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Daily London > World Affairs > UN calls on Australia to do better on human rights
World Affairs

UN calls on Australia to do better on human rights

Daily London
By Daily London
Published: January 26, 2026
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Daily London

Australia has been urged to do better on keeping children and Indigenous people out of prison, treat refugees and asylum seekers more fairly and step up its efforts to fight climate change, in a major United Nations review of its human rights record.

The UN Human Rights Council review heard overnight from dozens of countries, many of whom also called on Canberra to implement a national human rights act, potentially including specific hate speech provisions

There was also a call for more action on climate change from some countries, including Pacific Island neighbours Fiji and Nauru.
Australia has been urged to do better on keeping children and Indigenous people out of prison. (AAP)

Australia came in for the heaviest criticism on the age of criminal responsibility, particularly in relation to the overrepresentation of Indigenous children in prisons.

Responding to the review, Australian Human Rights Commission President Hugh de Kretser said as a “wealthy, stable democracy, Australia should be leading the world on human rights”, saying the review highlighted many areas where we “must do better”.

“The strongest concerns raised by countries went to the rights of First Peoples, particularly around inequality, racial discrimination and justice outcomes.  

“In particular many countries called on Australia to raise the age of criminal responsibility. 

“In most Australian jurisdictions, children as young as 10 can be arrested, prosecuted and jailed. This is inhumane and remains out of step with international human rights standards. 

“First Peoples are hit hardest by these unjust laws. The international community is calling us out on this.”

Kathryn Haigh, the first assistant secretary in the Attorney-General’s Department international cooperation and human rights division, said Australian states and territories were primarily responsible for handling their own criminal justice systems but said there’d been improvements since 2021.

Kathryn Haigh, the first assistant secretary in the Attorney-General’s Department international cooperation and human rights division (UN Web TV)

“This has included investing in fit for purpose prisons, rehabilitation and reintegration programmes, diversionary programmes and non-custodial options to reduce recidivism and prison populations, including programmes to reduce the over-representation of First Nations peoples,” she said.

“Australia recognises that it must do more to address the over-representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in the criminal justice system”.

She gave five commitments to the review from the Australian government. 

She said it would review the Disability Discrimination Act in accordance with royal commission recommendations, increase appropriate affordable housing for Indigenous people, deliver the Our Ways – Strong Ways – Our Voices plan to end domestic and family violence, legislating the National Commission and National Commissioner for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and young people, and to increase investment into dementia. 

National Indigenous Australians Agency CEO Julie-Ann Guivarra acknowledged more progress was needed to achieve lasting change for First Nations people but insisted the country was acting with “urgency and resolve”.

“[Australia’s] is a rich, proud and deeply remarkable story, a story of hope, achievement and survival against the odds,” she said.

“Our stories are intertwined, but as the Closing the Gap Report routinely lays bare, there are still too many areas in which we are not together. 

“We have made progress, but real change takes continued effort to listen to First Nations voices, to act and to deliver practical outcomes that improves lives. 

“Our goal is clear, to close the gap and ensure equal life outcomes for all Australians.”

The report is set to be adopted on Friday afternoon (early Saturday AEDT).

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