City
Epaper

Trends in welfare of Indigenous Australians 'deeply troubling': Australian minister

By IANS | Updated: August 1, 2024 11:20 IST

Canberra, Aug 1 The Minister for Indigenous Australians Malarndirri McCarthy has described a new government report on the ...

Open in App

Canberra, Aug 1 The Minister for Indigenous Australians Malarndirri McCarthy has described a new government report on the welfare of First Nations people as deeply troubling.

The Productivity Commission, the government's primary review and advisory body, on Wednesday published its latest report on Closing the Gap, the national strategy to reduce the structural disadvantages faced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, Xinhua news agency reported.

The report found that five of the 19 Closing the Gap targets are on track to be met and that progress on four targets has gone backwards.

According to the new data, the number of Indigenous Australians imprisoned, taking their own lives and losing their children to out-of-home care has increased from baseline levels.

In 2021, 34.3 per cent of Indigenous children commencing school were considered developmentally on track, down from 35.2 per cent in 2018.

McCarthy, the Minister for Indigenous Australians, said in a statement on Thursday that a bipartisan approach was needed to close the gap.

"These figures are deeply troubling, but I am determined to work in partnership with First Nations Australians, the Coalition of Peaks and State and Territory governments to bring about positive change," she said.

"I will be reaching out to my colleagues across the parliament to seek a bipartisan approach to Indigenous affairs."

The life expectancy gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians has narrowed, the report said, but a target of zero gap by 2031 is not on track.

Indigenous people born in 2020-2022 had a life expectancy of 71.9 years for males and 75.6 years for females compared to 81.2 years and 85.3 years for non-Indigenous males and females respectively.

Suicide was the leading cause of death for Indigenous Australians aged 15-39 in 2022.

Targets concerning healthy birth weights of Indigenous children, the proportion of Indigenous children enrolled in preschool, Indigenous employment and the proportion of Australia's land mass and sea area covered under Indigenous legal rights are on track to be met.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentSalman Khan postpones UK tour in light of Pahalgam attack

ThaneThane: 18-Year-Old Boy Drowns in Railadevi Lake Due to Unpredictable Water Level

NationalSexually Explicit Content on OTT, Social Media: Supreme Court Issues Notice to Centre

NationalTelangana CM discusses Operation Kagar, Peace Committee's appeal with advisors

InternationalIndian Special Envoy meets Afghan Foreign Minister to discuss bilateral cooperation and investment opportunities

International Realted Stories

InternationalPresight to present AI-powered solutions at FDC Summit in Cairo

InternationalUS Embassy files FIR against man and agent for visa fraud using fake documents

InternationalEU refuses to lift sanctions on Chinese officials over ongoing Uyghur rights abuses in Xinjiang

InternationalAt least 68 killed in US airstrike on Yemen migrant detention centre

InternationalPutin thanks North Korean leader for troop deployment to Russia: Reports