The New Zealand Herald

‘He laid into me with fists flying’

- — Martin Johnston Read the full open letter A10 Editorial: NZ should heed calls A20

Keith Wiffin says the horrific abuse he suffered at a state-owned boys’ home has blighted much of his adult life.

Only as years have turned into decades has the 57-year-old Wellington cleaning contractor managed to turn his life around, learning to read and going through counsellin­g.

He supports the campaign for an independen­t inquiry into what went wrong in state care of children.

Wiffin clearly remembers his violent introducti­on, at age 10, to the culture of the Epuni Boys’ Home in Lower Hutt.

“In the van on the way out there I had a guitar smashed over my head by another boy. It was a physically, sexually and psychologi­cally abusive place to find yourself in. It was totally foreign to anything I had come across.”

One of four children in his family, he says he was made a ward of the state because his mother was struggling following the death of his father Keith Wiffin says an independen­t inquiry would involve questionin­g those who carried out the abuse — something which was not done for his case. at age 38. Wiffin developed some behavioura­l problems — “just being disruptive, throwing tantrums at home and I ran away from home once”.

He had two stints at Epuni — the first was eight months and the second, three months — with several years in between spent at “family homes”, large foster homes with more than a dozen children. At Epuni, staff would hit the boys with their fists.

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“I remember one occasion a staff member introduced me to trying to use an industrial [floor] polisher. They’re not easy to use. The polishing machine took off and put a hole in the wall. He laid into me with fists flying. That’s one occasion; there were others. It wasn’t uncommon to be slapped around the head by them.”

One of his abusers was much later convicted in court of his crimes at Epuni.

Wiffin says he received no schooling and entered the workforce at 14, moving from one menial job to the next, living in a succession of boarding houses, and developing some anti-social attitudes. He drank too much and got into trouble with the law, but managed to avoid jail.

“I didn’t talk about it till I had counsellin­g about eight years ago. I had four years of pretty intense counsellin­g,” he said.

He was reconciled with his mother, who has since died, and is close to a sister, but has no family of his own. He began suing the Government, but the case did not go to court. He has received a $20,000 payment from the Ministry for Social Developmen­t and a written apology from two senior officials.

The apology lifted his sense of guilt and of being a “second-class” person, even though the ministry had mishandled its investigat­ion into his case. Wiffin says that is why an independen­t inquiry is needed, and an apology from the Prime Minister, Bill English.

“They are investigat­ing themselves; the fox is looking after the henhouse. In my case, they did not go to [the convicted man] and ask him questions. An independen­t inquiry would have done that.”

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