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HIA inquiry to examine abuse allegations at Protestant church-run home

BBC News
January 5, 2016

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-35224931

Northern Ireland's Historical Institutional Abuse inquiry is being chaired by Sir Anthony Hart, a retired senior High Court judge

The Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) Inquiry has opened public hearings into allegations of sexual and physical abuse at a children's home run by Protestant missionaries.

Manor House in Lisburn, County Antrim, was run by the Irish Church Missions (ICM), an organisation with links to the Church of Ireland.

Manor House closed in 1984.

The HIA inquiry is investigating child abuse in residential institutions in Northern Ireland from 1922 to 1995.

Disputed

The allegations of abuse relating to Manor House have been made by some former residents who lived at the home during periods in the 1940s, 1960s and 1970s.

They claim the abuse was perpetrated by some staff, visitors and other children at the home.

Among those alleging abuse at Manor House are two people who were sent to Australia as part of a Child Migrant scheme in the 1940's and 50's.

One man, a retired company director, told the inquiry in September last year that he became a teenage prostitute in Australia after suffering abuse at Manor House.

At the time, the ICM said in a statement that it disputed the claims made.

The Society for the Irish Church Missions was founded in March 1849 by an evangelical preacher from England, in a bid to convert Catholics to Protestantism across the island of Ireland.

Experiences

Manor House, on Lisburn's Hillsborough Road, was bequeathed to the Society of Irish Church Missions in 1927, by Louisa Fitzgerald Stannus, a member of an aristocratic family.

The former children's home is one of 22 residential institutions across Northern Ireland that are currently under investigation by the inquiry team.

The list includes state-run children's homes, juvenile justice centres and homes run by the Catholic Church, the Church of Ireland and the UK's largest children's charity, Barnardo's.

More than 500 people have made a formal application to speak to the HIA inquiry or to share their experiences thorough its acknowledgement forum.

The inquiry's chairman, retired senior High Court judge Sir Anthony Hart, is due to submit his report to the Northern Ireland Executive by 17 January 2017.




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