PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
30/04/1998
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
10962
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
30 April 1998 TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS AT THE WESLEY MISSION LIFEFORCE SUICIDE PREVENTION COMMEMORATIVE SERVICE OPERA HOUSE, SYDNEY

E&OE................................................................................................................

Well, thank you very much for those words of welcome, Dr Moyes, to

the Reverend Bob Dunlop, to Reverend Pamela McNally, to Ms Carmen

Duncan, ladies and gentlemen.

I've come here this morning for several reasons. I've come

partly to salute the work over a long period of time of LifeForce

and its predecessor and I suppose, its parent organisation, Lifeline,

which under the leadership of that great Australian, Sir Alan Walker,

was established so many years ago and for the first time, provided

an easily accessible human link between people in our community who

felt lonely, depressed, ignored, unfairly treated or who in any way

were shut out from, or alienated from society. And the concept that

help was as close as the telephone and the concept that our community

was warmhearted enough and decent enough and had within its ranks

enough good people willing to make their time available to help people

who needed help. Over the years, that has undoubtedly saved the lives

of countless thousands of Australians and it's given to those

countless Australians and their families new and fresh hope.

So I therefore want, this morning, to salute the work, not only of

LifeForce and Lifeline, but all the other organisations in Australia

that have worked so very hard to provide a link between what seems

to people in a desperate frame and a depressed frame of mind, a world

that is passing them by and ignoring them and unfairly treating them

- that's provided those people with a visible link.

I've also come to demonstrate my personal concern and the concern

of my Government about the level of suicide within the Australian

community. It is a matter of sadness that the rate of suicide particularly,

but not only, amongst young people and marginally greater amongst

young men than young women, is one of the great social failings of

the Australian community. I don't want to talk for very long

about the resources that we have made available. But we have significantly

increased the resources for fighting suicide and preventing suicide.

But more, I want to talk about the way in which there can be greater

community consciousness and also address some remarks particularly

to those people here this morning who have been directly touched by

the tragedy of suicide. And I hope that this morning's gathering

gives you some comfort. I hope that it is a token for you that the

rest of the Australian community thinks about the sadness that you

have suffered. I hope that you do derive a little comfort, that you

try and perhaps find a little understanding in it. I have not personally

been touched by suicide in the sense that many of you in this gathering

have been, but as a local member of Parliament and as just an ordinary

member of society I have spoken often with people who have been directly

touched. And I know the anguished questioning, the why? How is it

that it happened to me, to a member of my family? Where did I go wrong?

What could I have done? All the multitude of questions and the introspections

and the self-criticism that inevitably happens and the sense of despair

that perhaps if something had been done, or not done, things might

have been different. And I know that for many of you, the opportunity

to converse with others who have been similarly touched, to have an

understanding that your community, your government, the churches of

Australia and the other community organisations of Australia have

a very, very active concern and a great desire to help and to understand.

As a Member of Parliament, I've been touched on a number of occasions

by lengthy discussions I've had with constituents of mine who've

lost young children, or young adult children as a result of suicide

and they've had a very profound effect on me. As a society, we

have to collectively try and understand some of the reasons why the

rate of suicide is so high. We can't, as a community, escape

responsibility for it. We can't, as a community, ignore the impact

of youth unemployment. We can't, as a community, ignore the impact

of weaker family bonds. We can't, as a community, ignore the

impact of a lessened sense of personal and family responsibility which

is a characteristic of modern, western society of the 1980s and the

1990s. Nor can we ignore the impact of the lessened role within our

community of institutions that stand for certain immutable values

and certain immutable principles of human conduct and human life.

The reasons why people take their own lives are mixed. There is no

one simple explanation but one thing that binds all of these incidents

together is of course, the enormous human tragedy that they represent

and the scars they leave, often forever, on those people who have

been directly affected.

Governments can help, they can fund programmes, they can recognise,

as I do, and as Dr Moyes does, that governments acting alone can't

solve or lessen the pain of this. Individuals acting alone can't

either, nor can organisations. We do need a shared endeavour, we need

the resources of the Government, we need the agencies of the Government,

we need the enormous moral commitment of organisations like the Wesley

Mission and we need the efforts of individuals in their own lives

to think about the alienation of a workmate, to wonder whether somebody

with whom we might be working feels left out of things and perhaps

we don't spend enough time talking to them about their personal

or family problems.

I once spoke to one of the telephone counsellors from an organisation

run by the De La Salle Brothers in Brisbane and he said that the thing

that had struck his organisation most about the telephone calls that

they'd had from young people was that the overwhelming bulk of

the telephone calls that they'd had from young people were young

people expressing a despair about the fact that they had absolutely

no capacity to communicate or to talk over their problems with anybody

in the world. They couldn't do it with their family members because

in some cases the family had disintegrated. In other cases, the family

unit members didn't care. Many of them didn't have jobs

and some of those that did have jobs found it quite impossible to

communicate with their workmates.

Now I think all of us can play a small part in spending a little more

time listening to people who seem to be making, I suppose, to put

it in one way, making heavy weather of their lives and who need help

and who need comfort and who need counsel.

So, ladies and gentlemen, I do want to associate my Government very

strongly with everything that can be done within the Australian community

to prevent suicide. It is a huge, collective social problem in this

country. It is a national disgrace that our suicide rate should be

as high as it is. It is the fault of no one thing, it is the fault

of no one group. We collectively, as a community must carry responsibility

and of course, the great tragedy is the opportunity of fulfilled lives

lost, the years of love, the years of contribution and the years of

playing an effective role within society that are lost.

But most importantly of all, it is an opportunity for me, on behalf

of the Australian community to extend our love and our understanding

and our thoughts to those here today and to those throughout our nation

who have been touched directly by the tragedy of suicide and to say

that we do care, we are trying to help. There are great organisations

like LifeForce, there is a government, there are communities who are

willing to help to try and lessen the pain and to try and help you

in the fullness of time to be more reconciled to and to be more at

peace with the tragedy that has overtaken your lives.

[Ends]

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