Skip to content
Political

Tasmania shows SA Premier must act to protect women in prisons

Family First Party 2 mins read

Tasmania’s decision to ban biological men from women’s prisons has exposed the failure of South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas to take seriously the safety of women in his state’s correctional system.

 

Family First Upper House candidate Deepa Mathew said the Tasmanian move, following the Northern Territory’s earlier ban, proves this is no longer be fobbed off by the Premier as a “niche issue”.

 

“Tasmania has done what every government committed to women’s safety should do — uphold biological reality and common sense,” Ms Mathew said.

 

Tasmania acted after a paedophile who raped his own three daughter demanded to be placed in a woman’s prison. Victoria is currently housing a similar child sex offender in a woman’s prison.

 

“The South Australian Premier can no longer brush this off as fringe. Women in our prisons are being placed at risk by male offenders who claim a female identity.”

 

The issue has become urgent following shocking reports of assaults in South Australian women’s prisons by violent male inmate Krista Richards. “These women are among the most vulnerable in our society — many have already suffered sexual violence and trauma. To expose them again to male-bodied offenders is cruel and indefensible,” Ms Mathew said.

 

She commended Tasmanian Attorney-General Guy Barnett for putting the safety of women first and urged Premier Malinauskas to follow suit. “The Premier’s refusal to act sends the message that ideology matters more than the safety of women,” she said. “He should immediately order that no biological male, regardless of gender identity, be housed in a women’s facility.”

 

“Protecting women’s spaces — whether prisons, refuges, or changerooms — is not about discrimination. It’s about safeguarding dignity, privacy, and safety. Tasmania and the NT have recognised that. South Australia must too.”

 

Ms Mathew and Family First supporters will be in attendance at today’s rally organised by Women’s Forum Australia on the steps of the SA Parliament.

 

 


Contact details:

[email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Political
  • 21/01/2026
  • 07:42
Family First Party

Libs drive stake in the heart of free speech, endanger groups like Family First

Family First is worried it may be banned as a “hate group” after the Liberals backed Labor’s antisemitism, hate and extremism laws. “There are…

  • Contains:
  • International News, Political
  • 20/01/2026
  • 16:04
Monash University

Monash expert: Japan’s prime minister calls snap election

This week Japan’s prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, called a snap election. She will dissolve parliament on 23 January with Japan expecting to head to the polls on 8 February. A Monash expert is available to talk about the snap election and what it could mean for Japan and politics in the region. Available to comment: Associate Professor Charles Crabtree, Senior Lecturer, School of Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts Contact: +1 720 236 0778 or [email protected] The following comments can be attributed to Senior Lecturer Crabtree: “Takaichi has called a snap election for 8 February, hoping to translate her striking popularity…

  • Political
  • 20/01/2026
  • 15:02
Dr Monique Ryan, Independent Member for Kooyong

Dr Monique Ryan highlights concerns about the Government’s rushed Hate Speech and Migration Laws

Following passage of theCombatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism (Criminal and Migration Laws) Bill 2026, Independent Member for Kooyong, Dr. Monique Ryan, said today: “Afterthe Bondi tragedy, itwas critical that our Parliament united behindlawstoprotect Australians from gun violence and hate speech.Our communities–particularlythe AustralianJewishcommunity – have been shocked andtraumatisedbythatsenseless act of violence.They want us to take action to ensure their safety andtheir freedom.ButIhaveserious concerns aboutthis legislation. "Australians want us to get this right. Poor policymakingwon’tmake our constituents safer. Terrorismisn’tonly an attack on lives;it’salso an attack onourconfidence in the idea that democracies can remain both secure and free. Legislation on the run will…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.