The Country Liberal Senator issued a video message direct to the Australian public explaining the outcome of the urgency motion she tabled in the Senate on Tuesday afternoon

Jacinta Nampijinpa Price strongly criticized the government after her efforts to initiate a formal inquiry into the sexual abuse of Aboriginal children were rejected.

The Senator from the Country Liberal Party addressed the Australian public in a video message to report on the outcome of the urgent motion she presented in the Senate on Tuesday afternoon.

In the 11-minute video, she expressed her extreme anger, stating that she had never felt so furious before. At certain points, she struggled to hold back tears while explaining the significance of this issue to her.

During her appeal to the government and cross bench to support a Royal Commission, Ms Price shared several real life examples of First Nations children being sexually abused.

One such story involved her niece, who at 15 years old was ‘beaten and raped by her own father’. 

‘[She] suffered horrific abuse for years and tried at first to get support with family who didn’t believe her…. it wasn’t until my cousin took her to police so she could make a report, and she had the incredible courage to be heard at the age of 17 and testify,’ Ms Price said, fighting back tears.

The Country Liberal Senator issued a video message direct to the Australian public explaining the outcome of the urgency motion she tabled in the Senate on Tuesday afternoon

The Country Liberal Senator issued a video message direct to the Australian public explaining the outcome of the urgency motion she tabled in the Senate on Tuesday afternoon

‘The judge in her case said the abuse had been protracted, prolonged and involved the use of weapons.’

Ms Price accused Labor Senator Tim Ayres of dismissing the importance of her speech in an attempt to shut down her motion.

‘I’m horrified and disgusted,’ she said.

‘Given that I shared those stories in my speech, that Senator Tim Ayres would proceed to make light of Kamahl during the referendum in his speech was just beyond words.

‘How absolutely degrading to sit there and hear that, and witness that, and be spoken at by a male senator in that fashion, after sharing those stories of abuse.’ 

The comments that Ms Price are referring to were made immediately after her own speech.

Mr Ayres said: ‘Of course child sexual assault is abhorrent, and everybody in this place would condemn it. 

‘Like many of the interventions by those opposite, this is all about the politics and not about the solution. It’s always about the politics, never about the solution. 

‘We will, having accepted what happened over the course of the weekend, listen carefully and continue to proceed in a careful and deliberate way. We will listen carefully to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.’

His comments regarding Kamahl – who famously changed his position on the referendum several times over during the debate – was a pointed comparison to Opposition Leader Peter Dutton’s apparent backflip on his own commitment to hold a referendum on constitutional recognition.

‘He changed his mind more quickly and more often than Kamahl. At least Kamahl is popular,’ Mr Ayres said.

Daily Mail Australia has contacted Senator Ayres’ office for comment. 

Ms Price accused Labor Senator Tim Ayres of dismissing the importance of her speech in an attempt to shut down her motion

Ms Price accused Labor Senator Tim Ayres of dismissing the importance of her speech in an attempt to shut down her motion

Ms Price said she took Australia’s comprehensive rejection of the Indigenous Voice to Parliament at the October 14 referendum as a mandate to pursue this inquiry.

She, along with the Coalition, is also seeking an audit into spending in Indigenous Affairs, to stop the ‘drizzle down’ approach which sees huge amounts of money being poured into services which seem to do little to help those most at need.

Three Indigenous senators; Ms Price, Kerrynne Liddle and Lidia Thorpe, all joined forces in August to push the matter through the Senate, but it narrowly failed. 

‘To ignore Indigenous children in this country who are suffering, generation after generation, from sexual abuse, is, I think, absolutely abhorrent,’ she said in her message to fans.

But critics of the proposal said it was no more than a Coalition attempt to ‘demonise First Nations people’ and a disingenuous move. 

Greens Senator Dorinda Cox said ‘it will be dressed up to demonise our communities and culture, which has sustained us for tens of thousands of years.

‘Our people are hurting right now… and I know some people on the other side of the chamber don’t care.’  

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Minister for Indigenous Australians Linda Burney conceded the Voice's defeat on Saturday night, but vowed to continue working to improve the rights and lives of First Nations people

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Minister for Indigenous Australians Linda Burney conceded the Voice’s defeat on Saturday night, but vowed to continue working to improve the rights and lives of First Nations people

Ms Price also said she’d been wrongly accused of having sinister motives for calling for such an inquiry.

‘One such excuse that was made, was that somehow we’re playing politics with this issue,’ she said.

‘Sure. I’m playing politics with the lives of my own family. Yeah right.’

She also said she was accused of ‘only wanting to do this to make Aboriginal men look bad’.

‘It’s not about the perpetrators,’ she said. ‘It’s actually about the victims.

‘The victims who we’re talking about are Indigenous children. I don’t care who the perpetrator is, so long as they’re dealt with. Or what race the bloody perpetrator is.

‘What I know, is the vast majority of victims in this country are Indigenous children. Why the hell should they not have the same opportunities as other kids in this country? Why aren’t their human rights being upheld?

‘These are the voices, these are the children, that the Labor government has now denied. That to me, is racism. 

‘I’m absolutely disgusted.’ 

Ms Price said despite the setback – and disappointment – she would not stop pushing for these inquiries. 

‘We will continue to fight, we will continue to hold this government to account, because we are serious about improving the lives of our most marginalised.

‘They would rather protect the characters, the image of a group of people as opposed to protecting the children.’

Ms Price’s emotional video attracted almost 2,000 comments and hundreds of shares within an hour of uploading it. 

Ms Price also said she'd been wrongly accused of having sinister motives for calling for such an inquiry

Ms Price also said she’d been wrongly accused of having sinister motives for calling for such an inquiry

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