Normally
I would not pay this much attention were it not for the fact that
this brave young woman, Tania Billingsley, has asked for
name suppression to be lifted so that she could speak out and and
address the wider issues of sexual violence.
There
is also a wider issue - which is of oppression and violence in
general and the rape of Mother Earth.
NZ
PM John Key , FM Murray McCully (a known misogynist), and all those
like him, show utter disdain for all this - and disdain for
everything that has beauty in this world.
Woman
at centre of Malaysian diplomat case speaks out
The
woman at the centre of the Malaysian diplomat case has spoken out
about what she feels is a mishandling of the case and a symptomatic
breakdown in how New Zealand treats victims of sexual violence
9
July, 2014
Tania
Billingsley, 22, has voluntarily had her name suppression lifted so
she could share her thoughts on the case with media.
Sexual
assault-accused Muhammad
Rizalman bin Ismail was
a staff assistant for defence at the Malaysia High Commission in
Brooklyn, Wellington, and is understood to hold a military rank of
second warrant office.
He
was arrested on May 9 and charged with burglary and assault with
intent to rape after allegedly following Ms Billingsley home.
"I
guess that I'm someone who has something to say about this assault,"
says Ms Billingsley. "It happened to me and throughout this
whole process, especially once it's become so public, my voice
hasn't been heard. And I do, obviously, have a lot to say about
this. I'm not just a bystander."
There
can be no more important voice, but it's been one lost amongst the
noise. So much has been written, aired, discussed, surmised about
this case, but it's all at such an impersonal level. Nowhere have
you heard the woman at the centre of it all.
She
has made a considered decision. She wants you to know who she is and
she wants you to know her story.
"Because
I'm hoping that in revealing who I am and having a face to put to
this alleged victim that I'll be able to help address some of the
issues around sexual violence in this country."
But
speaking out is not as straightforward as you might think.
Complainants in sex attacks, for good reason, are granted automatic
name suppression. Ms Billingsley – with her lawyer – had to
apply to the courts to have that protection lifted so she could
talk.
"In
making myself too public I am making myself quite vulnerable to
people who see this differently than me and also just being so
visible is quite a scary thing."
Beginning
with the May 9 attack, Rizalman was arrested and appeared in court
the next day, charged with burglary and attempted rape.
Ms
Billingsley says she first became aware of Rizalman's diplomatic
status on May 11, which is also her birthday.
"So
I spent the morning of it in the police station being told that he
was a diplomat," she says.
Official
meetings followed and just two weeks later a diplomatic escape route
was taken – Rizalman left New Zealand.
"I
found out that he was going to leave the day that he left. Up until
then the police had been really great at keeping me informed, but
even they didn't know what to tell me.
"I
got this call and it was like, 'Yeah, you know we just found out
that he's leaving today.'
"Obviously
I was frustrated and I was angry because I had from the very
beginning said that I wanted him to stay in New Zealand and be held
accountable here."
Her
wishes, though, counted for nothing, and Rizalman's controversial
departure was kept quiet.
"[It
was] as though what happened to me is just backdrop to the political
drama instead of a really real and traumatic experience. Of course
it's that thing of it's only become a real issue when it started to
inconvenience them."
What
transpired is Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully was briefed
when the charges were laid and did nothing.
"It's
just not appropriate for ministers to get involved too closely in
this process," says Mr McCully.
But
Ms Billingsley is upset the minister, in his weekly meetings with
officials in those seven weeks before this became public, didn't ask
them about the case.
"Clearly
he doesn't know how to do his job properly," says Ms
Billingsley. "He obviously doesn't take sexual assault as a
serious thing to consider.
"I've
heard that I have a formal apology on the way, but really the only
apologies that I've heard have been them saying in the media that we
have apologised."
She
says she wants more than just an apology.
"I
would take them actually committing to address rape culture and to
being just more engaged in this stuff as an apology instead; if they
want to swap an apology for them starting to deal with this stuff
then I'm okay with that."
But
if an apology is to come, whom does she want it from?
"McCully,
I would like an apology from him, not just for what I feel is a
really incompetent handling of the situation, but in his reaction,
like the fact that even when asked directly about me and things like
that, that he just brushed it off. He was so intent on trying to put
responsibility and blame on everybody else that I just feel like he
wasn't actually addressing and putting energy towards fixing what had
happened. Obviously it was painful for me to watch that, seeing
someone be so dismissive of something that's been so traumatic to me,
but it is also embarrassing watching a grown man trying to put blame
and talk his way out of what effectively is failure at his own job."
She
says Mr McCully should resign.
Addressing a culture of violence
Ms
Billingsley's quest for accountability doesn't stop with the Foreign
Minister. She's outraged too at what she feels is dismissiveness of
her case, from the very top.
"I
just remember the first, the very first, thing I watched on it, and
just seeing him looking bored and annoyed at having to be talking
about it and just saying there's nothing that we can do pretty much.
