Foreign

Rallies have taken place across Australia in response to a wave of recent violence against women.

Demonstrators want gender-based violence to be declared a national emergency and stricter laws put in place to stop it.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the issue was a national crisis.

In Australia, a woman has been killed on average every four days so far this year.

Organiser Martina Ferrara said: “We want alternative reporting options for victim survivors to let them own their stories and own their healing and reporting journey.

“And we want the government to acknowledge this is an emergency action and take immediate action.”

Speaking at a march in the capital Canberra attended by thousands of protesters, Mr Albanese admitted the government at all levels needed to do better.

“We need to change culture, the attitudes, the legal system and the approach by all governments,” he said.

“We need to make sure that this isn’t up to women, it’s up to men to change men’s behaviour as well,” he added.

Responding to calls by protestors for violence against women to be classified as a national emergency, Mr Albanese said the classification was normally used during floods or bushfires to release a temporary injection of cash.

“We don’t need one month or two months – we need to address this in a serious way, week by week, month by month, year by year,” he said.

As some in the crowd criticised him, Mr Albanese suggested that he had been told ahead of time that he would not be allowed to speak at the rally – prompting a tense exchange with organiser Sarah Williams.

“That’s a lie. That’s a full out lie,” Ms Williams can be heard saying in video of the incident, before appearing to burst into tears.

In a statement on Monday, Ms Williams said the prime minister had demanded to speak “because he was being heckled” and accused him of behaving like “a man with power trying to diminish a vulnerable young woman”.

“I was happy to just attend as a participant or happy to speak, either way,” Mr Albanese told Seven News, urging that the controversy should not serve as “a distraction from what is a very serious issue indeed”.

Australia’s federal attorney general, Mark Dreyfus, has rejected holding a royal commission into gender-based violence.

Mr Albanese has repeatedly called gender-based violence an epidemic but it’s not new: in 2021, marches took place across the country over allegations of sexual misconduct within the parliament and society.

In Adelaide, it was estimated around 3,000 people rallied outside the city’s parliament building on Saturday.

Protests have also taken place in Brisbane, Melbourne, the Gold Coast and Newcastle over Friday and Saturday, 9News reported.

Recent killings have put the issue back in the spotlight.

Earlier this month, a man stabbed six people to death in a Sydney shopping centre. Five of the victims were women and the police are looking at whether they were the target.

New South Wales Police Force commissioner Karen Webb said “the offender focused on women and avoided the men”.

The rallies also coincided with the charging of a man with the alleged murder of 30-year-old mother-of-four Erica Hay, who was found dead after a house fire in Perth earlier this month.

In all, 27 women have been killed in the first 119 days of 2024, according to data compiled by the campaign group Destroy the Joint.

BBC/Simeon Ugbodovon

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Foreign

Seven aid workers have been killed in Gaza in what their charity’s founder said was an Israeli air strike.

World Central Kitchen (WCK) said workers from countries including the UK, Poland and Australia were killed.

WCK founder and chef José Andrés said they were killed “in an IDF air strike”. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it was conducting a “thorough review”.

Gaza’s Hamas-run media office also blamed Israel.

The alleged strike could not be immediately verified independently.

A journalist working for the BBC in Gaza has seen the bodies of three international aid workers and a Palestinian driver, recovered from the site of the alleged air strike. Foreign passports were also shown.

WCK later said in a statement that seven of its team had been killed and were Australian, Polish, British, Palestinian and a dual US-Canadian citizen.

“I am heartbroken and appalled that we – World Central Kitchen and the world – lost beautiful lives today because of a targeted attack by the IDF,” the charity’s CEO Erin Gore said in a statement.

“The love they had for feeding people, the determination they embodied to show that humanity rises above all, and the impact they made in countless lives will forever be remembered and cherished”.

Ms Gore said WCK was pausing its operations immediately in the region.

She added that those killed were part of a convoy that was hit while leaving the Deir al-Balah warehouse in central Gaza, “where the team had unloaded more than 100 tons of humanitarian food aid brought to Gaza on the maritime route.”

Further details of the alleged attack are still emerging.

Adrienne Watson, a spokesperson for the White House National Security Council, said on X: “We are heartbroken and deeply troubled by the strike that killed [WCK] aid workers in Gaza.

“Humanitarian aid workers must be protected as they deliver aid that is desperately needed, and we urge Israel to swiftly investigate what happened.”

Australian Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese has confirmed that aid worker Lalzawmi “Zomi” Frankcom was among those killed and has offered his condolences to family and friends.

In a statement, he said: “This is someone who was volunteering overseas to provide aid through this charity for people who are suffering tremendous deprivation in Gaza. And this is just completely unacceptable.”

He said Australia expected “full accountability”, adding that it was a “tragedy that should never have occurred”.

A Palestinian medical source told the BBC the workers had been wearing bullet-proof vests bearing the WCK logo. The charity is currently providing meals for thousands of people in Gaza.

In a post on X, Mr Andrés, a celebrity chef, called on the Israeli government “to stop this indiscriminate killing”.

BBC / Titilayo Kupoliyi

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