Yahoo – AFP,
Robin MILLARD, February 27, 2017
London
(AFP) - England's mammoth inquiry into historical child sex abuse was told of
the "torture, rape and slavery" suffered by child migrants shipped to
Australia, at its first public hearings on Monday.
The
wide-ranging Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse opened by looking at
the schemes that sent thousands of vulnerable children to far-flung parts of
the Commonwealth in the decades after World War II.
David Hill
broke down as he told the inquiry of the "endemic" sexual abuse at
the school he was sent to in Australia.
"I
hope this inquiry can promote an understanding of the long-term consequences
and suffering of those who were sexually abused," he said.
"Many
never recover and are permanently afflicted with guilt, shame, diminished
self-confidence, low self-esteem, fear and trauma."
British
Prime Minister Theresa May set up the inquiry in 2014 when she was interior
minister.
The British
Empire sent some 150,000 children abroad over 350 years, according to a 1998
parliamentary study, although the probe started Monday by looking at use of the
practice after World War II.
It was justified as a means of slashing the costs of caring for lone children and providing disadvantaged young people with a fresh start, while meeting labour shortages in the Commonwealth and populating colonial-era lands with white British settlers.
British
Prime Minister Theresa May set up a mammoth inquiry into historical
child sex
abuse in July 2014 when she was the interior minister (AFP Photo/
Daniel
LEAL-OLIVAS)
|
It was justified as a means of slashing the costs of caring for lone children and providing disadvantaged young people with a fresh start, while meeting labour shortages in the Commonwealth and populating colonial-era lands with white British settlers.
Between
1945 and 1970, youngsters were sent mainly to Australia, but also Canada, New
Zealand and what is now Zimbabwe -- often without the consent of their
families.
But the
promise of a good upbringing and an exciting new life in the sun was often, in
reality, a world of forced labour, brutal treatment and sexual assault in
remote institutions run by churches and charities.
"They
sent us to a place that was a living hell," victim Clifford Walsh told the
BBC.
Oliver
Cosgrove was sent to Australia in 1941, one of an estimated 5,000 to 6,000
children shipped there from 1922 to 1967.
"Those
who were abused tried in vain to tell others, who they hoped and believed might
assist them. But they didn't," his representative told the inquiry.
"This
was a systematic and institutional problem."
'Unacceptable depravity'
Aswini
Weereratne, of the Child Migrants Trust which supports victims, said there was
good evidence that Britain knew of the poor standards of care in Australian
institutions but failed to respond.
"Some
of what was done there was of quite unacceptable depravity. Terms like sexual
abuse are too weak to convey it," she said.
"This
was not about truly voluntary migration, but forced or coerced
deportation."
Some
children were said to have suffered "torture, rape and slavery," she
added.
Professor
Stephen Constantine told the hearings that royal visits to such institutions
legitimised them for people who saw the photographs, believing if it was good
enough for the royal family, "it is good enough for us".
The
hearings are being held at the International Dispute Resolution Centre in
London. The opening phase dealing with Australia is expected to last 10 days.
The inquiry
was established following the death of TV star Jimmy Savile in 2011, when it
emerged he had been one of Britain's worst serial paedophiles, carrying out
abuse unchecked in a range of public institutions.
The inquiry
will look at historic abuse in England and Wales, including in schools,
hospitals, children's homes, local authorities, religious organisations, the
BBC, the armed forces and charities.
It will
also examine allegations involving famous people in politics and the media.
The inquiry
got off to a rocky start, with the first three chairs stepping down.
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