This may be a simplistic few words but let’s think it through – how relevant is this in today’s remote communities?
One indication to the drastic social problems confronting young Indigenous Australians living in remote communities is the fact that there are two references before Parliamentary Committees in Canberra that have a direct bearing on two major social problems. They are:
1. Indigenous youth and the criminal justice system
1. Indigenous youth and the criminal justice system
2. Early intervention programs to prevent youth suicide
The population in jails in the Northern Territory for Aboriginal people is 82% of all inmates and over 50% of them are under the age of 30 years. There are around 900 Aboriginal people in gaol with 95% being males.
In the NT there has been a concerning increase in suicides in recent months. The NT news typifies the situation in the following Editorial on 29th September 2010:
AT least seven Territory children have killed themselves in the past month.
That bald statistic masks unfathomable pain - the hopelessness that leads young people to give up on life, the never-ending anguish of the loved ones left behind.
As revealed in the NT News yesterday, the problem is not confined to remote Aboriginal communities, although the suicide rate among indigenous youth is far higher than among non-indigenous children.
Most young Territorians are drunk or stoned - or both - when they kill themselves, proving that alcohol and ganja (Marijuana) can turn someone who is depressed suicidal.
As revealed in the NT News yesterday, the problem is not confined to remote Aboriginal communities, although the suicide rate among indigenous youth is far higher than among non-indigenous children.
Most young Territorians are drunk or stoned - or both - when they kill themselves, proving that alcohol and ganja (Marijuana) can turn someone who is depressed suicidal.
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