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In Australian prisons, strip-searches assault women and children. You need to listen
March 5, 2026 By Guest Blogger Leave a Comment

Early this week, the Australian Human Rights Commission, FIGJAM (Formerly Incarcerated Girls Advocates Melbourne), and Flat Out issued a joint report, Ending Strip Searching in Australian Prisons. The report offers eight key findings: there is no evidence of any relationship between strip searching and contraband detection; People in prison experience strip searches as acts of sexual assault and coercive control; strip searches are conducted routinely but rarely uncover dangerous items; less invasive alternatives expose strip searching as unnecessary; people in prison are routinely having their human rights breached by strip searches; children are being forced to strip in front of adult prison guards; the harms of strip searching compound the mass incarceration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples; there is a crisis of secrecy in prison.
Consider the findings concerning children: “In most Australian jurisdictions, children as young as ten are incarcerated and can be subjected to strip searching. Based on data covering varying periods in 2021-2022, it is estimated that, on average, children were subjected to more than 300 strip searches each month in prisons across seven Australian jurisdictions. In the month of April 2022 alone, 127 strip searches were conducted on children at two New South Wales (NSW) youth prisons. Only three searches identified items.” These children are disproportionately “Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, children with disability and drug and alcohol dependencies, and children with complex trauma.” Not that it should matter, but many of the children who have been strip searched were not incarcerated; they were visiting incarcerated parents. A child is a child is a child.
In 2021, we wrote, ““Excessive strip-searching shines light on discrimination of Aboriginal women in the criminal justice system”. An article with that headline appeared yesterday. While the research and argument of the article is unimpeachable, one wonders about the shining light. The discrimination against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women by and in the Australian so-called criminal justice program is a longstanding open secret. In 2018, Human Rights Watch issued a report, which noted, “Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women in prison are the fastest growing prison population, and 21 times more likely to be incarcerated than non-indigenous peers.” A version of that statement, “Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women in prison are the fastest growing prison population”, had appeared in major reports in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015,2016, and 2017. Now it’s 2021, and where are we?”
Where, indeed. This week’s report opens with a foreword by Aunty Vickie Roach, “strong, proud Yuin woman”. The foreword begins, “As a strong, proud Yuin woman who was subjected to strip searches while caged in custody, I can tell you that it is state–sanctioned sexual assault. It is akin to being ambushed, raped and forced to strip naked in front of screws dressed in deliberately authoritarian, intimidating uniforms.” The foreword ends, “I have always fiercely advocated for people in prison, that they are deserving of dignity, and that their human rights must be respected. For us to be called human, we must respect everyone’s human rights. I have told my story far and wide – I have told the prisons, I have told the government, I have told the media and I have told the Yoorrook Justice Commission. Now I am telling you. And you need to listen.”
You need to listen.
(By Dan Moshenberg)
(Illustration: Judy Kuo / Human Rights Law Centre)

“I’m writing this letter so that you can hear my story. I need you to help us.”
February 26, 2026 By Guest Blogger Leave a Comment
Therefore I shall speak not of “natural needs” but of the “existential limit to the satisfaction of needs”. Agnes Heller, The Theory of Need in Marx February began with ProPublica sharing letters written by children currently and previously detained at Dilley Immigration Processing Center in South Texas. There is no processing at Dilley, only the […]

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February 19, 2026 By Guest Blogger Leave a Comment
“Suffer little children, and forbid them not, to come unto me: for of such is the kingdom of heaven.” Matthew 19:14 On February 17, 2026, PBS New reported, “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced recently it will not review Moderna’s mRNA flu vaccine despite late-stage trials showing it was safe and effective.” Dr. Michael […]

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February 11, 2026 By Guest Blogger Leave a Comment
This week, yet again, the world abandoned and betrayed children. Not some children. All children. On Monday, ProPublica published two stories: “The Children of Dilley” and “I Have Been Here Too Long: Read Letters from the Children Detained at ICE’s Dilley Facility”. On Tuesday, The Guardian published a story: “Israeli court blocks life-saving cancer care […]

A Winter of Anguish for Minneapolis Children
February 4, 2026 By Guest Blogger Leave a Comment
But now, ah now, to learn from crises of anguish, advancing, grappling with direst fate and recoiling not, And now to conceive and show to the world what your children en-masse really are. Walt Whitman, “Long, too long America” “A Winter of Anguish for Minneapolis Children”. That’s the headline of an article in today’s […]

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On Martin Luther King Day How far we are from the dreams, Today more than ever, Injustice strikes hard, Over the phone I hear the broken words of a woman, “Her husband was arrested while on his way to work, ‘Show me your papers, where are you from?’” The children are crying too, They […]

If elected, Amanda Burrows would be Vancouver’s first renter and woman mayor
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Who sets housing policy where you live? Renters? Homeowners? Or both? Does anyone in charge of housing policy in your area really know anything about the experience of facing eviction or, more drastically, of being evicted? Recently, Amanda Burrows announced her candidacy for the mayoral nomination of Vancouver. Burrows is “a prominent social justice advocate […]

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In October of 2024, the Afrikan Liberation Hub (ALH) was invited to the G20 South Africa: Kickoff workshop for civil society. The event was hosted in a hotel in inner Joburg that has gained notoriety as a gathering space for civil society organisations and movements; ANEW Hotel eParktonian. We were excited to receive the invitation, […]