Queensland Senator, Larissa Waters, writes about the findings in the interim report of the Senate’s groundbreaking inquiry into domestic violence.
Women are living with men who they fear will kill them because those women have been turned away from overrun refuges and the only alternative is sleeping on the street.
Desperate phone calls are ringing out at crisis line centres because there simply aren’t enough staff to answer endless cries for help.
Volunteer law students are filling in at women’s legal services because there isn’t enough funding to keep paying qualified lawyers, despite the tragically high demand for their important advice.
These are some of the harrowing realities we’ve heard through the Senate Inquiry into domestic violence, established by the Greens.
Women’s legal services, refuges and call centres have spoken at the Inquiry’s hearings in most capital cities.
Their front-line experience has not only further opened our eyes to the horrific extent of domestic violence in Australia, but it has also offered ways forward.
The Inquiry committee, made up of senators from all sides of politics, has been working on recommendations to solve our national domestic violence crisis.
Read more: This is one of the most powerful anti-domestic violence campaigns we have ever seen.
Last week, we tabled our interim report in the Senate.
The final report is still some months away, given the volumes of information collected through more than 150 public submissions and six hearings in five cities.
However, the Committee decided to put forward interim recommendations before the federal government hands down its budget in May.