Vigils planned across Australia for dead 5-year-old Indigenous girl


Community unrest outside Alice Springs Hospital, where a 47-year-old man arrested in connection with the alleged killing of five-year-old Kumanjayi Little Baby was taken, in Alice Springs, Australia, released May 1, 2026, in this screengrab taken from a video. AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION/via REUTERS

SYDNEY, May 7 (Reuters) - Mourners ⁠on Thursday will gather across Australia to hold vigils for ⁠a five-year-old Indigenous girl whose alleged abduction and murder ‌shocked the nation and sparked riots in the Outback town of Alice Springs.

The gatherings come a week after the girl was found dead by authorities following a ​five-day search involving hundreds of volunteers and ⁠police.

The disappearance and death ⁠of Kumanjayi Little Baby, the name by which the victim is ⁠known in ‌line with Indigenous custom, dominated national headlines.

The subsequent arrest of a man suspected of abducting and murdering her ⁠triggered violent clashes in Alice Springs, with a ​crowd of 400 ‌Indigenous people gathering to demand "payback," referring to traditional and mostly ⁠physical punishment in ​Aboriginal societies.

The Alice Springs community has since been conducting "sorry business," the mourning period and cultural practices that occur after an Indigenous person's death.

The ⁠girl's family will hold a vigil in ​the Outback town on Thursday evening and others will be held across the country in remembrance of the girl.

Vigil organisers have asked attendees ⁠to bring candles and wear pink - the girl's favourite colour.

Kumanjayi Little Baby disappeared from her home on the outskirts of Alice Springs on the evening of April 25.

Hundreds of people were involved in ​a search effort to locate her, scouring ⁠dense bushland around the town, a popular tourist destination in Australia's ​Northern Territory.

Police on Sunday charged Jefferson Lewis, ‌47, with her murder and two ​other offences, which cannot be publicly disclosed for legal reasons.

(Reporting by Christine Chen in Sydney; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus)

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