‘Changes must be made’: Shocking Australian child abuse inquiry ends

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
CNN

December 14, 2017

By Lucie Morris-Marr

Children are still being sexually assaulted in Australian institutions.

That was the stark warning of an exhaustive five-year investigation by an Australia Royal Commission into institutional child sex abuse that concluded Thursday.

In a short hearing in Sydney, Hon Justice Peter McClellan, who has headed the investigation, said the “nation thanks the survivors” who gave testimony about decades of systematic abuse and cover-ups in religious and state institutions such as churches, youth groups, care homes and schools.

More than 8,000 people gave evidence in private sessions, and 2,559 referrals were made to authorities, including the police, as a result of the $383 million (AU$500 million) probe.

“The sexual abuse of children is not just a problem from the past. Child sexual abuse in institutions continues today,” said McClellan. “In some case studies into schools the alleged abuse was so recent that the children are still attending school.”

McClellan singled out the Roman Catholic Church in particular for often putting reputation above the safety of children in what they found to be decades of systematic sexual abuse — a familiar pattern of scandals dogging Catholic institutions globally.

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