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Protesters across country demand end to violence against women during What Were You Wearing? rallies
Protesters across country demand end to violence against women during What Were You Wearing? rallies

ABC News

time10-05-2025

  • Politics
  • ABC News

Protesters across country demand end to violence against women during What Were You Wearing? rallies

Protests have been held in Australian cities today, with people of all ages calling for an end to violence against women. Indigenous-led not-for-profit organisation What Were You Wearing? led the rallies, which asked for more government investment in prevention and crisis support services, mandated trauma-informed training for first responders, nationally consistent and holistic consent laws, housing security, and bail reform to prioritise victim-survivor safety. About 250 women, men and children marched in Brisbane on Saturday, many of them carrying signs with powerful messages. The crowd heard from seven speakers, including victim-survivors and community leaders who shared their personal stories. Brittany Higgins — who was last year found, on the balance of probabilities, to have been raped by Bruce Lehrmann at Parliament House in 2019 — attended the rally but did not speak publicly. Pictured among other women attending the Brisbane rally, Ms Higgins was holding a sign that said: "25 women killed and still not an election issue." The sign refers to the 25 women who have been killed between January 13 and May 9 this year, according to figures from Australian Femicide Watch. March organiser Brooke Gillham said the national rallies showed solidarity with victims of domestic and gendered violence. "I'm here today as a victim-survivor, and that makes me really passionate about the cause and really passionate to get true systemic change," she said. The march started at Reddacliff Place, continued along Queen Street, and looped closed-off CBD streets. In Melbourne's CBD, hundreds of people gathered on the steps of state parliament to call for an end to violence against women. Australian Femicide Watch founder Sherele Moody voiced her frustration about what she described as authorities' lack of action to combat violence against women. "Can't believe we're doing this s*** again, but here we are", she told the crowd on Saturday afternoon. One by one, she read out the names, ages and locations of all the Australian women killed by acts of violence since January last year. British gender equality activist Gina Martin spoke to the crowd about the Australian women who had been killed this year. "They matter, their stories matter, their legacies really matter," she said. "We honour them, not just in words, but in our actions." She also called out the vandals who defaced a Hosier Lane mural in the heart of the city last week, labelling them "cowards". The She Matters mural — bearing the names, pictures and artistic images of more than 100 Australian women who were allegedly murdered or died due to violence — was spray-painted with the words "war on men" on International Women's Day. Another speaker told the Melbourne crowd: "Women don't need any more talkfests from the government. What they need is action." Protesters gathered outside of Parliament House in Canberra to demand action from the re-elected federal government, which now includes more women than ever before. On social media, What Were You Wearing? called on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to "speak on violence against women now", citing an online petition that had amassed more than 15,600 signatures.

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