CANBERRA, Mar 7 (NNN-AGENCIES) – Former Australian Foreign Minister, Julie Bishop, urged the government to introduce independent counselling for parliament staff, amid claims of mistreatment of women.
Bishop, who served as the minister for Foreign Affairs from 2013 to 2018, said, she was “unspeakably sad” about allegations of sexual assault in Parliament, local media reported.
Brittany Higgins, a former government staffer, in Feb, went public with allegations that she was raped by a colleague in the office of Defence Minister, Linda Reynolds, in 2019.
Attorney-General, Christian Porter, is recently under pressure to resign, after he was identified as the government minister, accused of raping a 16-year-old girl in 1988, allegations that he has strenuously denied.
“The last few days have left me unspeakably sad,” said Bishop, according to the Australian on Sunday.
“I have so much sympathy for women who are victims of sexual abuse or other illegal, violent acts, and the physical and emotional trauma that surrounds it. It’s just so terribly sad,” Bishop said.
She called for the Parliament House to introduce new inductions and workplace standards training for politicians and their staff.
It came after the government announced on Friday that Sex Discrimination Commissioner, Kate Jenkins, would lead an independent review of parliamentary workplaces.
Bishop, who is now the Chancellor of Australian National University, in 2019, slammed the “gender deafness” in politics.– NNN-AGENCIES