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Among the poor conditions, a shortage of mattresses to accommodate them and the only available drinking water came from a tap above a communal toilet, which is often clogged.
A lack of medical care, including access to medication was also reported.
Conditions labelled human rights violation
“Prisons in the Territory are too often sites of significant human rights abuses.”

Dr John Paterson says the NT correctional facilities have been criticised for decades through “countless Royal Commissions” including the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody. Source: NITV / SBS News
First Nations people account for 88 per cent of incarcerated adults in the Northern Territory and that number has continued to rise.
“A prison system that warehouses the most disadvantaged and vulnerable — then further punishes them with inhumane conditions — does nothing to improve community safety or break the cycle of incarceration.”
NT corrections overcrowded and understaffed
Rocket Bretherton is the NT Coodinator for the Justice Reform Initiative — an alliance of people who share long-standing professional experience, lived experience, or expert knowledge of the justice system.

Rocket Bretherton has lived experience in the NT justice system and has worked for the past six years advocating to raise awareness of the system’s failings.
“What we are doing at the moment is only setting people up to fail,” the Noongar woman told NITV News.
“Low risk people could be serving their sentences out in the community on a corrections order… there are other options,” Ms Bretherton said.
What is the NT Government doing?
“Since the August election, there has been increase of more than 500 prisoners, and we are taking action to ensure the corrections system remains functional, effective, and safe,” Mr Maley said.
“Instead of real solutions, the Government is planning to rush through legislation that will allow untrained ‘probationary’ corrections officers to work in our prisons, putting lives at risk and paving the way for privatisation.”

NT Independent MP Justine Davis said the CLP Government’s plan to force the Bill through on urgency is an undemocratic approach to policy making that undermines the trust of Territorians. Source: supplied.
Calls to consult with Indigenous leaders
“The Government has an obligation to ensure that those incarcerated are treated with dignity and have access to essential services, healthcare, and culturally appropriate rehabilitation to break cycles of disadvantage and imprisonment,” Dr Paterson said.