World
9:34 am AEST March 22 2000

Mandatory laws worsen plight of Aborigines, UN tells Ruddock

AAP -- Levels of Aboriginal incarceration in the Northern Territory were
already unacceptably high and
mandatory sentencing had worsened the plight of indigenous people, an
Australian government
delegation was told today by the United Nations' main race committee.

Minister assisting the Prime Minister on Reconciliation Philip Ruddock
led the delegation to the UN
Committee for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination in Geneva, which
is examining Australia's reports
on race relations between 1992 and 1998.

He was grilled on mandatory sentencing and Australia's native title laws
by three members of CERD
including chief rapporteur Gay McDougall, the US-born Executive Director
of the International Human
Rights Law Group.

A UN spokesman said CERD told Mr Ruddock the federal government should
have done more to
introduce legislation to stop mandatory sentencing by Western Australia
and the Northern Territory.

The committee said figures which showed that Aboriginal people made up
25 per cent of the population
of the Northern Territory but 70 per cent of the prison population were
"astonishing".

And it was "unacceptable" and "unfair" that the rates of incarceration
were made worse by the fact that
mandatory sentencing laws put Aboriginals in a very unequal position and
exposed Aboriginals to
criminal influences at a very young age.

The Committee also questioned Mr Ruddock on amendments to the Native
Title Act, on the funding
and decision-making powers of Aboriginal bodies and on the One Nation
political party.

Ms McDougall said she was surprised that a wealthy developed industrial
country like Australia could
not do more to raise standards of economic opportunity for a simple two
per cent of the population.

Among other criticisms, the committee said Australia's report lacked
information on changes in the
social and economic status of refugees since its previous report and was
short of detail on how
Australia measured the achievements and successes of reconciliation.

Mr Ruddock is due to respond today.

A spokeswoman for the minister said the questions had been expected.

"I don't think the committee raised anything new," the spokeswoman said.

"These are debates we have been having in Australia for some time."
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Truth is a pathless land. --- Krishnamurti
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