It’s only April. And already, 19 Australian women have lost their lives to domestic violence or alleged domestic violence.
Trigger warning: This post deals with domestic violence and may be triggering for some readers.
The husband of missing Townsville woman Julie Hutchinson, 48, has been charged with murdering the mother of two and interfering with her corpse.
Security guard Michael Hutchinson, 47, has been in custody since Saturday night and Ms Hutchinson’s Townsville house was declared a crime scene over the weekend, ABC News reports.
Ms Hutchinson has not been seen since March 7, but was reported missing on April 9.
Related content: Julie Hutchinson’s husband has been arrested.
Ms Hutchinson’s alleged murder brings the number of women killed in alleged circumstances of family or intimate partner violence to 19.
That figure is 19 people too many.
This time last year, it was only one a week. This year, at times it has been two per week. It remains higher than average.
That’s because family and intimate partner violence is the leading cause of ill health and death for women between the ages of 15 and 44.
Bigger than cancer, heart disease, road fatalities — domestic violence is the single, greatest killer of women, and it can be stopped.
If you include women who have lost their lives to violence — like Masa Vukotic, Prabha Arun Khuman or Stephanie Scott — that number rises to a horrifying total of 31, according to Destroy the Joint.