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‘It is unconscionable': Defence abuse inquiry chair speaks out

‘It is unconscionable': Defence abuse inquiry chair speaks out

The Age08-07-2025
A lawyer whose review uncovered widespread sexual abuse in the Australian Defence Force more than a decade ago has accused the armed forces and government of putting more personnel at risk by failing to act on key recommendations.
Gary Rumble, one of the leaders of a 2011 review commissioned by the government that identified more than 1000 allegations of abuse, said it appeared very little had changed after a royal commission and an investigation in this masthead found abuse was ongoing.
'As far as I can tell, our report had little, if any, impact on successive governments and the ADF,' Rumble said.
'It is unconscionable that the ADF continues to run recruitment campaigns and advertisements targeted on recruiting women,' he said. 'My strong advice to anyone, particularly any woman, considering joining the ADF is to take the time to read just ... two pages.'
Those pages of the Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide's report, delivered last year, describe how sexual assault and misconduct have contributed to suicides by current and former members of the defence force. 'The majority of victims are women … ex-serving women [are] dying by suicide at twice the rate of the general female population,' the report reads.
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The 2011 investigation, co-led by Rumble, known as the DLA Piper review, made extensive recommendations to root out sexual misconduct in the defence force, including better management of records to identify perpetrators and aid convictions.
But in evidence to the royal commission, defence officials testified they had not completed work on data analysis systems to support monitoring for sexual misconduct. 'I grieve for the members of the ADF whose lives have been damaged and lost,' Rumble said.
Defence Minister Richard Marles is on leave and has not personally addressed this masthead's reporting that, nine months after the Royal Commission recommended a dedicated inquiry into sexual violence in the military, no one has been appointed to lead it.
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Video shows US Army testing new missiles in Australia
Video shows US Army testing new missiles in Australia

Daily Telegraph

time15 hours ago

  • Daily Telegraph

Video shows US Army testing new missiles in Australia

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Inside Australia's biggest war games, Exercise Talisman Sabre
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Sydney Morning Herald

timea day ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Inside Australia's biggest war games, Exercise Talisman Sabre

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'I'll leave the politics to the politicians,' Hazlett says. 'We get a set of orders, and we plan to those orders. For this, we plan to the tactics that we know. We train and we continue to train. 'We will hopefully continue to operate in peace time.'

Inside Australia's biggest war games, Exercise Talisman Sabre
Inside Australia's biggest war games, Exercise Talisman Sabre

The Age

timea day ago

  • The Age

Inside Australia's biggest war games, Exercise Talisman Sabre

It's a sweltering morning in the top end of Australia, where thousands of military personnel have swarmed Darwin's coastline for the nation's largest war games. Members of the US Coast Guard bring reporters through Darwin's turquoise waters off Larrakeyah Barracks on a fast ride through the security zone. There's chatter about the clear differences between how Australia and the US protect their coasts. Military vessels circle the water, a heavy presence as ordinary boaties cruise through. Further along the coast, a group of soldiers has set up to practise firing. There, they wait for civilian watercraft to pass through, the boaties seemingly unperturbed by the military. For many Darwin residents, the huge influx of armed forces to the region is not a surprise. And many of the troops have been here before. But some say this year's Talisman Sabre, the 11th iteration of the training exercise comprising mainly Australian Defence Personnel and members of the US military, is different. 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His personnel are tasked with testing the contingencies of the defence team, who represent Australia and its allies. 'That includes having a look at the vulnerabilities, and trying to exploit those as enemy combatants,' he says. Soldiers get to practise detention, handling skills, vehicle checkpoints, and other tactics with personnel from the US, Britain and Canada. For the first time, the exercises have stretched to Papua New Guinea and Christmas Island. Back home, Hazlett is a sergeant with the Queensland Police Service based outside Cairns. He's been with the QPS for more than a decade. Many of the things he's done with the army reserves, however, are difficult to explain to the civilian world – like how to stop his hands trembling when he puts a detonator into a claymore mine. 'It's a nerve-racking thing as it is. You've always got that feeling you've got to ground yourself ... that's why you hold it like a cigarette,' he says. 'But being able to then roll that back and set it off, is an incredible experience ... you're training to be a real soldier. You are a real soldier.' Taine Waerea, a private who recently joined from Queensland, says he always wanted to wear the greens. Loading After months in uniform, he remembers setting up his first claymore. 'I'm an electrician ... I don't get to be trained in such weapons systems I get to be trained in here. I don't get to blow things up,' he laughs. As members of the 31st/42nd Battalion sit near the water for a brief break, Lance Corporal Selby Anderson and his sister Private Brooke Anderson, both train drivers in Queensland, reflect on their careers. For them, military service is personal – their grandfather served in the Royal Australian Navy in Vietnam aboard multiple ships. The pair talk of army helicopters and vehicles, but also giving back to the community. All those who spoke to this masthead are confident when they say Australia is prepared for any war. 'I'll leave the politics to the politicians,' Hazlett says. 'We get a set of orders, and we plan to those orders. For this, we plan to the tactics that we know. We train and we continue to train. 'We will hopefully continue to operate in peace time.'

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