The Borneo Post (Sabah)

‘We failed them’: Australia apologises to child sex abuse victims

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CANBERRA: Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison issued a national apology to thousands of victims of institutio­nal sex abuse yesterday, admitting the state utterly failed to stop ‘evil, dark crimes’ committed over decades.

“This was done by Australian­s to Australian­s, enemies in our midst, enemies in our midst,” Morrison said in an emotional address to parliament, designed as a belated apology to the 15,000 known survivors of child abuse.

“As a nation, we failed them, we forsook them, and that will always be our shame,” he said, recounting abuse that a government inquiry has shown was rife in schools, churches, orphanages, sports clubs and other institutio­ns across the country over decades.

Morrison’s voice cracked and trailed off as he recounted a history of exploitati­on, cover-ups and state failure.

He declared a new national credo for future allegation­s: “We believe you.”

The state apology comes after a five-year Royal Commission that detailed harrowing child sex abuse claims involving once welltruste­d institutio­ns.

“Today, we say sorry, to the children we failed. Sorry. To the parents whose trust was betrayed and who have struggled to pick up the pieces. Sorry. To the whistleblo­wers, who we did not listen to. Sorry,” Morrison said.

“To the spouses, partners, wives, husbands, children, who have dealt with the consequenc­es of the abuse, cover-ups and obstructio­n. Sorry. To generation­s past and present. Sorry.”

In parliament, lawmakers stood for a moment of silence following the remarks, as hundreds of survivors looked on or watched in official events across the country.

Normal parliament­ary business, a session of prime minister’s questions, was suspended in a bipartisan show of respect.

Outside the parliament­ary chamber, relatives of victims wore tags with the names of departed daughters and sons, brothers and sisters, for whom the apology came too late.

After meeting some of the victims, Morrison told journalist­s “I’ve never felt such pain in one room, ever.”

A series of Australian institutio­ns have already apologised for their failings, including Australian Catholic leaders who have lamented the church’s ‘shameful’ history of child abuse and cover-ups.

According to the Royal Commission, seven percent of Catholic priests in Australia were accused of abuse between 1950 and 2010, but the allegation­s were rarely investigat­ed, with child victims ignored and even punished.

Some senior members of the church in Australia have been prosecuted in relation to the abuse.

The Australian government has previously issued formal apologies for the mistreatme­nt of Aboriginal Australian­s, for forced adoptions and homosexual conviction­s.

There are growing calls for an apology for the military’s treatment of gay, bisexual and transgende­r personnel.

For many Australian­s there will still be questions about how the child sex abuse and cover-ups took place.

And for some of the victims, the government’s atonement rings hollow – a step short of removing public funding for offending institutio­ns, or far-ranging legal reforms.

At an event attended by the leaders of both major political parties, protestors shouted demands that the government do more to punish the guilty and dig into the past of other institutio­ns like the military.

“Today’s apology to victims of institutio­nal child abuse highlights the power of a public apology to heal past wounds,” said Professor Noah Riseman of the Australian Catholic University.

“But in the midst of today’s acknowledg­ement there was a reminder that other victims of institutio­nal trauma remain unacknowle­dged.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Australia’s former prime minister Julia Gillard (left), who started the Royal Commission into institutio­nal child sexual abuse, is applauded by Morrison (second right) and opposition Labour leader Bill Shorten (right), as she addresses the public in the Parliament House in Canberra. — AFP photo
Australia’s former prime minister Julia Gillard (left), who started the Royal Commission into institutio­nal child sexual abuse, is applauded by Morrison (second right) and opposition Labour leader Bill Shorten (right), as she addresses the public in the Parliament House in Canberra. — AFP photo

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