We want to tell you a story.
Andrea Pickett was an ordinary Australian girl. But unlike most teenagers who covered the walls of their bedrooms with posters of popstars, as a kid Andrea taped pictures of babies in every bit of spare space.
And in 2009, Andrea was stabbed to death by her former husband outside a relative’s home.
Andrea married young, anxious to start the big family she had always wanted. She did the things that mums all around the country do each and every day: She packed lunchboxes, brushed hair, made it out the door each morning with only seconds to spare and dropped the kids off at school.
In 2008 Andrea left her husband. She alleged cruelty, threats, abuse and violence on his part. In the years that followed she approached the police and other agencies for help as she continued to fear for her safety. As we now know, her fears were justified.
The ABC’s 4 Corners told Andrea’s story in harrowing detail last night:
One woman [Andrea] at deadly risk was virtually abandoned to her fate by authorities, who repeatedly failed or refused to act on her pleas for help. Why was so little done by police, prisons, parole services, the courts and child protection departments to stop her predictable, brutal murder?
[ABC 4 Corners] tells the story of women targeted by violent men and let down by the systems meant to protect them… Andrea’s story is not unique. There is significant evidence that victims of domestic violence are not being adequately protected, even when they make their situation known to the people who should protect them.
It can be easy to assume that what happened to Andrea was highly unusual, that it was a special set of circumstances, that it wouldn’t happen to anyone we know – but sadly that is not the case.
The most recent figures show that around 130 Australian women are killed as a result of intimate partner violence each year. In fact, one report has found that intimate partner violence is a bigger contributor to death, disability and poor health amongst women under 45 than obesity or smoking.