Violence against women is embedded in NI, O'Neill tells Assembly
However, the First Minister said she does not accept that the situation cannot be turned around and called for a 'whole of society' approach to dealing with it.
For the second day, a number of MLAs at Stormont expressed condolences following the murder of pregnant mother-of-two Sarah Montgomery in Co Down.
A man is being questioned on suspicion of murder after the 27-year-old died at her home in Elmfield Walk in Donaghadee on Saturday.
Answering questions at the Northern Ireland Assembly, Ms O'Neill said: 'I can't even imagine what her family are going through.
'A young mummy expecting her next child, her whole life ahead of her and taken from her family in the most devastating way.'
Ms O'Neill updated MLAs on actions taken as part of the Executive's Ending Violence Against Women and Girls strategy, stating there needed to be a 'whole of society' approach.
Ms O'Neill said the Executive Office had committed £3.2 million until next March to support the strategy.
She said funding had already been provided to local councils to enable them to build awareness of the issue and to hold information events.
The First Minister said all councils in Northern Ireland had now opened up a local change fund to 'get right into the grassroots of community and voluntary organisations'.
She said a regional change fund had also been established with funding of £1.2 million.
Ms O'Neill said: 'All this information paints a positive picture for what we have been able to achieve to date, but there is no doubt about it there is much more work to be done.
'We are off to a strong start but I think we need to collectively keep moving forward in the right direction together.'
She added: 'We have to get into the weeds of this and it is going to take everybody working together to do so.'
Sinn Fein MLA Philip McGuigan said: 'Another young woman, another mother, another daughter has had her life brutally stolen from her this week.
'First Minister will you join with me in expressing our condolences to Sarah Montgomery's family who are undoubtedly experiencing unimaginable pain?'
The First Minister responded 'I think the fact that so many members are raising this issue shows me that people in this Chamber care about ending violence against women and girls.
'Sarah Montgomery had her whole life ahead of her, a beautiful woman, two children and one on the way.
'That tragedy is just unimaginable for so many people.
'This is another woman in our society who has had her life robbed from her in the most grotesque and barbaric fashion.
'Every woman lost isn't another statistic, it isn't another number, it is a mother, a sister, a daughter, a friend, an aunt, and her life has just been taken from her.
'We need to do everything we can to address this issue.
'It is not unique to us but we have a really, really embedded problem.
'But I don't accept we can't turn it around, I believe we can turn it around but it is going to take all of us facing the same way.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Man remanded in custody charged with murder of Sarah Montgomery
A 28-year-old man has appeared in court charged with the murder of pregnant mother-of-two Sarah Montgomery in Co Down. Zak Hughes, from Ardglen Place in Belfast, was also charged with child destruction during a brief appearance at Newtownards Magistrates' Court on Wednesday. Dressed in a grey tracksuit, he stood in the dock and nodded when asked if he understood the charges. A PSNI detective chief inspector told the court he could connect Hughes to the offences. No facts of the case were laid out and there was no application for bail. The date of the offences given on court papers was June 27. District Judge Conor Heaney remanded Hughes in custody until July 30. Ms Montgomery, 27, died at her home in Donaghadee. Floral tributes have been left outside her house in Elmfield Walk. A 42-year-old woman, who was arrested in Belfast on suspicion of assisting an offender, was released unconditionally on Tuesday. The death of Ms Montgomery has led to renewed focus on the rate of violence against women and girls in Northern Ireland. She was the 27th adult woman to be killed in Northern Ireland since 2020.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Former UUP leader 'beaten badly' in Army for being Irish
The former Ulster Unionist leader Doug Beattie has said he was "beaten badly" by instructors for being Irish when he joined the Army at the age of 16. Beattie became a soldier in 1982 and served three tours in Afghanistan with the Royal Irish Regiment (RIR). Originally from Portadown, Beattie became a UUP assembly member (MLA) in 2016 and was leader from 2021 until last year, after an internal row prompted his resignation. He said bullying he endured during his early years in the armed forces had a huge impact on his life. Speaking to BBC News NI's Red Lines podcast, Beattie said he joined the military as a teenager, after his mother died and his father struggled with alcohol addiction. He said he went to Somerset to do his initial Army training, where he faced discrimination because of his background. "Because I was an Irishman - and I've always been an Irishman - I was beaten badly by instructors, by people I was looking up to," he said. "I found myself bullied quite badly, it doesn't matter that I was a unionist or my father was a military man. "The fact I came from Northern Ireland meant I found myself being bullied and beaten quite a lot and that had an effect on my life as a young man." Beattie also spoke to the podcast for the first time about how the furore over his resignation as party leader unfolded last summer. He stepped down as leader after an internal row over the selection contest to replace Robin Swann as the UUP's North Antrim MLA after he became the MP for South Antrim. Beattie said he had wanted a female candidate to replace Robin Swann, saying the party had a "lack" of women in high-profile jobs at Stormont, and that he was "prevented" from bringing in another candidate he preferred over Colin Crawford, who was selected by the party's North Antrim association to take on the role. The Upper Bann MLA said when that happened, he felt it was "clear I could no longer influence the party". "People who weren't supporting me made what I was doing really difficult to stay on... the truth was I had no choice," he added. "I put in a letter of resignation, I didn't go to anyone I just went to the party chair. Then I was persuaded by the MLA group to withdraw it, I went back to withdraw and the party chair said no, they put it to party officers who said 'we're not letting you withdraw it, the letter stands'. "The bottom line is I stepped down, I found my place back in the party as an MLA and that's where I'm working now." Beattie admitted the affair had left him "bruised" after three years in charge, but said he would like to run for the assembly again in the next election scheduled for May 2027. He acknowledged that the UUP was a "broad church", which sometimes made the party "impossible to lead when you're trying to appease every level". "It's a fair criticism... it's never been easy to be leader of the UUP regardless of who it is," added Beattie. He was replaced as leader by Mike Nesbitt, Stormont's Health Minister, who also previously led the party from 2012 until 2017.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Man charged with murder of Sarah Montgomery in Co Down
A 28-year-old man has been charged with the murder of pregnant mother-of-two Sarah Montgomery in Co Down. Police said the man had also been charged with child destruction. The man is due to appear before Newtownards Magistrates' Court on Wednesday. Ms Montgomery, 27, died at her home in Donaghadee in Co Down on Saturday. Floral tributes have been left outside Ms Montgomery's home in the Elmfield Walk area. Earlier on Tuesday, a 47-year-old woman who was arrested as part of the investigation was released unconditionally.