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Family violence register push ahead of national rallies

Rallies protesting violence against women will be held in nine cities over the weekend. (Darren Pateman/AAP PHOTOS)

By Rachael Ward in Melbourne

The push for a register of convicted family violence offenders is gaining momentum in Victoria, as thousands prepare to march in national rallies calling for an end to gendered abuse.

Twenty-six women have allegedly died by violence in Australia so far this year, according to Destroy the Joint figures, which equates to a woman killed every four days in 2024.

Earlier this week Molly Ticehurst, 28, was found dead at her home in Forbes in NSW while Emma Bates, 49, was discovered dead at a property in Cobram in Victoria.

Ms Ticehurst’s former partner has been charged with her murder, while John Torney, 39, faced court in Melbourne on Friday on assault charges after Ms Bates’ death.

The rise in deaths has led Victoria Police to renew its calls for a register of convicted family violence offenders.

Victoria Police submitted the idea of a register to the Royal Commission into Family Violence, but it was not among the 227 recommendations.

Assistant Commissioner Lauren Callaway, who leads the family violence unit, said some high-risk offenders had a pattern of going from relationship to relationship.

“The principal of a right to know someone’s violent priors, if it is certainly going to provide you with a more informed choice around how to manage your safety, that is certainly something that police have previously put forward,” she told reporters on Friday.

She said greater focus should be put on rehabilitating perpetrators as “it’s not an option to lock everyone up forever”.

“Some solutions, I think, place too much emphasis on women to do the changing and we know that’s not the long-term solution,” she said.

Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan said governments had a responsibility to lead and the state’s ministers were seeking advice on strengthening protections.

“It’s clear we need to do more, it’s clear we need to examine what else we can do and that does include what changes we may need to make to our legal systems, our justice systems, how we respond in those areas,” she told reporters in Bendigo.

Meanwhile, NSW Police said it would back a proposal to stop court registrars from making bail decisions in domestic violence cases, after the death of Ms Ticehurst.

Rallies calling for an end to violence against women will be held across nine cities from Friday to Sunday, with thousands expected to attend for marches, speeches and performances.

Demonstrators will call for more action from politicians, rally organiser and What Were You Wearing Australia founder Sarah Williams said.

“We need them to take these crimes more seriously,” she said.

The first event will be held in Ballarat on Friday night, a regional Victorian city rocked by the deaths of three local women this year.

Police allege Samantha Murphy, Rebecca Young and Hannah McGuire all died at the hands of men.

Further demonstrations will be held in Newcastle, Adelaide, Sydney, Melbourne, Bendigo, Geelong, Coffs Harbour, the Sunshine Coast, Brisbane, Perth and Canberra.

Our Watch chief executive Patty Kinnersly said there had been a high number of deaths of Australian women over the past two months.

“The shocking rate of violent deaths of women this year exceeds anything Australia has experienced in recent years,” Ms Kinnersly said.

“The community, men and women, is demanding that this ends and ends now.”

No community is safe and the number of deaths only reveal the “tips of the iceberg” of violence against women, she said.

“Behind every number is a woman who was loved and who lived,” Ms Kinnersly added.

“When it comes to violence against women, the only acceptable figure is zero.”

The Ballarat rally will be held at the town’s Bridge Mall from 5pm on Friday, and there will be a demonstration at Newcastle Museum from 6pm.

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2 Responses to Family violence register push ahead of national rallies

cbrapsycho says: 26 April 2024 at 2:48 pm

It is those sexist and disrespectful comments that I have found useful in identifying abusive people, warning friends about them and avoiding them myself. My concern is that if these comments are silenced there will be no warnings yet the abusive behaviour may continue.

We have seen this happen in workplaces where people are very careful not to say anything or do anything that can get them into trouble when others are around, but to behave badly when others are not observing.

If we are to change behaviour we need to start in early childhood. Children are taught how to behave by their parents, teachers, peers and role models, so these people need to be held responsible for actions that are observed by children. They are responsible for the way children learn to behave and how they discriminate between what’s right and wrong. Kids mimic them, so we need to ensure all adults and leaders behave appropriately around them.

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David says: 27 April 2024 at 8:07 am

Maybe we actually need to spend some time to find out the why’s. That would be a step in the direction of taking the crimes more seriously. The only people who actually know the why’s are the perpetrators and potential perpetrators. What chance have we got of hearing anything we may get them to say while everyone is jumping up and down doing the same thing and expecting the results to be different. You want to make a difference and start taking it seriously then differences come from new information or a better understanding of old information. Start having the hard conversations and stop censoring conversations and comments that don’t support the current (and seemingly making no positive difference) stance. Apply some problem solving 101, take the emotion out of it, and you might just save some lives.

As for the previous comment, please explain how the parents on the Bondi perpetrator had anything to do will it other than trying to stop it happening? What response do you expect other than, so you’re blaming me for it?

Problem solving 101. A sign that you are taking the wrong approach and/or have the wrong understanding is that the situation is not improving.

This is about peoples live and heinous crimes, get serious and ask yourself is blaming all men and asking them to step up actually helping. How do you feel towards something when you get blamed for it?

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