Thursday, September 29, 2011

Executive to establish inquiry into abuse


The executive has agreed to establish an inquiry into allegations of abuse in children's homes and other care institutions going back as far as 1945.

The organisations who ran the institutions will face pressure to explain the treatment of children over the course of five decades.

They include Catholic religious orders, state and voluntary groups.

The inquiry follows lengthy judicial examinations of horrifying tales of abuse in the Irish Republic.

Concern has been expressed that passing the legislation necessary to give the inquiry powers to compel witnesses to appear and to obtain all relevant records could take the Northern Ireland Assembly two years.

Therefore the plan is to move forward immediately with other elements.

An advocacy service, designed to support victims of abuse, is to be created within around two months.

Then an "acknowledgment forum" will commence work behind closed doors.

The forum will enable survivors of the often harsh regimes inside homes to tell their stories, and will seek to gather evidence from those organisations with authority over the institutions.

No immunity

The forum is expected to be headed by a senior legal figure, someone with understanding of children's services and an expert in child psychology.

It is hoped the forum will begin its work in around four to six months.

Although the proceedings will be confidential, there will be no immunity for those facing allegations.

Any new information about possible criminal offences which emerges from forum hearings will be passed to the police.

Researchers will be hired to work alongside the forum, in order to provide an accurate context for any allegations.

After the assembly has pushed through its legislation the inquiry will be established on a statutory footing.

Some campaigners believe the delay could be avoided by using the current 2005 Inquiries Act.

However Stormont sources have said their legal advice is that a new law is required to deal with complaints prior to 1973.

The executive is expected to formally apologise to the victims, although that may not happen until the forum has established the full facts.

Victims are expected to be compensated not with cash, but with funding towards services that meet their needs, such as family holidays or retreats.

One informed source said "we are not going to financially underwrite the Catholic church".

In the Irish Republic, more than a billion euros was spent on an inquiry into institutional abuse.

There is no firm estimate yet of the cost or duration of the Northern Ireland inquiry, but sources suggest it will run into tens of millions but not hundreds of millions of pounds.



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