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As the elite FLOCK to an Australian capital city for art and parties... the poor face an army of security guards: CANDACE SUTTON exposes disturbing crisis at popular tourist spot
As the elite FLOCK to an Australian capital city for art and parties... the poor face an army of security guards: CANDACE SUTTON exposes disturbing crisis at popular tourist spot

Daily Mail​

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Daily Mail​

As the elite FLOCK to an Australian capital city for art and parties... the poor face an army of security guards: CANDACE SUTTON exposes disturbing crisis at popular tourist spot

It is the time of year when Sydney and Melbourne 's elite flock to Australia's booming northern-most city of Darwin for its horseracing carnival, prestigious Aboriginal art fair and, this year, the lawyer's picnic that is the trial of Netflix star Matt Wright. Meanwhile, Thompson Nganjmirra, 76, is sitting in a park in central Darwin. He nervously eyes a growing storm in the distance and wonders whether he will have to spend the night sleeping in the rain. Thompson tells the Daily Mail that he is one of Darwin's 'long-grassers' - the local name for the city's homeless population. They are known as such because they slept and begged in the tall spear grasses which once ringed the city. Sitting in Civic Park, just a few hundred metres from the Northern Territory Parliament and Supreme Court complex, Thompson is without a regular bed to sleep in or even a blanket. He has been caught short in the rain before. Darwin is a city divided. By most indicators, it is booming. Property prices have surged and rents are high. The warm, dry summer attracts a huge influx from out of state and a party-like atmosphere in town. Meanwhile, the Northern Territory's homelessness rate is twelve times the national average. Ninety per cent of the homeless in Darwin are Indigenous, many sleeping in the city's parks and bushland. 'Sometimes it's hard to get enough to eat,' Thompson admits. The Daily Mail spent four days recently reporting from Darwin and speaking to the locals - and learned that much has changed in the city over the past six years. That was when Darwin's politicians and civic leaders turned to private security firms to patrol areas of Darwin's CBD and suburbs during the day and night - including the khaki-clad Public Order Response Unit, or PORU, focused on the suburbs; and the 'blue shirts' of Territory Protective Services, who patrol the city's CBD. Also on patrol is Larrakia Nation, a service run by the peak group of the local traditional Aboriginal landowners. The group aims to prevent alcohol-related disputes and resolve problems and conflicts. Thompson shrugs his shoulders at the mention of the 'blue shirts', who, locals said, often wake sleeping people in the night to move them on. 'Some are good, some bad,' Thompson said. 'They tell us we can go here, but not there. It's okay if you have a place to sleep.' He breaks into his native language, Kunwinjku, to speak to his niece, 54-year-old Lillian Yulidji, who is sheltered with her uncle and other relatives under a large park tree. 'Blackfellas are used to them (the blue shirts) now,' Thompson said. A spokesman for the so-called 'blue shirt' company, TPS, said it had been contracted by the NT Police to maintain public order for six years and did not condone violence or ill-treatment of Darwin residents. With Darwin's peak tourist season underway - the art fair lasting four days, attracting buyers from Sydney and Melbourne's elite, and the Darwin Cup running at the Darwin Turf Club at Fannie Bay - both PORU and Larrakia Nation were patrolling the shores of Lake Alexander, at East Point Park. When the Mail visited on an afternoon late last week, Aboriginal family groups were gathered together while white people jogged and exercised along the boardwalks. Sitting amid council signs warning 'no camping or sleeping overnight', the families sat watching the sun sink over the water. Some of the group were drinking. Officers from PORU and Larrakia spoke with them. They dragged one old man off into a van which had a containment unit at its rear, much like a police paddy wagon. Political debate erupts The treatment of the city's homeless population and the government's crime policies are a hot political debate. Darwin mayoral candidate Leah Potter, who is campaigning on an 'end homelessness' ticket at this month's council election, told the Mail 'it is not a crime to homeless'. Potter was furious about plans by the NT government to further expand its law enforcement forces. The government wants to arm transit and public housing safety officers - who currently patrol buses, supermarkets and public housing - with firearms as part of a crime reform package. The new police auxiliaries will be on the streets by 2026. 'You can just imagine how that will play out,' she said. 'It is not a crime to be homeless, but what could possibly go wrong?' Meanwhile, the NT Government has just issued a new Bus Dress Code policy, placing signs on buses advising passengers with 'dirty or stained clothes' will be refused travel. 'This is clearly aimed at Indigenous people, the homeless and the mentally ill,' Potter claimed. 'When you have no roof or running water, or access to laundry facilities, meeting these so-called 'standards' is impossible. So, they're punished for poverty.' The Northern Territory Department of Logistics and Infrastructure told the Daily Mail that its Rules of Travel, displayed on all buses, 'ensure a safe and respectful environment for everyone using public transport'. A spokesman said that under those rules, 'a passenger could be asked to leave a bus if they are wearing soiled clothing that may leave dirt, grease, bodily fluids or damage a seat which could be used by another passenger'. They said that drivers or transit officers could 'exercise discretion and ask a person not to board the bus'. However, 'it is extremely rare for someone to be refused entry due to hygiene.' Potter, who runs the Sunset Soup Kitchen in Darwin, is on personal terms with most of the 200 Indigenous rough sleepers who populate the inner city, some of them regularly setting up camp in her street. She is a Territorian by birth, with a rollercoaster history living in Sydney and Melbourne. 'I am campaigning to change the shame, disempowerment and other factors contributing to homelessness,' she said, 'which is inequality, education, health, joblessness, imprisonment, violence against women. 'Aboriginal women are killed in alarming numbers. They are more than 10 to 12 times more likely to be victimised, assaulted and murdered than any other group of women.' But she admits she is unlikely to win against the twelve other candidates, and that her Roadmap Out of Homelessness 'is a really hard sell to Territorians'. 'It's about dignity and respect. You've got 40kg blackfellas about to die of chronic disease. They are human beings,' she said. 'But instead the NT Government wants to focus on fining people for breaking the law because sleeping in public parks is illegal.' Although, even at this time of year the daytime temperature in Darwin is a steady 31 degrees, it can drop to 17 overnight, a shivering prospect under a wet tree. Darwin's shelters always fill up fast, especially on rainy nights, and places like Spin Dry out at Berrimah are too far to walk. 'The cost of living crisis has pushed even more people onto the streets of Darwin, and the bus dress policy will mean getting access to food, health care, Centrelink and even family will be more difficult,' Potter said. 'To be excluded from a public service simply because of the clothing you're wearing is appalling.' As for Thompson and his niece Lillian, thankfully, they have found an 'uncle' who can house them for at least one night, and that means they will get a feed. Thompson has been coming to Darwin on-and-off from Oenpelli, a mission bordering Kakadu National Park in West Arnhem Land, for 25 years, and Lillian for 'a long time'. They are considering a return to their country. 'Might go back for Christmas, it's really good back there,' he said.

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