The Chronicle

Bullying nightmare

- HOLLY CORMACK

A HEARTBROKE­N mother said her little girl refused to return to class for weeks after her first year of high school took a nightmaris­h turn, leaving her the target of relentless bullying in and out of school.

The woman said her lively daughter was beyond excited to enter her first year of Murgon State High School before things took a devastatin­g turn.

“My baby girl couldn’t wait to go to high school, she just thought she was on top of the world,” she said.

“But then after a few weeks she starts telling me, ‘I don’t want to go to school, they’re just going to pick on me’. It’s heartbreak­ing.”

The woman said that the rapid shift in her daughter’s enthusiasm about her education was a devastatin­g sight, with the 12-year-old returning home in tears less than one term into her high school journey.

The young girl’s older sister said the bullying at school was relentless, with the abuse against her little sister beginning at school and bleeding into the streets of Cherbourg when the girls went to visit their family.

“They’ll swear at her, threaten to hit her, call her motherf--ker, slut, bitch and whore,” the sister said.

“When we go down to Cherbourg they’ll walk the streets and try to look for her, and if they find her by herself they’ll hurt her. She doesn't like to walk the streets anymore.”

The woman said that she witnessed this behaviour herself about a week ago when she took her children to visit their grandmothe­r, with her daughter’s bullies showing up at the house.

“My baby girl ran inside and she was peeking out through the windows. That’s how frightened she was,” she said. “My biggest goal for my children is for them to go to school and get a good education. But they can’t go to school or even walk the streets of Cherbourg without getting bullied. It’s just unreal how all of this is unfolding.”

The woman said she was aware her daughter wasn’t the only child being affected by bullying at the school, telling of a girl who had a chunk of hair torn out of her head by three older students and another young child, who recently admitted to wanting to take her own life.

Her niece has also been targeted, with the woman’s sister saying she was “dreading” her daughter starting year 7 because she was already aware of bullying at the school.

The woman claimed that it was common for older students to find younger girls after school and force them to fight each other, which left her older daughter with a black eye after she attempted to pull her little sister out of a fight.

She said she’d attempted to get help from the school and police regarding both the physical and mental abuse, but nothing had changed.

“Are they going to wait until something bad happens to one of these young girls or for a kid to take their own life because of bullying before they do anything?” she said.

“Right now this is something that can be prevented and we should be coming together as a community to stop it.”

A spokesman for the Department of Education said Murgon State High School did not tolerate violence or antisocial behaviour and had programs to prevent bullying.

“This whole-school framework teaches expected behaviours and encourages students to make responsibl­e and respectful decisions,” the spokesman said. He said the school also had access to a GP, counsellin­g, psychologi­st and social workers.

“The department encourages any students, parents and carers to report any cases of bullying or misconduct to their school principal in the first instance, or their closest Department of Education regional office.

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