Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeYour LettersOur children are vulnerable

Our children are vulnerable

This morning I woke to read in the Sydney Morning Herald about a man that has killed a rabbi and three children in a Jewish school in France. This comes after recent news about children killed in Afghanistan by an American Soldier and the release of the horrific Kony 2012 documentary which outlines how one man has led to the mutilation and torture of many young people who have been recruited as sex slaves and boy soldiers, and forced to kill their own parents.
Issues of child abuse such as these, spread far and wide across the world, but here in Australia we have a sense of smugness about how lucky and safe our children are. But that smugness is a lie. Children in Australia are our most vulnerable, they need our protection and yet adults are disconnecting from our kids at our own peril.
The very fact that one in five children in Australia today is sexually abused, is example enough that our children are no safer than those from other countries.
For years I have questioned who is willing to stand up for the 20,000 Australian children** who become victims of physical and sexual assault here in our lucky country. These figures are horrific and our belief that our children are being protected is a false one, considering the long-term and traumatic effects of these experiences that these kids carry with them.
After 38 years of experience with youth, I know that sexual abuse destroys lives, families and generations and yet we are too scared to put this issue on the national agenda. We are facing a massive endemic problem about the protection of kids and yet we are too afraid to know of the truths of child abuse.
March 21 marked Harmony Day and in recognising this day, I ask that Australia acknowledges the need to take notice of our children, no matter their culture, no matter their geographic location. We are forgetting the kids right here, in Australia, that need our support.
We are a communit, and as a community we need to start protecting our young people – this is something that crosses nationalities. Harmony Day is about celebrating the commonalities between families, and the safety of our children should be something that all our families focus on every day.
We need to put child protection on our national agenda!

Father Chris Riley
Chief Executive Officer
Youth Off The Streets

Previous article
Next article
Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Stanthorpe Art Prize finalist paints art born from struggle

On the 12th of June 2026 Stanthorpe will be hosting its prestigious Stanthorpe Art Prize finals. Amongst the finalists this year is a very...
More News

200 fined over road safety breaches

More than 100 people have been fined for speeding, six charged with drink driving and almost 30 tested positive for drug driving during a...

Locals unites to help protect state forest

More than 50 people have joined forces to establish a new Friends of Broadwater group aimed at protecting and enhancing the Broadwater State Forest...

Big win as Redback/Bombers climb the ladder

In was a dominant performance from the Souths/Redbacks Bombers women in round five of the AFL Darling Downs competition with the fledgling team winning...

Limited margin for error

Australia’s dairy producers are facing the 2026/27 season with “limited margin for error” as they juggle rising input costs, Rabobank says in its annual...

Summit singles draw announced

The Summit Men’s Championship singles are set to be held this weekend with the draw released this week. All games are to be first to...

Close game for Association play

Lesley and Julie Grayson have won a close one in the only Warwick Croquet Club Association Play game on Tuesday 12 May. The duo defeated...

Vintage holdens headed for Stanthorpe

A blast from the motoring past is coming to Stanthorpe this June, with the 35th annual FB-EK Holden Nationals bringing almost 100 vintage 1960s...

Alcohol ad rules failing Australians, AMA warns

With alcohol-induced deaths at their highest rates in more than 20 years, the Australian Medical Association has called for tougher regulation of alcohol advertising...

Volunteers power animal rescue efforts

National Volunteer Week is a time to celebrate the people who quietly make our communities better. The people who give up their time as...

Hole in one for McLennan

Melanie McLennan experienced every golfer’s dream during an afternoon round on Saturday, 16 May, producing a remarkable hole-in-one on the picturesque fifth hole —...