Teal Ribbon Speech by Su’a William Sio
Teal Ribbon Speech by Su’a William Sio, MP for Mangere
Saturday 13 November 2010
Welcome to Mangere,
the Gateway to the nation, and home of the
young,
beautiful and gifted.
Earlier this month, we
were reminded of the importance of families, of
our
children and of the future of our Pacific heritage of some
of our
kids at Lotu Tamaiti – White Sunday.
White
Sunday celebrates these things – it celebrates the concept
of
family and of community. So we all know how important
family is – yet
violence continues to occur.
We have
a collective responsibility to ensure that our children, and
our
children’s children, live in environments that are
safe and free from
violence.
I want this collective
responsibility to extend all the way through
society –
right up to the government.
It’s a responsibility that
we must take seriously, and in the past
several years,
Labour put in place some major initiatives designed
to
address the root causes of family violence, supported
by many if not all
parties in Parliament.
A few years
ago, on Mangere Mountain, the Police showed us some
horrific
examples based on statistics that one third of
all murders in New
Zealand are family violence
related.
It stunned many of us. It showed that we are
hurting the very people we
are meant to love the most –
something that too often used to be written
off as a
crime of passion, or just another domestic between Mum and
Dad.
The TV ad campaign “Its Not Ok” reflected that
New Zealand has had
enough, and we’ve collectively
decided that “It’s Not OK.” The Campaign
is
designed to make family violence everybody’s business, and
may of us
have taken some kind of action as a result of
that campaign.
A few months ago while I was watching
Manukau Rovers play Pakuranga,
some of the boys got a bit
rough and started pushing each other around
after a hard
tackle. A woman watching the game, called out. “Its
Not
Okay” boys It’s Not Okay. I think the boys did
hear her, because they
stopped.
Last month Parliament
debated and passed the Govt’s Child and
Family
Protection Bill.
Labour supports any measure
that aims to mitigate and prevent the harm
of domestic
violence. We said to this Government that while we
supported
their Bill, we did not think it was ambitious
enough for our children.
We believe that the this
Government can, and should, be doing more to
mitigate and
prevent domestic violence. I believe future
governments
need to be ambitious about protecting
families and children.
I would like to share some
statistics on domestic violence in New
Zealand that
highlight why I think this Government and
future
governments can, and should, be doing more to
prevent domestic violence.
• In 2008 the police
responded to about 83,000 incidents
involving some form
of domestic violence.
• Four to 10 percent of
New Zealand children experience physical
abuse;
•
24 percent of girls and 11 percent of boys experience
sexual
abuse.
• In 2007, 6,400 children were
involved in applications for
protection orders. Most of
those children had witnessed violence. Some
had been
subjected to violence directly themselves.
• New
Zealand’s domestic violence rates do not compare well
with
other OECD countries, and we have the worst rate in
the world of child
death by maltreatment.
• A
recent report commissioned by Every Child Counts found
that
child abuse and neglect in New Zealand costs around
$2 billion per year.
These statistics may not mean much to
most people - they are just
numbers, you might say.
Let
me share with you some real life experiences which reflect
how real
these statistics are.
I repeat the experiences
from the mouths of children who are and have
been the
victims of domestic violence.
I had the opportunity with
the Social Services Committee to visit a
Wellington
organisation that provides support, encouragement,
and
counselling to a group of young men who range in age
from 12 to 19 years.
Members of the committee heard,
firsthand, the horrific life stories of
when they were
young children.
• One as young as 4 years old
was left to look after younger
siblings. They had been
abandoned by their parents who were out on a
drinking
spree, and left to fend for themselves with no food in
the
cupboards.
• We heard terrible stories
and graphic detail of how children
were beaten up,
sexually abused, or witnessed the degrading of their
mother.
• I apologise to you in advance, but I
would like to share some
of these stories. They are
horrible stories. They were told to me in
graphic,
violent detail.
• One young man revealed how, at
night, a woman, would enter his
bedroom and sexually
abuse him. It was painful for him. He prays to God
for
help. God does not answer him, and the abuse continues. This
young
man grew up hating God and then hated himself. He
is recovering.
• Another said that whenever his
dad was drunk, the son would
have to sit on the laps of
his dad’s friends and he would massage each
of his
father’s friends. He was 6 years old. He hates his father,
but he
also needs him.
• Another young boy,
at 9 years old, was raped by his mother’s
boyfriend.
The boyfriend pushed his head into the mattress and
sodomised
him. The man said: “I’m doing this to
teach you to respect me.” His mum
does not want to know
what happened. The boy wishes his dad were alive
so he
could do something about this guy.
• There were
also stories of how these young children witnessed
the
degrading of their mothers. One boy described how his dad
tried to
kill his mum by pouring gasoline on her while
they watched. Their mum is
depressed and shuts them out
now.
• Another boy described how his dad gave
his mum a beating and
she was bleeding all over. This was
when he was only 4 years old. His
father made him clean
up all the blood.
