Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
ABC News
ABC News
Health

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese flies into Alice Springs amid calls for action on alcohol-fuelled crime crisis

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has flown into Alice Springs after days of pressure from the federal opposition and national media over crime and alcohol-fuelled violence in the town.

Mr Albanese will join Northern Territory Chief Minister Natasha Fyles for a meeting with the Central Australian Aboriginal Congress health service, in a visit government sources say was delayed last year.

The federal government has already rejected calls from Opposition Leader Peter Dutton and Alice Springs Mayor Matt Paterson for the Australian Defence Force or federal police to be deployed to the town.

The idea was also dismissed by NT Police Commissioner Jamie Chalker in an interview on ABC RN Breakfast this morning.

"I'm not sure that the imagery of Australian soldiers, who are here to serve our country, dealing with First Nations people in a way that sees them having to arrest them and place them in police vehicles and alike, is the imagery we really want for Australia," Commissioner Chalker said.

Figures released last week by NT Police show a 43 per cent increase in assaults in Alice Springs over the past year, including a 53 per cent increase in alcohol-related assaults.

Commercial break-ins and home invasions have jumped by more than 50 per cent.

Commissioner Chalker said police data collected since the sunsetting of Intervention-era alcohol bans six months ago showed a significant increase in alcohol-related harm.

He said "functionally broken" services in remote communities over decades were pushing residents into service centres such as Alice Springs.

He said a "broader conversation" was needed about the factors behind the population shift and levels of crime and alcohol addiction.

"The jails are full," he said.

"You cannot arrest your way out of these social problems … there is an inherent social cause that is driving this propensity for violence and offending."

Aboriginal health boss allegedly threatened by intruders demanding alcohol 

The NT government has been defending its handling of the end of the Intervention-era alcohol bans, despite criticism from Aboriginal health groups about a lack of consultation and planning for the change.

Congress chief executive Donna Ah Chee, who will meet with Mr Albanese this afternoon, was among the Aboriginal leaders who called for an "opt-out" transition period before the bans expired.

In an interview with ABC Radio Alice Springs on Tuesday morning, she said she personally had been threatened by intruders who tried to break into her home overnight, demanding alcohol.

"I have never felt this unsafe and frightened in the 36 years I've lived in Alice Springs," she said. 

Ms Ah Chee said she was threatened with a heavy-duty spanner as she tried to leave the house, before the alleged intruders smashed the back and side windows of her car.  

New restrictions to alcohol sales in Alice Springs have been announced by retailers over the past week, though critics say they are inadequate. 

NT Labor senator Malarndirri McCarthy this morning said stronger industry action was needed "not just in Central Australia — but right across the Northern Territory".

Ms Ah Chee said the NT had struggled with high levels of alcohol addiction and alcohol-fuelled violence even when the blanket bans were in place.

But she said their abrupt removal had had a disastrous effect and "immediate" action was now needed.

"For me, I don't care if it's the NT government or the Commonwealth, or together," she said.

"They need to do something about availability and reducing the supply alcohol in this town."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.