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Australia’s apology for sexual abuse in Parliament is not enough, campaigner says

SYDNEY — A day after Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison apologized in Parliament for the treatment of women who had suffered sexual abuse there, a prominent campaigner said she wanted to see action more than words.

Former political staffer Brittany Higgins, who says she was raped in a parliament office by a fellow staffer, said she was concerned workplace sexual abuse was in danger of becoming a “political perception problem neutralized and turned into a net positive.”

“Actions are what matter,” Higgins said in a speech at the National Press Club in Canberra. “Task forces are great. Codes of conduct are important. But only if it’s paired with institutional change.”

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The apology by Morrison, who must hold an election by mid-May, came after he struggled last year to place public anger amid several allegations of sexual abuse, discrimination against women and misconduct in Parliament.

A review set off by Higgins’ going public with details of her alleged sexual assault in a ministerial office found half of parliamentary staff had experienced harassment, bullying or sexual assault.

As Parliament sat for the first time in 2022 on Tuesday, the speaker read a statement apologizing for “an unacceptable history of workplace bullying, sexual harassment and sexual assault in parliamentary workplaces.”

In his address to Parliament, Morrison apologized to all who had suffered, and directly to Higgins for what happened to her.

Higgins said on Wednesday she recognized the significance of the moment but was concerned the government had only learned how to be better at talking about the issue.

Last year, police charged a 26-year-old man after an investigation into Higgins’ case. He is due to face court later this year.

The parliamentary apology marked a rocky start to an election year for Morrison as anti-vaccination protesters gathered outside Parliament and his conservative party argued about a religious freedom bill.

His personal integrity has also come under attack from damaging leaks, including by Higgins, of historical text messages from state officials and leaders of his Liberal-National Coalition, including some labeling him a “liar.”

Higgins spoke at the press club alongside another prominent campaigner for the rights of abuse victims, former Australian of the Year Grace Tame.

Tame was asked how opposition Labor leader Anthony Albanese could do better on the issue of workplace abuse if elected.

“All that Anthony would have to do is none of the things Scott’s done,” Tame said.

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