The chair of the royal commission into veteran suicides has blasted the defence establishment for failing to move urgently to prevent former service members from taking their own lives.Credit:Marija Ercegovac
Kaldas added that putting one’s hand up for help was often wrongly perceived as weakness in the male-dominated Australian Defence Force,as he accused various arms of the Defence bureaucracy of stonewalling the royal commission’s search for information.
Kaldas,a former deputy commissioner of the NSW Police Force,told the press club that at least 1600 veterans had died by suicide between 1997 and 2020,more than 20 times the number killed in active duty over the same period.
“Rarely a week goes by that this royal commission isn’t alerted to the untimely death of another serving or ex-serving member,” he said.
Loading
“It is unquestionably a national crisis.”
The suicide rate for ex-servicemen who were in the permanent forces was 44 per cent higher than for the general Australian male population,he said.
Despite these figures and the fact the royal commission hasalready issued an interim report,Kaldas said:“When it comes to protecting the mental health and wellbeing of servicemen and women,the evidence this royal commission has uncovered to date suggests there’s been far too much talk and not enough action.”