Oz Aboriginal kids '23 times' at risk of jail than non-indigenous counterparts: Report
Sydney, June 29 (ANI): Australian Aboriginal children are '23 times more likely' to face jail than non-indigenous counterparts, a new international report has warned.
The London-based rights organisation, Minority Rights Group International, said that Aboriginal children face more risk as federal government programs are falling short to address extreme hardship within the communities.
Indigenous Australians are also over-represented in the criminal justice system and are 14 times more likely to be sent to jail than non-indigenous people.
Indigenous minors are particularly at risk; indigenous girls and boys are 23 times more likely to be imprisoned than their non-indigenous counterparts, the report said.
The report said that the 2006 program of 'Closing the Gap' has addressed the situation of extreme indigenous disadvantage by setting clear targets to improve the lives of indigenous Australians, the Herald Sun reports.
However, recent analysis indicates that the government is on track to meet only two of its six targets (under the initiative), the report said.
Across a range of indicators such as education, health and life expectancy, they all fall significantly below non-indigenous averages, it added.
The report also pointed out that indigenous communities also appear to have failed to fully benefit from the mining boom. (ANI)