Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains the image of an Indigenous person who has died, used with the permission of her family.

Northern Territory Child Protection Minister Robyn Cahill says three child protection workers have been stood down following an investigation into the circumstances of Kumanjayi Little Baby before her alleged murder last month.

The five-year-old girl’s body was found near the Old Timers / Ilyperenye town camp in Alice Springs last week and 47-year-old Jefferson Lewis was charged with her murder on Sunday.

A young Indigenous girl wearing a pink dress does the peace sign symbol with her fingers.

Five-year-old Kumanjayi Little Baby went missing from a town camp near Alice Springs last month. (Supplied: NT Police)

At a press conference in Darwin this afternoon, Ms Cahill said she had “reached out to the department to identify if there was any areas of concern” with regard to the the girl now referred to as Kumanjayi at the request of her family.

“I was basically told that things were not a situation of concern,” she said.

“I then requested a full brief and I can’t go into the detail of what was in that brief but suffice it to say that we had to investigate how those processes had been executed.

A group of young girls dressed in matching pink shirts, performing a parade dance.

Residents in Alice Springs wore pink to the Bangtail Muster in honour of Kumanjayi Little Baby earlier this week. (ABC News: Xavier Martin)

“As a result of the initial investigation that had occurred, there’s been three staff that have been stood down from the roles that they were occupying.

“That wasn’t my decision, that was a decision of the department.”

Ms Cahill said she “can’t talk about the specifics” of how Kumanjayi came to the attention of the department.

The ABC is not suggesting wrongdoing on the part of the five-year-old’s family.

A politician speaking at a microphone

Robyn Cahill says she can’t talk about the specifics of the case.  (ABC News: Michael Franchi)

Ms Cahill said the while the investigation involving Kumanjayi Little Baby was being undertaken by the department, she had “indicated that I think we need a much broader, independent investigation into the structure of the department”.

“That is on the back of the work that I’ve been undertaking with my team and with the assistance of some members of the department over the last 12 months,” she said.

“And the repeated situations I’ve come across that indicate that there are so many children who have had repeated notifications made where zero action is taken for a number of years, and those children subsequently have ended up in the criminal justice system.

“It’s been me trying to understand how that could possibly happen when the absolute most critical thing must be the safety and wellbeing of the child.”

Ms Cahill said child protection in the NT had been “under a lot of pressure” for “a very long time” without significant change.

“There’s been some 30 inquiries since the late 1980s into child protection across the country and yet we still continue to see these really poor outcomes for these kids,” she said.

A politician with light-coloured hair wears a patterned top as she sits inside parliament house.

Robyn Cahill’s department sacked three of the Northern Territory’s child protection workers. (ABC News: Pete Garnish)

“So I made it very clear when I came into these portfolios, particularly around domestic violence, we couldn’t keep doing things the same way, we needed to do things differently.

“And now is absolutely the time to look at how we can do things differently, because we’re not going to be able to deliver better outcomes for children unless we shift our focus.”

Ms Cahill said there would “likely be a restructure of how the department operates” with an announcement to be made “in due course”.