As Kumanjayi Little Baby’s family and community have mourned, Alice Springs has again been under the intensity of the national gaze.
On April 25, Kumanjayi Little Baby was reported missing from her bed at the Old Timers town camp, just south of Alice Springs.
Five days later, after a community-unifying effort, her body was found. She was five years old.
Soon after, community members found the man accused of killing her. They called police and now a 47-year-old man has been charged with murder, and other charges we can’t mention for legal reasons.
For the past week, as Kumanjayi Little Baby’s family and community have mourned, Alice Springs/Mparntwe has again been under the intensity of the national gaze; its grief, anger and calls for justice broadcast across the country.
Today, the chief executive of SNAICC, the national peak body advocating for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, Catherine Liddle, on Kumanjayi Little Baby, the grief in Mparntwe, and the questions that need to be asked without turning her death into another political fight.
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