BULA tale.
As a committed advocate for gender equality, I was delighted to recently attend the commemoration of the completion of Phase I and the launch of Phase II of the Pacific Partnership to End Violence Against Women and Girls. This milestone was an opportunity to reflect on the progress we have made, and how far we have to go.
It is important to acknowledge that gender-based violence is a global challenge, not just an issue for the Pacific or, indeed, Australia.
Over my life, I have seen gradual changes in Australia’s system through education and awareness of the impact of established attitudes and behaviour on women and girls.
I have also worked extensively in the Pacific region with extraordinary women and men whose efforts to prevent, address and respond to gender-based violence have helped change the way we collectively respond to this issue.
Yet despite our progress, the statistics remain alarming. Our Pacific region has some of the highest rates of intimate partner violence in the world, with 30 to 60 per cent of women in most countries experiencing physical or sexual violence during their lifetime.
In Australia, Prime Minister Albanese has described the situation as a national crisis. One in four Australian women have experienced sexual violence and one in two have experienced sexual harassment in their lifetime.
In Fiji, research from the Fiji Women’s Crisis Centre has found that over the past 10 years an average of six women a year have been killed as a consequence of ongoing gender-based violence.
Across the Pacific region, there is a small, but growing body of evidence on the wide-ranging impacts of technology-facilitated gender-based violence and the impacts of artificial intelligence. This is an issue which has been prominent in the Australian media recently.
This has very real impacts on women and girls’ lives. They become excluded from family and community networks, there is increased absenteeism from school or work, and women abandon or never take up career paths that place them in the public eye, such as in politics or journalism.
The impacts are significant and wide reaching for individuals, our communities and our countries. In economic terms alone, the World Bank estimates gender-based violence costs an estimated $US1.5 trillion each year globally.
So what are we doing about it?
In Australia, the Government is committed to addressing these challenges through the National Plan to End Violence Against Women and Children 2022-2032. The Plan is the overarching national policy framework that guides actions towards ending violence against women and children over the next 10 years. It is underpinned by a whole-of-society effort which aims to coordinate across all sectors and levels of government to address, prevent and respond to gender-based violence.
Recently, our National Cabinet (which includes the Prime Minister and all State and Territory leaders) committed to a range of strategies including: providing crisis support for women leaving violent relationships; enacting new laws and measures to combat online harms; and taking measure to reduce the exposure of children and young people to violent content.
Australia is also developing a new international gender equality strategy that will put gender equality at the centre of Australia’s foreign policy, international development, humanitarian action, trade and security efforts.
We are proud to partner with Fiji on this shared priority. Australia has worked through the Pacific Partnership to End Violence Against Women and Girls and UN Women to provide targeted support to Fiji to begin implementing its National Action Plan to Prevent Violence Against All Women and Girls (2023-2028).
Fiji has shown real leadership in this area. As Minister for Women, Children and Social Protection, Lynda Tabuya has spearheaded Fiji’s Plan, making Fiji the first Pacific Island Country, and second globally after Australia, to have a whole-of-government and whole-of-community, inclusive, evidence-based approach to prevent violence against women and girls.
The Australian High Commission team here are working in partnership with the Fiji Government, regional organisations, UN agencies, civil society and other development partners to tackle gender-based violence.
In the broader region, Australia is working with Pacific partners to progress gender equality including through our flagship Pacific Women Lead program with the Pacific Community. We are supporting Phase II of the Pacific Partnership to End Violence Against Women and Girls, along with the European Union, UN Women, the Pacific Community, and the Pacific Islands Forum. I was proud to witness the endorsement of the revitalised Pacific Leaders Gender Equality Declaration at the Pacific Islands Forum Leaders meeting in Cook Islands last year.
We are making progress, but globally there is a long way to go.
As gender inequality is the root cause of gender-based violence, it is imperative we all play a role in addressing this issue, both at an individual and societal level.
As individuals, and particularly as men, we must call out and stop condoning violence against women and girls.
Yes this takes courage, but it is essential.
We must ensure women are given the freedom to make decisions for themselves in both their public and private lives. And we must challenge rigid gender stereotyping and dominant forms of masculinity that emphasise aggression, dominance and control.
While these are not always easy things to do, it is important to have the conversation and create awareness to help adapt and change individuals and communities’ behaviours.
I invite you to partner with us on this challenging, and important mission.
It is only by working together, as Vuvale, that we can make a difference.
- EWEN MCDONALD is Australia’s High Commissioner in Fiji and Australia’s inaugural Special Envoy for the Pacific and Regional Affairs. The views expressed in this article are the author’s and not necessarily shared by this newspaper.