Oz: Aboriginal Prisoners

Human Rights Coordinator (hrcoord@igc.apc.org)
Tue, 27 Jul 1993 08:23:00 PDT


/* Written 6:44 pm Jul 27, 1993 by greenleft@peg.UUCP in greenleft.news */

WA unions support appeal to `send Kerry home'

By Kath Mallot

PERTH - The WA Trades and Labour Council has voted unanimously to
support a national campaign which will put pressure on states and
territories to implement the recommendations of the Royal
Commission Into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, particularly the
recommendation that Aboriginal prisoners should be placed in an
institution as close as possible to the place of his or her
family.

Kerry Wayne Jones is an Aboriginal man currently in prison in far
north Queensland. He comes from New South Wales. Jones has
appealed to Queensland authorities to transfer him to a prison
near his family in NSW. He was initially told that he would be
allowed to transfer, but it now appears that this decision is
being deliberately blocked within the system, either in
Queensland or NSW.

Kerry needs to be near his family, which he has rediscovered
after being torn from them at the age of eight.

Like so many other Aboriginal children, Kerry was stolen into a
white society which never wanted him in the first place, a white
society with its own special agenda for Aboriginal children.

The final indictment of the white policy of forced assimilation
must be, that of the 99 deaths in custody which were examined by
the royal commission, 45 of those deaths were Aboriginals who
were taken away from their families as children.

To support Kerry's appeal, write to: Minister for Justice John
Hannaford, Good Sell Building, Chifley Square, Sydney, NSW 2000;
and Minister for Corrective Services Glenn Milliner, PO Box 195
North Quay, Brisbane Qld.