As Australian women push for action on domestic
violence – a problem described by the country’s prime minister as a “national crisis” – one state has
appointed a special official charged with improving men’s behavior.
Victoria Premier Jacinta Allan has announced that
state MP Tim Richardson would serve as the inaugural Parliamentary Secretary
for Men’s Behavior Change – the first
position of its kind in the country.
Richardson said he would focus on the influence the
internet and social media have on male attitudes towards women, and on building
respectful relationships. It would not be “easy work, but it is important,” he
added.
“We must
make Victoria a safer place for women and children and work to end the tragedy
of deaths of Victorian women at the hands of men,” Richardson wrote on X.
Gender-based violence is plaguing Australia – 31
women have been killed across the country so far this year, according to the Counting Dead Women project. Last year,
64 women were murdered, the group said.
Last weekend, a woman and her daughter were shot
dead in Perth, Western Australia, by a man who was allegedly trying to find his
ex-partner and daughter. In a statement, the man’s daughter said that, “when my
father couldn’t find us he murdered her best friend and her best friend’s
daughter.”
The country was rattled by multiple violent incidents in April,
including when five women were killed by a man armed with a knife at a shopping center in the suburb of
Bondi in Sydney. Police said CCTV footage showed it was “obvious” the man targeted
women. In another violent incident, a 28-year-old mother was allegedly murdered
by her partner, who was already facing charges of raping and stalking her but
had been released on bail.
However, not all Australians had a positive reaction to the news. Jane
Hume of the opposition Liberal Party, who represents Victoria in the national
Senate, questioned the efficacy of the appointment.