Skip to content
Government Federal, Indigenous

Major UN review urges Australia to raise age of criminal responsibility, adopt Human Rights Act – RADIO GRABS ATTACHED

Australian Human Rights Commission 2 mins read

Monday, 26 January 2026  

UN review urges Australia to raise age of criminal responsibility, adopt Human Rights Act 

NOTE: Audio grabs from Australian Human Rights Commission President Hugh de Kretser, recorded in Geneva, are attached. 

A major United Nations review of Australia’s human rights record has highlighted serious and persistent gaps in legal protection and outcomes, with countries from around the world urging stronger action, particularly on the rights of First Peoples. 

Australia was reviewed overnight by the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva under the Universal Periodic Review (UPR), a five yearly peer review process where members assess each state’s human rights performance and make recommendations for reform. 

At Australia’s fourth UPR, more than 120 countries made around 350 recommendations to improve our protection of people’s human rights. 

Australian Human Rights Commission President Hugh de Kretser, who is in Geneva for the review, said there were consistent messages from the international community. 

‘As a wealthy, stable democracy, Australia should be leading the world on human rights. This review highlighted many areas where we can and must do better,’ he said. 

‘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.’ 

Countries also consistently raised concerns about racism and discrimination, calling on Australia to strengthen legal protections and address hate speech. 

Another key focus of the review was the need for Australia to adopt a national Human Rights Act, with numerous countries urging the Albanese Government to take action. 

‘A Human Rights Act would require our national government to protect people’s rights. It would prevent human rights violations and give people the power to take action if their rights are breached,’ President de Kretser said. 

‘This reform is long overdue. A Human Rights Act is a missing part of our democracy. It would provide a stronger foundation for addressing many of the issues raised during this review.’ 

Countries further raised concerns about Australia’s treatment of refugees and asylum seekers, disability rights and the need to approach climate change as a human rights issue, particularly given Australia’s impact on neighbouring Pacific nations. 

Countries noted progress since Australia’s last review in 2021 particularly on gender equality and addressing violence against women and children. Countries made clear that sustained and strengthened action in this area is needed.  

‘This is the most significant international review of Australia’s human rights record,’ President de Kretser said. 

‘Australia should accept these recommendations and implement them. Protecting human rights makes our communities fairer, safer and more prosperous.’ 

The Australian Human Rights Commission contributed to the review through its independent submission on Australia’s human rights record. UN human rights bodies and civil society organisations also informed the review. 


Contact details:

[email protected] or 0457 281 897 (calls only, no texts) 

Media

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Political
  • 14/07/2026
  • 10:46
Social Cyber Group

Intelligence Assessment: US Heading for Competitive Authoritarianism; FBI is Key

Key Facts: Several of the wealthiest US tech oligarchs and their political allies in the US administration have by default co-created the information and coercive infrastructure to undermine possible Democrat victory in the mid-term elections This is probably not a coordinated conspiracy but the effects of their anti-democratic acitivity are cumulative US allies will be deeply affected by the outcome of this political battleIn the absence of official assessment from any Five Eyes government on the likely fate of democracy in the United States, a former Australian intelligence analyst has released a discussion document and a summary of it. The…

  • Government Federal
  • 14/07/2026
  • 10:15
International Justice Mission Australia

New eSafety report reinforces the need for stronger guardrails to protect children from livestreamed abuse

14 July 2026 The eSafety Commissioner’s latest transparency report reveals live online sexual exploitation of children persists in an enabling environment on most popular video calling platforms. eSafety’s third periodic transparency report reveals a continued lack of tools to detect and prevent livestreamed child sexual exploitation and abuse (CSEA) across Apple’s FaceTime, Discord’s GoLive and Video Calls, Google Meet, Facebook Messenger live calls, Snapchat and WhatsApp video calls—despite having the technology to do so. Only Microsoft reported using proactive detection tools to detect and disrupt live child sexual abuse in video calls: “On some of our services, we also deploy…

  • Government Federal, Information Technology
  • 14/07/2026
  • 08:00
The Digital Industry Group

Sunita Bose to depart DIGI after seven years as Managing Director

DIGI Media Statement, Tuesday 14 July 2026: The Digital Industry Group (DIGI) has today announced that Sunita Bose will depart as Managing Director in August, after seven years leading the organisation. Ms Bose joined DIGI in February 2019, initially as its only staff member and has overseen a significant expansion of the organisation’s membership, capability and influence in Australia’s digital policy landscape. During her tenure, DIGI more than tripled the industry association’s membership, contributed expertise to reforms – across online safety, privacy, consumer protection, scams, mis- and disinformation, responsible artificial intelligence and the digital economy – as a constructive policy…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.