Another Indigenous person has died in custody - the fifth in Australia since the start of March

An Indigenous inmate at Perth's maximum security Casuarina Prison has died in hospital, adding to a recent spate of Aboriginal deaths in police custody.

An Indigenous inmate at Perth's maximum security Casuarina Prison has died in hospital.

Five Indigenous people have died in custody in Australia within a month. Source: AAP

Another Indigenous person has died in police custody, the fifth across Australia in just over a month.

The latest death involves a 45-year-old male inmate at Perth's Casuarina Prison, Western Australia's main maximum-security prison.

He was taken to Fiona Stanley Hospital on Friday and died on Saturday after undergoing a medical procedure and being placed in intensive care.

"His next of kin have been notified," the WA Department of Justice said on Sunday.
WA Police will prepare a report for a coronial inquiry, in accordance with all deaths in custody.

There's been a spate of other Indigenous deaths in custody across the country over the past month.

Barkindji man Anzac Sullivan, 37, died during a police pursuit in Broken Hill, NSW on 18 March.

Another man died in Victoria's Ravenhall Correctional Centre on 7 March and a woman in her 50s died in custody in NSW on the same day.

A man in his 30s died in NSW on 2 March.
The recent wave of fatalities prompted Indigenous Labor Senator Pat Dodson to warn another royal commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody could be needed unless there are major efforts to address the national scourge.

More than 450 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have died in custody since the release of the 1991 landmark royal commission report.

With the 30-year anniversary of the 339 recommendations next month, Indigenous leaders are demanding more action to fix the shameful statistics.
Senator Dodson pursued bureaucrats at a parliamentary inquiry on 26 March over what action was being taken to address deaths in custody.

"Use your influence, because this is a scandal. An absolute scandal," he told Assistant Attorney-General Amanda Stoker.

Senator Stoker said 91 per cent of the royal commission's recommendations had been fully implemented before noting many drivers of incarceration rates needed state and territory action.


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2 min read
Published 4 April 2021 1:45pm
Updated 4 April 2021 2:03pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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