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Social Justice Report 2003: SUMMARY SHEET SIX: PETROL SNIFFING

Media Pack:

SUMMARY SHEET SIX: PETROL SNIFFING

Over the past year, there has been significant
concern expressed about petrol sniffing in Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander communities at the national level. The phenomenon of petrol-sniffing
is, however, not well-understood and there is no reliable national data
on the number of people involved and the extent of resulting damage to
individuals and communities.

There are, however, reported instances of petrol
sniffing being a significant issue in several Indigenous communities across
Australia. The limited research also suggests that there are different
patterns of use of petrol and other volatile substances by Indigenous
people compared to non-Indigenous people.

It has been argued that there are structural problems
in the way governments address issues of petrol sniffing in Indigenous
communities. Because of the lack of reliable data and the absence of any
powerful lobby groups or other agencies with the capacity to ensure that
petrol sniffing remains on the public agenda in anything more than a transient
manner. Petrol sniffing as a public issue owes almost everything to sporadic
media coverage.

In these circumstances, it is difficult to consolidate
an evidence base, to build and sustain links with existing expertise,
or to maintain extensive corporate knowledge on the subject. By identifying
petrol sniffing as an 'Indigenous problem' it has also been marginalised
as a policy issue, with the result that it has not received the attention
and resourcing that it may have if it had been positioned within mainstream
substance misuse policy frameworks.

In September 2002, the South Australian Coroner
brought down his findings in the inquests into the deaths of three Anangu
who were chronic petrol sniffers and lived on the Anangu Pitjantjatjara
Lands (AP Lands) of South Australia. Data collected in 2000 indicates
that, despite an overall decline in the 1990s, the number of people engaged
in petrol sniffing on the AP Lands has begin to increase in recent years.
Approximately 6% of the total Anangu population and 12% of the population
aged between 10 and 35 years of age were sniffers in 2000. Petrol sniffing
had caused at least 35 deaths in the last 20 years in a population of
between 2,000 and 2,500.

'The Coronial Inquest identified the need for
'prompt, forthright, properly planned, properly funded action' and the
importance of effective inter-governmental coordination to achieve this
and sustain it into the longer term. In the year since the Coronial Inquest,
there has been some movement in this direction but overall not enough'
(p150).

Communities on the AP Lands have expressed concerns
about the continuing piecemeal approach to petrol sniffing and a reluctance
to act by governments in the twelve months following the Coronial Inquest.
Governments cite the intractable nature of the issue and the need for
appropriate consultation as reasons for the slow progress to date.

There is significant concern that the discrete
focus on petrol sniffing is potentially being obscured by the level of
bureaucracy. There is concern that petrol sniffing will be submerged within
a sea of other significant issues and not receive the focussed attention
called for by the Coronial Inquest and communities on the AP Lands.

'[G]iven the smallness of the Anangu population,
and the proportion of petrol sniffers within it, why has there been so
little progress in addressing these problems, despite the plethora of
governmental service delivery agencies and committees already in existence?'
(p152).

See Chapter Four of the Report for full details
of the case study of petrol sniffing on the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Lands.

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