• Another terrible story was
about a father who likes getting
drunk and who beats up
his wife and forces her to prostitute. Whenever
she
finishes taking men, the father insists on knowing all the
graphic
details of what they did.. The young daughter who
witnessed all this,
later in life became a prostitute
herself and would beat up the men she
was with. She ended
up going too far and killed a man, and now she is
in
prison.
• Yet another story, just as
horrible, is that of a 6-year-old
who was beaten by her
mother because she could not read. When she played
with
matches, she was threatened with burning by having her hand
held
over a lit stove. At 7 years old her father sold her
so he could buy
alcohol, and she was raped 40
times.
I’m sorry for repeating these stories. I have
attempted to tone it down
for your sake. These stories
underscore how important it is to be
ambitious about
protecting children from domestic violence and
abuse.
These are real stories. These are real people.
These are our kids.
These stories come from Māori,
Pākehā, and Pacific kids. I highlight
that fact, as
there are many myths about domestic violence.
Often when
we read letters in newspapers or blogs on the Internet,
or
listen to radio talkback shows, we hear a host of
myths about domestic
violence being regularly promoted.
They include suggestions that only
drunk or mentally ill
men are violent.
Others blame women for staying in abusive
relationships or provoking the
violence against them. The
reality is that although some who perpetuate
domestic
violence are drunks, many are not; some abusers are
mentally
ill, but many are not.
Responsibility for
abuse must lie with the person who is abusing others.
No
one ever deserves to be abused, struck, beaten, or
raped.
One myth that has been difficult to change has been
the suggestion that
domestic violence occurs in certain
sectors of society and not in others.
It is often
suggested that domestic violence is something that
occurs
only in poor neighbourhoods or in Māori and
Pacific families. This is
just not true.
Men who
physically abuse their partners and children, and it is
mostly
men, come from all occupations, classes,
religions, and ethnicities.
Domestic violence, whether one
is Pākehā or Pasifika, Māori or Asian, is
never
right.
The Governor-General Sir Anand Satyaanand, made
these remarks earlier
this year: “Cultural norms can
never be used as an excuse for violence,
whether that be
within the family or elsewhere. To those who would
argue
otherwise, I would respond that the
‘tradition’—and I place the words in
quotes—has
either been twisted and misinterpreted or simply has no
place
in New Zealand society.”
Another factor which
contributes significantly to violence in the homes,
on
the sports field, in the community is the alcohol abuse and
the binge
drinking culture we have normalised since
alcohol was made so easily
accessible over many
years.
We now have an alcohol crisis in our country.
Sir
Paul Reeves, Dame Temuranga Batley-Jackson, Papalii Dr
Semisi
Ma’ia’i and others have called on all Members
of Parliament to use the
current historic opportunity
brought about by the Law Commission’s
“first
principles” review of the liquor laws, to change the
damaging
heavy drinking culture in New Zealand.
The economic cost of the harm caused by heavy drinking is in the billions.
• Twenty five percent of New Zealand drinkers are heavy drinkers.
• A third of all
police apprehensions involve alcohol. Half of
all serious
violent crimes relate to alcohol.
• Up to 75% of
adult presentations at Emergency Departments on
Thursday
to Saturday nights are alcohol-related.
• There
are over 500 serious and fatal injury traffic
crashes
every year.
• There are over 1000 alcohol deaths every year.
• There are 70,000
alcohol-related physical and sexual assaults
each year,
and much, much more.
We need future leaders who are
prepared to stand up and be counted and
say to their
peers and future generations that life can be
enjoyed
without alcohol.
We need them to say that
social events don’t need to have alcohol in
order for
it to be successful events.
There is overwhelming evidence
that all point out the significant
economic, social and
health costs that arise from alcohol and
tobacco-related
harm in our families, community and country.
Domestic
violence is not confined to the poor, brown and uneducated,
it
affects all of us. This is why we need to be working
together to combat
it..
As a parent, I do not want my
children to be addicted to alcohol,
tobacco, or any other
drug. I do not want my children to be involved
in
violence of any kind or form whatsoever.
Our country
spends so much money combating domestic violence, paying
for
the economic, social and health harms caused by
alcohol &
tobacco-related harm when this money should be
spent on our kids education.
My aspiration is that our
children release their fullest potential, grow
their
gifts and talents, and become the best leaders we have ever
seen.
To prepare our kids for this, we must stand together
to fight those who
are opposed to our kids taking up
their rightful leadership place in the
future of New
Zealand.
Anyone targeting our kids with an intent to harm
them, physically or
emotionally, or aims to stifle our
kids progress in life, is my enemy,
is an enemy of my
community and should be an enemy of this nation.
Let us
renew again this year our collective commitment that we
stand
together in opposition to violence in our homes.
Let us rededicate our
efforts that we oppose violence in
our community, and we will battle
ahead to oppose those
factors that contribute to violence in our country.
Let us
re-dedicate ourselves to continue the fight against the
thinking
of those who think it is ok. Let us all say
together, It is Not Ok.
Let us all aim to be violence
free.
Ia
soifua