ADF must stop closing ranks on sexual abuse of servicewomen
Using classified reports and other secret material, the Herald and 60 Minutes have shown how officialdom has betrayed women who have been victims of sexual violence by fellow servicemen, leaving them ignored, sidelined and marginalised.
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Reporter Nick McKenzie and producer Garry McNab interviewed former servicewomen who suffered sexual assaults and then endured the pain that followed, a suffering that turned into anger heightened by the ADF's failure to help them heal.
Their harrowing stories include: the accused rapist who returned as a Defence contractor only to be charged with another rape; the high-ranking SAS officer who assaulted a fellow female officer at a reunion; and the junior airwoman assaulted at knife-point who was forced out and hit by a military gag order that the ADF refuses to remove.
The ADF has been wrestling with its dismal record on protecting women servicemen since the 2013 'Skype scandal' at Duntroon, where a male trainee officer filmed a sexual encounter with a female trainee and broadcast it live to other male trainees. It triggered the largest organisational reform effort in Defence's history. But apparently to little avail.
The royal commission's September 2024 report into defence and veteran suicide described data showing almost 800 reported sexual assaults over the past five years – a number it warned concealed the true scale of the problem given an estimated under-reporting rate of 60 per cent and the military's failure to 'accurately quantify' all cases of sexual misconduct. The commission also found an unknown number of ADF personnel with sexual offence convictions for attacks on their colleagues were still serving.
Ludicrously, more than nine months after the commission demanded a fresh, focused inquiry into military sexual violence, the Albanese government has yet to announce who will lead the investigation and its terms of reference.
Even Lieutenant General Natasha Fox, who as ADF chief of personnel is leading reform efforts to combat sexual violence, is in the dark. Asked to respond to the woman now speaking out, Fox admitted the ADF had failed to protect servicewomen. 'I'm sorry we weren't there when you needed us,' she said.
Such behaviour is not tolerated in other workplaces. The Albanese government's prevarication is unconscionable. But the ADF's inaction on so many fronts is the stuff of powerful hierarchies with their own codes and loyalties. No institution, whether cloaked in khaki, clerical or any other garb, should ever be a law unto itself.

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West Australian
7 hours ago
- West Australian
EDITORIAL: After making good with China, Anthony Albanese must salvage the US relationship
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Sky News AU
9 hours ago
- Sky News AU
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The Advertiser
11 hours ago
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Mr Albanese and Premier Li will attend, with the focus expected to be on green iron and metals, research and development, education, finance and clean energy technology. The Australian business delegation includes the heads of major banks, mining companies, universities and insurance companies. Business Council chief executive Bran Black said the private sector could help boost economic opportunities between Australia and China. "It's a partnership that matters deeply to our nation's success," he said. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will need to delicately balance Australia's economic interests with security concerns as he prepares to travel to China. Mr Albanese will leave for China on Saturday for a week-long tour across Beijing, Shanghai and Chengdu, accompanied by a delegation of Australian business leaders. The prime minister will meet with President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Qiang and Chairman Zhao Leji to discuss global and regional issues as well as trade and tourism opportunities. It's his second trip to China after his first in November 2023. Australia and China have largely stabilised a tense relationship that culminated in billions of dollars worth of trade barriers against Australian products. But issues of contention remain, including Chinese military forces performing dangerous actions towards Australian defence personnel and the continued imprisonment of Australian Yang Hengjun. The writer was given a suspended death sentence after being charged with espionage offences, the basis of which was kept secret. Australia has strongly denounced the sentence and called for his release. "We will continue to patiently and deliberately work towards a stable relationship with China, with dialogue at its core," Mr Albanese said in a statement on Tuesday, but didn't mention the writer. "I will raise issues that are important to Australians and the region." Australia has repeatedly raised concerns about a lack of transparency over China's unprecedented military build up and denounced any security presence in the Pacific as Beijing courts influence with Pacific island nations. Mr Albanese will travel with notable Australian business leaders to attend a roundtable with Chinese representatives from the business, tourism and sport industries. The Business Council and China Development Bank will host the Australia-China CEO roundtable in Beijing. Mr Albanese and Premier Li will attend, with the focus expected to be on green iron and metals, research and development, education, finance and clean energy technology. The Australian business delegation includes the heads of major banks, mining companies, universities and insurance companies. Business Council chief executive Bran Black said the private sector could help boost economic opportunities between Australia and China. "It's a partnership that matters deeply to our nation's success," he said. