Herald on Sunday

It’s up to men to stop abuse of women

- Kerre McIvor u@KerreWoodh­am

Finally the Grace Millane murder trial has come to an end, with her murderer jailed for life imprisonme­nt with a minimum non parole period of 17 years.

So, nearly two decades before this cold, callous, killer can even apply to be considered for parole.

That’s got to be a relief to anyone with a sister or a daughter. But for Grace’s family, dealing with the loss of their girl is only just beginning.

For two years, they’ve had a focus: To ensure that the man who’d taken their daughter, sister and friend didn’t get away with murder. They sat through his trial day after day, not flinching when they heard, in excruciati­ng detail, evidence given about Grace’s personal life.

I’m not going to go into the details here — they’ve been canvassed sufficient­ly — but suffice it to say, there is no privacy or dignity when a person is murdered. Their life is laid bare within the cold, impersonal confines of a courtroom while the prosecutio­n and the defence engage in judicial contest, each side only really concerned about winning legal points and ultimately their case.

Courtroom proceeding­s aren’t about justice. We all know that.

But the conviction of Grace’s murderer, who was found guilty by a jury in a unanimous verdict, was a vindicatio­n for Grace. Her life mattered.

There was no excuse, no defence for the way her killer brutalised and objectifie­d her.

Grace’s family opened the sentencing on Friday by reading out victim impact statements, underscori­ng their loss and their devastatio­n.

And Justice Simon Moore affirmed the brutal nature of the murder and the subsequent desecratio­n of Grace’s body when he imposed the sentence.

But now it’s over. And the Millane family have to get on with living each day without her.

I can’t even begin to imagine the pain that they’re feeling. Somehow, they have refused to allow her killer to dim her light.

They decided to channel their grief into a project for good and the Love Grace charity was launched in Britain.

Even in their pain and grief, the Millanes refuse to be brought low by an ugly, cruel act of depravity.

White Ribbon charity ambassador, Mark Longley, whose own daughter was murdered by her boyfriend, says Grace’s death must be a reminder that violence against women, in any form, is wrong and that it’s up to men to spread that message. Damn right it is.

On the same day that Grace’s murderer was sentenced, fury was raging over statements made by the detective in charge of the murders of a woman and her three children in Australia in the most horrific manner.

They were burned alive by a vindictive husband and father, who would not contemplat­e them living outside of his control. Was this, mused Detective Inspector Mark Thompson, an issue of a woman suffering significan­t domestic violence and her and her

HWhat’s your view? letters@hos.co.nz children perishing at the hands of the husband? Or is it, he said, an instance of a husband being driven too far by issues he’s suffered by certain circumstan­ces into committing acts of this form?

Dear God. How can he even begin to contemplat­e an excuse for burning alive three babies and their mother who only wanted to keep them safe?

There is no excuse for violence against women. Women shouldn’t be dying because a man’s ego is wounded or because he wants to act out a pornograph­ic fantasy. And yet they are. Of all victims killed by a partner or expartner in this country between 2004 and 2019, 75 per cent were female and 25 per cent male. And even when the woman was the killer, in a number of cases the court found she was acting in self defence.

Yes, women can be abusive but they simply don’t kill men in the way men kill women. And it will be men, and only men, who can change this.

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 ?? Photo / 123RF ?? A man's wounded ego or pornograph­ic fantasy should never lead to violence.
Photo / 123RF A man's wounded ego or pornograph­ic fantasy should never lead to violence.
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