IT'S TIME TO RAISE THE AGE
Do you remember what you were doing at 10 years old? Or do you have a child of your own that age, or a niece or nephew perhaps? What are they like?
Chances are they’re running around outdoors, kicking balls, playing in nature, playing games, maybe playing with dolls or lego or pokemon (or whatever new craze there is). And so they should be.
They are searching for their independence and finding their voice, they’re learning more about the world around them and trying to understand their place in it. They’re also full of energy and fun to be around but they’re also fiercely sensitive and fragile.
They’re not babies or toddlers and they’re not yet teens. They’re children.
They’re not deemed old enough to have a Facebook account - but they are deemed old enough to go to prison.
So why are children as young as 10 being arrested, charged and locked up in prison (juvenile detention, if you will) in Australia? This is far below international standards.
Children need to feel nurtured and supported and loved. Not abandoned.
“Children who come in contact with the criminal legal system are more likely to die an early death, to reoffend and to stay in the criminal legal system - including as adults,” Cheryl Axleby, the co-chair of Aboriginal-led justice coalition Change the Record told SMH. “It’s a quicksand that traps these kids and their families for the rest of their lives.”
We’re setting them up to fail.
According to the Raise The Age website:
In just one year across Australia close to 600 children aged 10 to 13 years were locked up and thousands more were hauled through the criminal legal system.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children are disproportionately impacted by these laws and pushed into prison cells at even higher rates, accounting for 65 per cent of these younger children in prisons.