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will need to delicately balance Australia's economic interests with security concerns as he prepares to travel to China. Mr Albanese will leave for China on Saturday for a week-long tour across Beijing, Shanghai and Chengdu, accompanied by a delegation of Australian business leaders. The prime minister will meet with President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Qiang and Chairman Zhao Leji to discuss global and regional issues as well as trade and tourism opportunities. It's his second trip to China after his first in November 2023. Australia and China have largely stabilised a tense relationship that culminated in billions of dollars worth of trade barriers against Australian products. But issues of contention remain, including Chinese military forces performing dangerous actions towards Australian defence personnel and the continued imprisonment of Australian Yang Hengjun. The writer was given a suspended death sentence after being charged with espionage offences, the basis of which was kept secret. Australia has strongly denounced the sentence and called for his release. "We will continue to patiently and deliberately work towards a stable relationship with China, with dialogue at its core," Mr Albanese said in a statement on Tuesday, but didn't mention the writer. "I will raise issues that are important to Australians and the region." Australia has repeatedly raised concerns about a lack of transparency over China's unprecedented military build up and denounced any security presence in the Pacific as Beijing courts influence with Pacific island nations. Mr Albanese will travel with notable Australian business leaders to attend a roundtable with Chinese representatives from the business, tourism and sport industries. The Business Council and China Development Bank will host the Australia-China CEO roundtable in Beijing. Mr Albanese and Premier Li will attend, with the focus expected to be on green iron and metals, research and development, education, finance and clean energy technology. The Australian business delegation includes the heads of major banks, mining companies, universities and insurance companies. Business Council chief executive Bran Black said the private sector could help boost economic opportunities between Australia and China. "It's a partnership that matters deeply to our nation's success," he said. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will need to delicately balance Australia's economic interests with security concerns as he prepares to travel to China. Mr Albanese will leave for China on Saturday for a week-long tour across Beijing, Shanghai and Chengdu, accompanied by a delegation of Australian business leaders. The prime minister will meet with President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Qiang and Chairman Zhao Leji to discuss global and regional issues as well as trade and tourism opportunities. It's his second trip to China after his first in November 2023. Australia and China have largely stabilised a tense relationship that culminated in billions of dollars worth of trade barriers against Australian products. But issues of contention remain, including Chinese military forces performing dangerous actions towards Australian defence personnel and the continued imprisonment of Australian Yang Hengjun. The writer was given a suspended death sentence after being charged with espionage offences, the basis of which was kept secret. Australia has strongly denounced the sentence and called for his release. "We will continue to patiently and deliberately work towards a stable relationship with China, with dialogue at its core," Mr Albanese said in a statement on Tuesday, but didn't mention the writer. "I will raise issues that are important to Australians and the region." Australia has repeatedly raised concerns about a lack of transparency over China's unprecedented military build up and denounced any security presence in the Pacific as Beijing courts influence with Pacific island nations. Mr Albanese will travel with notable Australian business leaders to attend a roundtable with Chinese representatives from the business, tourism and sport industries. The Business Council and China Development Bank will host the Australia-China CEO roundtable in Beijing. Mr Albanese and Premier Li will attend, with the focus expected to be on green iron and metals, research and development, education, finance and clean energy technology. The Australian business delegation includes the heads of major banks, mining companies, universities and insurance companies. Business Council chief executive Bran Black said the private sector could help boost economic opportunities between Australia and China. "It's a partnership that matters deeply to our nation's success," he said.