Sunday Territorian

Act now or women will lose hope

- DEBORAH DI NATALE DEBORAH DI NATALE IS THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF THE NT COUNCIL OF SOCIAL SERVICE

TWO weeks ago a woman was murdered in Darwin.

It didn’t make national news. People didn’t take to the streets in protest.

The police arrested a man for “murder and domestic violence”.

In January in Alice Springs, a leading campaigner against domestic violence was murdered in what police called “a domestic violence incident”.

Late last year a woman was stabbed to death on a busy street in Darwin. The police arrested a man for murder, but also with contraveni­ng a domestic violence order.

Three women murdered in a handful of months. Three women who represent thousands more caught in domestic, family and sexual violence in our Territory communitie­s.

Earlier this week, the federal government held the Women’s Safety Summit to discuss with services and survivors around the country about what is needed in the next 12-year National Plan to Reduce Violence Against Women and their Children.

Attendees were angry, passionate but also hopeful that this was, indeed, a moment for national leadership and action. Spoiler alert: it wasn’t.

The NT Council of Social Service joined with 15 other Territory delegates to advocate for improved regional and remote services, building on community-designed culturally appropriat­e responses.

We also called for national funding for domestic, family and sexual violence services to be allocated on the basis of need, not on the size of our population. The NT has long had the worst domestic, family and sexual violence rates in the country – but resources are not matched to that.

While many experts shared powerful advice, wisdom and recommenda­tions; the opportunit­y for contributi­on at the summit by the hundreds of invited delegates was limited. The agenda was narrow, the process was exclusiona­ry and the space was tightly controlled. The summit failed to meaningful­ly include many marginalis­ed groups; and a number of key advocates, including survivors, were not invited to contribute.

But the NT delegates are still hopeful. There is no way to continue to do what they do, day after day, year after year, without hope.

We know that our communitie­s have the answers and expertise, and they know what works best for them. We know community-led initiative­s need sustained, longterm funding to address our high rates of domestic, family and sexual violence.

In Alice Springs, the Tangentyer­e Women’s Family Safety Group works in Town Camps on early interventi­on and prevention of domestic, family and sexual violence. They are women with lived experience of violence and they are invested in finding systemic solutions to the issues of family violence, because it is their home, their community, their family and their future. The Tangentyer­e Women’s Family Safety Group is an example of what can happen when we not only centre the voices of those with lived experience, but value their specialist knowledge.

As Shirleen Campbell, co-coordinato­r of the Tangentyer­e Women’s Family Safety Group, said at the summit: “We have the expertise. We are embedded in our communitie­s. We know what we do works. We just need

Attendees were angry, passionate but also hopeful that this was, indeed, a moment for national leadership and action. Spoiler alert: it wasn’t.

the ongoing support to do it.”

These are the voices that need to be heard. Theirs is the wisdom that needs to drive the drafting and developmen­t of the next National Plan. We need action.

Before the hope runs out.

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 ??  ?? There are solutions to domestic violence but the government must listen to the people who have them. Picture: iStock
There are solutions to domestic violence but the government must listen to the people who have them. Picture: iStock

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