'Oh it sucks but it is what it is.' And that's what I was getting. I
don't feel from him any sincerity in his concern for me."
Her
friends get it, both in terms of what happened and what the fallout
represents. It's something that has been driving her activism since
long before all this. Spend time with Ms Billingsley and her friends
and you'll see they're part of a growing global conversation about
rape culture.
"[Rape
culture] is a society and culture within it that normalises and
trivialises and, even in subtle and obvious ways, condones rape and
sexual violence.
"I
think quite clearly from the beginning the fact that as the person
who has had to deal with this and who has from the beginning, I've
had very definite views about what I've wanted and how I felt about
this and it hasn't been listened to.
"The
police have been good and they've definitely acknowledged in respect
of where I'm coming from, but at a higher level there's been no
attempt to really honour what I want.
"I
just really think that we as a country, and especially the
Government, needs to start not just reacting to sexual assault but
working to prevent it."
No
longer does she feel comfortable walking the streets of Wellington at
night. Ms Billingsley can't talk about the man accused of her attack;
the legal process has still to play out.
But
already she has a capacity for thinking beyond herself, about victims
of sexual violence. But her compassion extends also to the family of
Rizalman.
"They're
also victims in what has happened and I can't even imagine how hard
the last couple of months have been for them. They're probably not
watching this but I hope the message gets back to them that I'm
thinking about them as well and hope they're being supported where
they are because I think that people aren't really acknowledging that
this has probably been horrible and life-changing for them as well as
me."
3rd
Degree approached Foreign Minister Murray McCully for an interview,
but he declined, saying: "I have publicly apologised
to the young woman whose distress has been aggravated by the poor
management of this case. The terms for a full inquiry into the matter
are being finalised. I do not wish to compromise either the inquiry
or any criminal proceedings by commenting further."
We
also asked Prime Minister John Key and he also declined, with his
office saying: "We will decline your request for the Prime
Minister to appear on the programme. The legal implications of any
pending court case precludes an appearance."
The
following letter, from Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade chief
executive John Allen, was handed to Ms Billingsley a few hours before
3rd Degree went to air tonight: "I deeply regret the
distress caused to the woman at the centre of this incident. I have
apologised to her publicly and by letter. In dealing with this issue
the Ministry fell short of the standards expected of us. Our focus
now is on performing the rest of our role in this matter to a high
standard and on learning from the lessons that come out of the
independent inquiry."
From
Malaysian media -
Tania
Billingsley to family of
alleged Malaysian attacker: I
know you are
victims too
KUALA
LUMPUR, July 9 — Even as she vented her anger and frustration at
the way the authorities were dealing with her sexual assault, New
Zealander Tania Billingsley voiced sympathy with the Malaysian
family of her alleged attacker.
Muhammad Rizalman Ismail
Malay Mail online
9
July, 2014
In
an interview on New Zealand television today, the 21-year-old
highlighted that she was not the only person to have suffered in the
international storm following her alleged assault, pointing out that
the family of junior envoy Muhammad Rizalman Ismail likely felt
entrapped by the situation.
“They’re
also victims in what has happened and I can’t even imagine how hard
the last couple of months have been for them,” Billingsley said on
the Kiwi TV3’s 3rd Degree programme today.
The
military assistant, formerly attached to the Malaysian High
Commission in Wellington, has a wife and three children.
“They’re
probably not watching this but I hope the message gets back to them
that I’m thinking about them as well and hope they’re being
supported where they are because I think that people aren’t really
acknowledging that this has probably been horrible and life-changing
for them as well as me,” she was quoted saying on the New Zealand
news agency’s website.
Billingsley
made her first public appearance today, revealing herself as the
woman at the centre of the sex case that had nearly unravelled New
Zealand-Malaysia ties.
She
said she chose to forego court protection of her identity because she
was “frustrated” and “angry” with her country’s leaders for
their lackadaisical response to her alleged assault.
She
had accused Muhammad Rizalman of breaking into her home last May with
the intent to rape her.
He
was arrested by Kiwi police on May 9 on allegations of burglary and
attempted sexual assault on Billingsley.
He
was charged in a New Zealand court the next day for burglary and
assault with intent to commit rape, with both charges carrying the
maximum penalty of a 10-year jail term.
The
junior envoy has since returned to Malaysia, taking advantage of the
diplomatic immunity.
The
Malaysian government however announced last week that he will be
returning to New Zealand to be tried there.
There
have been no further confirmation on the exact date of his return as
he is currently undergoing mental and emotional evaluation tests, the
New Zealand Herald reported last week, citing an unnamed doctor at
the Tuanku Mizan Military Hospital in Malaysia.
The
envoy would not be discharged until the medical examinations were
complete, the doctor said.
His
request for his return to be delayed until after Hari Raya was also
denied by New Zealand authorities, according to media reports.
Well done to a very brave lady!
ReplyDeleteWhen our under age child was gang raped in Auckland, we reported it to authorities, who promptly gagged us to prevent anyone finding out. http://bit.ly/ourNZexperience