Mildura protestors call for action on women’s safety

MILDURA MP Ali Cupper and gender equality councillor Helen Healy both delivered impassioned speeches at Mildura’s March4Justice event on Monday.

Mildura’s protest, held outside federal MP Anne Webster’s office on Eighth Street, was among dozens of gatherings held across Australia to protest unacceptable treatment of women in the workplace and the community, and the right of women to feel safe.

Speaking at the gathering, Ms Cupper argued the standard of proof needed to shift to make women safer in their workplaces.

“I want to offer a new way of thinking for people like the Prime Minister,” she said.

“We need beyond reasonable doubt to be the standard of proof for sending someone to jail for a crime, I don’t disagree with that. But when it comes to making decisions about recruitment, or workplace laws, or managing harassment in the workplace, it should be the balance of probabilities.

“It should be ‘Is it more likely than not that this happened?’”

The nationwide March4Justice movement comes as the federal government is under a cloud over the alleged rape of a former Liberal staffer by a colleague and rape allegations dating back to 1988 levelled against Attorney-General Christian Porter, which he strongly denies.

Ms Cupper called on her fellow parliamentarians to act, arguing that change on issues around women’s safety needed to come from the top.

“How are we ever going to address this problem when the problem is in our nation’s capital, federal parliament, where we should feel safest?” she said.

“Just after the Brittany Higgins story came out, I was at Victorian Parliament, just after 11pm … I was walking to the bathroom and thinking for a second, ‘Am I safe?’

“It’s 2021, we shouldn’t feel unsafe in the halls of what should be the most powerful, exemplary institutions.”

Ms Cupper also had a message for men.

“I heard someone mention recently about men and ‘Isn’t it terrible that mean have to live with this idea that if they’re accused of something they could lose everything?’” she told the crowd.

“The answer to men is this … you think about the things we (women) have to live with every single day, which is ‘What if I’m raped?’

“If you have to feel a little bit awkward about the fact that you might be accused one day and then you’d have to defend yourself, that’s a fair deal, I think.

“It’s going to stop women from having to avoid situations, avoid professional situations, avoid parliament, because they’re scared they’re not going to make it out alive.”

Mildura councillor Helen Healy told those gathered that her passion for the March4Justice campaign had very personal roots.

“And I’m here this morning because I spent an hour on the phone with a very close female relative, who’s still recovering from the impact of child sexual abuse to this day,” she said.

“This morning, I got a text from a high profile woman in this community saying, ‘I am marching, I am there, because my rapist is still out there living his miserable life and I got very little justice’.

“We all carry the load for these people, and we all have to say enough is enough. We have to have these conversations, men and women, to call it out, to change it, to change the system, to change the toxic culture that allows this to happen.”

Organiser Krystyna Schweizer told Sunraysia Daily she was inspired to take action after seeing so much coverage of sexual assault and harassment in the media.

“Christian Porter’s alleged accusation and Brittany Higgins really lit a fuse with the women of Australia,” she said.

“More needs to be done.

“Women have had enough.”

A petition citing March4Justice protestors’ demands was delivered to Dr Webster’s office at the conclusion of the gathering.

Nationwide call to action

The Mildura protest joined other March4Justice events in cities and towns across the country calling for action of women’s safety issues.

Organisers outlined their key demands ahead of Monday’s protests, calling on the government to confront sexism and gendered violence.

Demands directed at the government included investigating gendered violence within parliament, standing down politicians who perpetrate violence, creating a code of conduct for federal MPs to include prevention of gendered violence, mandating annual sexual harassment and violence training for MPs and staff and conducting a gender equity audit of parliaments, with a goal of ensuring all Australian parliaments are gender equal by 2030.

Organisers also demanded stronger rules targeting workplace harassment.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison refused to attend a rally in Canberra, where thousands gathered on the lawns of Parliament House.

Mr Morrison offered to meet March4Justice delegates after the rally, but organisers rejected the offer, saying a meeting with just three women was not enough.

“We have already come to the front door, now it’s up to the government to cross the threshold and come to us,” March4Justice founder Janine Hendry said.

“We will not be meeting behind closed doors.”

– with AAP

Digital Editions


  • Fighting fires in Mallee scrub

    Fighting fires in Mallee scrub

    WITH fires burning through two Mallee national parks on the weekend, and a pair of the blazes still to be contained, the environment fire crews…

More News

  • Mobile coverage upgrades on the way

    Mobile coverage upgrades on the way

    TELSTRA mobile base station upgrades at Irymple are scheduled from Thursday 27 to Saturday 31 January, with the aim of bringing a better 4G and 5G coverage to customers. The…

  • Royal commission will bring ‘momentum for change’

    Royal commission will bring ‘momentum for change’

    A ROYAL commission examining the Bondi terror attack will be an impetus for change across the community, Australia’s chief envoy for anti-Semitism says. After weeks of pressure following the 14…

  • Peg your leg at pirate pool party

    Peg your leg at pirate pool party

    AHOY me hearties! The Irymple Progress Association is holding a pirate pool party to help celebrate council grants to support engagement in the community. The party, which will be at…

  • Van-tastic laughs at the Setts

    Van-tastic laughs at the Setts

    DESPITE an aversion to public toilets, the VanLife comedians Nicky Wilkinson and Mick Neven, who are bringing their comedy show to the Setts in Mildura on Thursday 12 February, agree…

  • Circus evolution is a revolution

    Circus evolution is a revolution

    SUNRAYSIA residents don’t need to spend a fortune on tickets to Las Vegas to see a circus act, the Cirque Nouvelle is on its way to the Mildura Arts Centre…

  • Rural Aid begins new partnership

    Rural Aid begins new partnership

    RURAL Aid recently announced a partnership with WFI Insurance aimed at supporting rural communities facing disasters. Rural Aid’s association with WFI began in April 2025 when the insurance group donated…

  • Travelling Wilburys tribute band to play

    Travelling Wilburys tribute band to play

    THE Travelling Wilburys were the supergroup of the late 1980s, consisting of superstars George Harrison, Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, Bob Dylan, and Roy Orbison. The group was the brainchild of…

  • Nowingi the place to be on 26 January

    Nowingi the place to be on 26 January

    NOWINGI Place is just one of the locations in Sunraysia where Australia Day celebrations will be in full swing on Monday 26 January. Mildura City Council is encouraging people to…

  • The power of creativity

    The power of creativity

    Making Artisan Chocolates for Beginners Andrew Garrison Shotts UNLEASH your creativity and elevate your chocolate-making skills with Making Artisan Chocolates for Beginners. This affordable and concise edition is a beginner-level…

  • Value for everyone

    Value for everyone

    Cr Ali Cupper Mayor Mildura Rural City Council AS I touched on in this same publication last week, Mildura Rural City Council’s financial sustainability and ensuring our residents continue get…