Shocking figures on domestic violence have been revealed as Police step up their campaign for stronger laws.

The Queensland Police Union (QPU) has released figures showing there were 15,665 incidents of domestic violence reported on the Gold Coast in 2024.

There were also a staggering 6427 breaches of domestic violence orders on the Gold Coast across the year.

That’s an increase of 8.7 per cent on the previous year.

The QPU is pushing for tougher domestic violence laws, including making DV a standalone crime.

It also wants high-risk offenders to be tracked and banned from nightclubs and dating apps.

Queensland Police Union President Shane Prior says we need bold and significant change to address the growing problem.

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“The ​current reality ​really ​is ​dire ​in ​this ​state. ​Police ​in ​this ​state ​every ​day ​are ​being ​called ​to ​526 ​domestic ​and ​family ​violence ​incidences. ​That’s ​one ​every ​three ​minutes ​on ​those ​numbers ​alone,” Mr Prior said.

“With ​current ​approaches ​with ​the ​police ​protection ​notices, ​we ​are ​failing ​to ​adequately ​protect ​victims ​and ​change ​perpetrator ​behaviour. We ​are ​on ​track ​for ​a ​record ​in ​the ​state. ​We’re ​going ​to ​reach ​210,000 ​occurrences ​that ​our ​police ​on ​the ​front ​line ​are ​going ​to ​for ​domestic ​and ​family ​violence.”

The union warns the time spent dealing with surging domestic violence cases is leading to an exodus of officers from the QPS.

It also wants a streamlined process for dealing with DV cases including the introduction of Police protection directions to help protect victims immediately.

“If Police ​see ​that ​domestic ​violence ​has ​occurred ​and ​they’ve ​identified ​the ​person ​most ​need ​of ​care, ​they ​should ​take ​action ​immediately ​and ​issue ​an ​order ​on ​the ​spot ​to ​protect ​that ​victim, ​not ​send ​them ​to ​court ​with ​a ​temporary ​protection ​order ​and ​an ​application ​for ​a ​protection ​order ​in ​court.

“​Police ​are ​very ​well ​skilled ​in ​this ​area ​and ​they ​should ​be ​given ​the ​tools ​needed ​to ​protect ​victims ​straight ​away.”

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A QPU petition to strengthen DV laws closes on Friday.

Queenslanders can sign the petition at http://makedvacrime.com.au

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