Posted: 2023-02-10 18:36:23

In the chambers of Australia's federal parliament, personal secrets are often buried far from the curious public eye.

But occasionally they are laid out on the carpeted floor, raw in their fury and heartbreak.

So it was this week when, under intense national attention, it was announced that alcohol bans would return for Alice Springs' town camps and surrounding communities.

On Thursday morning, between the red walls of the Senate, two women from opposite sides of politics proved that the matter was far from a dry policy debate.

Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, an Alice Springs local, rose to deliver an impassioned tale of trauma centred around the early death of her cousin in the town's palliative care unit late last year.

An empty bottle of Bundaberg rum lying on a large patch of sand, surrounded by grass and trees
The issue of alcohol abuse in remote parts of the Northern Territory is now being debated in federal parliament.(ABC News: Xavier Martin)

"My cousin, only one year older than I am, who never bore children of her own, loved and nurtured other children in our family whose own parents could not care for them — because they were either dead, incarcerated or suffering from alcohol or substance abuse," Senator Nampijinpa Price told the chamber.

An entire life in an Alice Springs town camp — "lived in a hellhole" — contributed to her cousin's bad health, the senator said.

"But it was the last few months, when alcohol was reintroduced in her town camp, that her health took a steep decline, ending in her early death."

Over the last two weeks, the outback centre's struggles with alcohol-related crime have leapt from local headlines to TV screens around the country and the front page of the national broadsheet.

A political whirly-whirly had spiralled from Central Australia into Canberra.

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Play Video. Duration: 6 minutes 11 seconds
Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price's powerful speech on alcohol restrictions in the Senate.

After weeks of pressure and scrutiny, NT Chief Minister Natasha Fyles announced on Monday that liquor bans were returning.

They will mirror the federal, Intervention-era bans that lapsed last year, but will this time will operate under territory law.

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