Jeremy Rockliff said the environment was part of Tasmania's "brand". "It's about getting the balance right. "Half of Tasmania is in reserve. That sends a very clear message to the world of our environmental credentials." A significant proportion of that "reserve" land is the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area. Mr Rockliff also listed the state's new container deposit scheme as a positive environmental outcome. He earlier announced a plan to make it easier for large industrial companies to negotiate and complete trade waste improvements with TasWater. In December, excessive trade waste from the Cadbury factory in Hobart caused a sewage treatment plant to fail, resulting in mostly untreated sewage flowing into the River Derwent for several days, with beaches closed. Labor's only environment announcement this campaign involved streamlining environmental approval for industries, including renewable energy. Labor leader Dean Winter used the regional forest agreement (RFA) as an example — a process in which native forest logging is "exempted" from additional assessment under federal environmental laws. Mr Winter said the idea was to speed up environmental assessments for projects like the Robbins Island wind farm. In a review of federal environmental laws by Professor Graeme Samuel — released in 2021 — the RFA system was described as providing "weaker" environmental protection, and that oversight was "insufficient". This month, state-owned logging company Sustainable Timber Tasmania released its updated list of native forest coupes that can be logged, burnt and re-sown at short notice, covering 39,417 hectares. Of those, about 6,300 hectares includes breeding areas for the swift parrot. When asked about environmental policies this election, Mr Winter said he wanted to address water quality. "We've seen over the course of the last 11 years, for example, the number of sewage spills into our waterways continuing," Mr Winter said. A report into Tasmania's water and sewerage industry, released last month, showed there were 64 sewer breaks and chokes per 100 kilometres of sewer — three times worse than similar-sized water authorities interstate. Just under a quarter of the state's potable water remains unaccounted for — or goes missing — each year. TasWater continued to miss service standard targets, with the water authority blaming "decades of underinvestment". Tasmania's Environment Protection Authority (EPA) was separated from the environment department in 2022, in an effort to make it more "independent" from government. But the Tasmanian Greens say this intent has not been achieved, because the EPA still has a "statement of expectation" from the environment minister. This includes that the EPA will "support sustainable development in Tasmania", which the Act defines as "the use, development and protection of natural and physical resources". The term, to "protect the environment of Tasmania", was removed from the Act in 2008 and has not returned. Greens leader Rosalie Woodruff said both major parties were sidelining environmental protection. "The Liberal and Labor party both are prepared to log and burn native forests in a climate emergency, and we know they are both backing big salmon corporations." An Invasive Species Council forum this month heard how Tasmania's environmental issues were continuing to have impacts on people's health, on volunteer groups and on farmers. Finn Pasanen is blind in his left eye due to toxoplasmosis, contracted by his mother while he was in utero, likely caused by stray and feral cats that frequented their backyard. Mr Pasanen said it had greatly affected his hand-eye coordination and depth perception, and he suffered motion sickness and headaches. "The best thing to do to reduce toxoplasmosis is getting your cats to not roam freely, [it's] much less likely to develop it themselves and become a vector," he said. TasFarmers chief executive officer Nathan Calman said toxoplasmosis was also causing problems for lamb and wool producers. The State of the Environment report found that invasive animals were continuing to increase as an issue in Tasmania, particularly cats and fallow deer. Landcare Tasmania chief executive officer Peter Stronach told the forum that volunteer groups were under increasing pressure due to the ongoing spread of invasive weeds. He said they remained heavily reliant on fundraising but government support was sporadic. "We don't get the funding that we need, and when the funding does come it's quite haphazard, to say the least," he said.