The interim report from the Royal Commission into Defense and Veteran Suicide says the prevalence of suicide among serving and ex-ADF members “should concern us all” and the commissioners are “dismayed” by the lack of action from past governments to previous inquiries and reports .
It makes 13 recommendations for immediate action, including eliminating the backlog of compensation claims, simplifying and harmonizing veteran compensation and rehabilitation legislation, and improving the administration of the claims system.
Veterans’ Affairs Minister Matt Keogh said the government will make a formal response to the recommendations before getting on “with the task of saving lives.”
Keogh called the rate of veteran suicide a “national tragedy.”
“It is devastating that Australia has lost more serving and former serving personnel to suicide than it has lost through operations over the last 20 years in Afghanistan and Iraq,” he said.
Keogh said he is “deeply sorry” for the failings and lack of action within the defense force and veterans’ affairs department.
The commissioners also noted the considerable number of previous reports and inquiries since 2000, identifying over 50 previous reports and more than 750 recommendations.
“While we acknowledge that many of these reports and inquiries were about discrete topics, we have been dismayed to come to understand the limited ways that Australian governments have responded to these previous inquiries and reports,” the report said.
In response to this, Keogh said it is “vital” that the recommendations are urgently addressed.
“It is clear that a number of recommendations from this interim report call on the government to get on with recommendations that have been the subject of numerous previous reviews in this area and it is vital that these are addressed as a priority,” Keogh said.
Keogh acknowledged the recommendations and details of the report will be confronting ADF members, veterans and families and urged them to seek support.
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton said the Coalition would support “reasonable steps” the government took in its response to the royal commission.
“It is a national tragedy and this is a problem that’s been frankly decades in the making, back to the Vietnam War where people were treated very poorly when they came home,” Dutton said.
“The way our country provides support to our veterans should be a source of national pride, not shame.
“I want to make sure we can support the government in every reasonable step they take to reduce and hopefully bring to zero the numbers who seek to take their own lives.”
Dutton called on the government to move the veterans’ affairs portfolio back into cabinet after it was made a junior ministry.
He refused to be drawn on whether the Coalition, which had been in government from 2013 until this year’s federal election, would take responsibility for issues faced by veterans, saying it was an issue which has “been going on for decades” and “is not about politics”.
The final royal commission report will be handed down in June 2024.