The New Zealand Herald

Victims of abuse in care ‘need apology’

Group welcomes expansion of Govt inquiry to churches

- Lucy Bennett politics

An apology is needed for people who have been abused in state and church care, says a group that supports sex-abuse survivors. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern yesterday promised that.

Leo McIntyre, spokesman for The Road Forward Trust, which offers peer support to male survivors of sexual abuse, welcomed the Government’s decision to expand the terms of reference of an inquiry into the abuse of children in state care to include faith-based organisati­ons.

That includes religious schools such as Catholic schools and communitie­s such as the Gloriavale Christian community on the West Coast. Under the Inquiries Act they could be made to appear at hearings.

“I think this will be of benefit to people who thought they were going to be excluded previously,” he said.

“Having an opportunit­y to voice their concerns to report what happened to them and receive some assistance with dealing with that is critically important in their recovery and living a better life,” said McIntyre, who is also chairman of Balance Aotearoa which supports people with mental health issues.

“I think an apology is a very important thing as well. That should be coming from the responsibl­e institutio­ns and the Government.”

Ardern and Internal Affairs Minister Tracey Martin yesterday announced that Cabinet had agreed to expand the scope of the inquiry, to be chaired by former GovernorGe­neral Sir Anand Satyanand.

The inquiry would now be called the Royal Commission into Historical Abuse in State Care and in the Care of Faith-Based Institutio­ns.

Ardern had previously been resistant to calls for churches to be included in the inquiry. “But it was very hard to ignore the strength of feeling that came through during the consultati­on process. I myself was very strong advocate for it remaining narrow . . . but we had to listen, and we have listened,” she said.

Ardern said the Government would “absolutely” apologise.

“If an apology is what is called for it is only right that we do that.”

The Catholic and Anglican Churches said they were pleased the Government had changed its mind to include faith-based organisati­ons.

Anglican Archbishop Philip Richardson said justice must not only be done but also be seen to be done.

“While I think that those in authority in the church today have a good sense of what the scope of historical abuse of children in the care of the Anglican Church has been, we can’t be categorica­l about that,” he said in a statement.

Bishop Patrick Dunn, President of the New Zealand Catholic Bishops Conference, said the Catholic Church had also wanted to be included. “The view we expressed during the consultati­on was that it would be wrong if some individual­s were excluded . . . simply because their path of referral to an institutio­n was different from someone else’s.”

The inquiry has a budget of close to $79 million over four years, $15m of which is for counsellin­g and other support for survivors, Ardern said.

“This is the cost of us hearing thousands of individual­s who want to be heard. But not doing this also comes at a cost.”

The inquiry will look back to between 1950 and 1999. But Satyanand, who joined Ardern and Martin at the announceme­nt yesterday, said it could also look at earlier or later periods if necessary.

The inquiry will begin hearing evidence from next January, with an interim report due by the end of 2020 on abuse in state care and a separate report on abuse in faithbased groups. A final report with findings and recommenda­tions will go to the Governor-General in 2023.

The four other inquiry members are Auckland barrister Ali’imuamua Sandra Alofivae, Auckland law lecturer Andrew Erueti, former disability rights commission­er Paul Gibson and Judge Coral Shaw.

 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? Jacinda Ardern says she is proud to have played “even the smallest part” in the inquiry.
Photo / Dean Purcell Jacinda Ardern says she is proud to have played “even the smallest part” in the inquiry.

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