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Catholic Church Wants to Be Included in State Abuse Inquiry

By Lucy Bennett
NZ Herald
March 26, 2018

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12020386

Bishop Patrick Dunn wants all who want to be heard to be able to speak to the Royal Commission. Photo / Fotopress

The Catholic Church has written to Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern asking for religious organisations to be included in a Royal Commission looking into abuse in state care.

The New Zealand Catholic Bishops and representation from Catholic religious orders wrote to Ardern, Minister for Children Tracey Martin and Sir Anand Satyanand, chairman of the Royal Commission into Abuse in State Care.

The letter, signed by Bishop Patrick Dunn, the president of the New Zealand Catholic Bishops Conference and Sister Katrina Fabish RSM, congregational leader of the Sisters of Mercy, said they supported the work of the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Historical Abuse in State Care but wanted the Inquiry's terms of reference broadened to include a range of Church institutions.

"We are of the firm view that no individual should be denied the possibility of making a submission to this government inquiry. It would be wrong if some individuals felt excluded from this process simply because their path of referral to an institution was different from someone else's," the letter said.

"We assure you once again of our support and our desire to learn from this national undertaking which we are confident will contribute positively to the strengthening and safeguarding of our whanau, communities and society."

The terms of the upcoming Royal Commission on abuse in state care excludes institutions such as churches unless children were sent to them by the state.

Ardern has previously said that state care survivors did not want their cases "diluted" by the Royal Commission looking into abuse by the Church.

Ms Ardern told RNZ last month that distinction was made because the state had essentially been a parent in the past so needed to take responsibility.

"There is no doubt that there will be religious institutions who will be brought into the remit of this inquiry by virtue of the fact that children in state care may have in some form been sent there. This inquiry allows us to then look into both what occurred to that child via the state, the state's role in seeking to respond when that abuse was often raised and they didn't always respond to it but also what actually happened with those institutions too," she told RNZ.

The Royal Commission will focus on the victims, including any systemic bias based on race, gender or sexual orientation, but it will not compensate individual victims.

It will begin hearing victims' stories within six months, with the aim of reporting back by the end of the parliamentary term.

The inquiry is expected to cost $12 million in its first year. The draft terms of reference state that the inquiry will:

• Look at physical, sexual and emotional abuse and neglect.

• Look at bias against Maori but also based on gender or sexual orientation, and against those with disabilities or mental health issues.

• Consider the nature and extent of abuse, immediate and long-term impacts, the factors (including systemic factors) that contributed, and lessons to be learned.

• Cover a period of 1950 to 1999 - though this can be broadened

It will not consider individual compensation, but instead invites feedback on the Ministry of Social Development's historic claims process. It will also include a support mechanism for anyone that wants to lay a complaint with police.

State care includes child welfare and youth justice placements, as well as care in health, disability and special education facilities, such as psychiatric hospitals and residential care facilities, residential special schools and health camps.

It does not include prisons, former penal institutions, general hospital admissions or schools, unless the person was in state care at the same time.

 

 

 

 

 




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