Army chief David Morrison: "People needed to stop asking why women in domestic violence situations do not simply leave their partners" by Judith Ireland - 25/11/14, 10:36 AM Judith Ireland Political reporter View more articles from Judith Ireland

"Here I am, a white Anglo Saxon 58-year-old male, who has never been discriminated against in his life. On any matter. It's a man's world...and it shouldn't work that way": Army chief Lieutenant General David Morrison. Photo: Alex Ellinghausen

In a speech to coincide with White Ribbon Day, Lieutenant General David Morrison has, yet again, made a raft of salient, timely and important points about the ingrained sexism in Australian culture both within and outside the military.

General Morrison said the statistics around domestic violence were "terrible," saying Australia has been too slow to address what is an "existential issue".

Opposition Leader Bill Shorten and Prime Minister Tony Abbott in discussion during the White Ribbon Day Breakfast at Parliament House in Canberra on Tuesday. Photo: Alex Ellinghausen

Every week, a women dies in Australia due to domestic violence, while one in three will experience violence at some stage in her life and one in five will experience sexual violence.

"We need to make a difference."

The Army chief said that while the Anzac story was a "great Australian narrative", the stories of women and others who were not white males needed to be included.

He said unless they were, there was a risk of "compounding this idea that Australia is a man's country".

"Where men are promoted on their potential. Women are only ever promoted on their proven performance."

While praising the "extraordinary bravery" of those who fought in World War I, he warned there has been "too much emphasis [on] the masculine over the feminine".

General Morrison - who became a social media star in 2013 after a video message demanding men who did not respect women "get out" of the Army - said cultural change needed to happen across society.

"Look, here I am, a white Anglo Saxon 58-year-old male, who has never been discriminated against in his life. On any matter. It's a man's world. And it doesn't work. And it shouldn't work that way," he said.

General Morrison said that people needed to stop asking why women in domestic violence situations do not simply leave their partners.

"It just isn't that easy. Women are our primary carers of our children. Women have less economic support than men," he said.

"Society needs to ask itself 'why doesn't he stop?' Rather than 'why is she staying?'"

At a White Ribbon breakfast on Tuesday, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said that "domestic violence has no friends anywhere".

"It's just wrong, it's never justified, it's never excused."

Labor leader Bill Shorten said that every Australian man had to become an advocate against domestic violence.

"It's time for every Australian man to face up to our responsibilities – in our Parliament, in our homes, in our communities, in our nation."

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