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Catholic Primate Backs Call for Ni Mother-and-baby Home Inquiry

BBC News
March 9, 2017

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-39224430

Archbishop Eamon Martin said he felt "incredibly sad" over the discovery at the former mother-and-baby home

The leader of the Catholic Church in Ireland has backed a call by Amnesty International for an inquiry into mother-and-baby homes in Northern Ireland.

The call came after "significant human remains" were found at the site of a former home in the Republic of Ireland.

The home was run by the Bon Secours order of nuns in Tuam, County Galway.

The bodies ranged from premature babies to three year olds.

The discovery was made as part of an investigation into claims by a local historian that up to 800 babies and young children died at the home and were buried in unmarked graves.

Amnesty International has said that archaeological surveys should be carried out at all former mother-and-baby homes in Northern Ireland.

The site in Tuam, County Galway where the mother-and-baby home once stood

Archbishop Martin said many in the church and society were "ashamed" of what had emerged at the home in Tuam.

He added that "families are owed an apology" and that the church had repeated an apology it made in 2014 when the claims "first came to light".

"It makes me feel awful. I feel incredibly sad in recent days. We as a church do not want to repeat the awful mistakes of the past."

Remains 'sent to medical schools'

He added: "It's an appalling time for us and everyone in society.

"We're opening up a whole chapter in the society in Ireland and the rest of the world where there was a terrible stigma against unwed mothers.

"There was a terrible time, we in society and in the church isolated and stigmatised them."

Meanwhile, the Irish children's minister Katherine Zappone has said that 474 "unclaimed infant remains" from mother-and-baby homes were transferred to medical schools between 1940 and 1965.

Irish national broadcaster RTE made claims about the transfer of remains in a 2011 documentary.

Ms Zappone told the Dail (Irish parliament) that the transfer of remains was "part of a tapestry of oppression, abuse and systematic human rights violations that took place all over this country for decades".

She also said an interim report into the home in Tuam would be published by the end of March, a move Archbishop Martin said the Catholic Church supported.

 

 

 

 

 




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