MEDIA
RELEASE – WED 17TH FEB 2010 – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Minister misleads
Parliament on domestic violence
A leading men’s health
organisation today claimed that the Minister for the Status of
Women, Hon Gail Gago MLC, misled Parliament by maintaining that
false statistics on the Government’s
Don’t Cross the Line
anti-violence campaign
website are accurate.
Men's Health
Australia also lodged an official complaint with the Ombudsman last
Thursday after five months of attempting to draw the Minister's
attention to the major statistical errors on the website. The
complaint alleges that the Office for Women acted unreasonably by
publishing and not correcting this false and misleading information.
Men’s
Health Australia spokesman Greg Andresen said, “The
Facts and Stats page of the website is
extremely misleading to the public. It clearly inflates statistics
about domestic violence against women while understating statistics
about domestic violence against men.”
Men’s Health
Australia is supportive of all efforts to reduce interpersonal
violence in the community but is concerned that the regular use of
incorrect or misleading ‘statistics’ by Governments unfairly
stigmatises men and boys as violent and abusive, while
simultaneously denying services to male victims of violence.
They
are also concerned that the Government’s approach is not in the
interests of all children in families where there is abuse or
violence, but selectively favours those children in families where
violence is perpetrated by the father. The other one-third to half
of children have to fend for themselves without support.
On
14
th October Minister Gago defended the misleading
statistics in
Parliament, claiming that “the data on the
Don't
Cross the Line website is sound.”
Some of the
campaign’s
errors alleged by Men’s Health Australia
include:
· Overstating the annual number of
women victims of domestic violence by almost 400%
·
Overstating the number of women killed in domestic violence
situations by 86% while ignoring the one in three victims of
domestic homicide that are male
· Incorrectly
claiming that 95% of domestic violence involves a male perpetrator and a
female victim, when in actual fact at least one in three victims of
family violence are male
· Ignoring the
fact that as many young people have witnessed physical domestic
violence by their mother against their father, as have witnessed it
by their father against their mother
·
Ignoring the research showing that equal numbers of young males and
females have experienced domestic violence or have been forced to
have sex by their boyfriend/girlfriend.
·
Incorrectly claiming that domestic violence is the main cause of
death, disability and illness in young women (the main causes are
actually anxiety and depression, migraine, type 2 diabetes, asthma
and schizophrenia).
“All victims of violence deserve
campaigns based upon up-to-date accurate data, and the tax-paying
public doesn’t deserve to be misled. Flawed data such as this can
only lead to flawed policies and actions, and many children continue
to be exposed to violence because of these myths,” said Mr
Andresen.
“Inflating statistics on domestic violence
against women risks generating an unwarranted climate of fear in the
community, especially amongst females. It also has terrible impacts
upon the self-esteem of boys and the development of their healthy
masculinity.
“Understating the prevalence of domestic
violence against men makes it less likely that a man will be
believed when he finally summons up the courage to disclose his
partner’s abuse of him. It also allows Government to continue to get
away with family violence policies and campaigns that ignore male
victims.”
Media contact: Greg
Andresen |
media@menshealthaustralia.net
| 0403 813 925
The full complaint and
statistics shown by Men's Health Australia to be inaccurate can be
found at
menshealthaustralia.net/files/dctl.pdf