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- New Zealand Inquiry Finds Over 200,000 Abused in State and Religious Care
New Zealand Inquiry Finds Over 200,000 Abused in State and Religious Care
A royal commission of inquiry in New Zealand has found that nearly one-third of individuals in state and religious care between 1950 and 2019 experienced abuse. The report estimates that around 200,000 children, young people, and vulnerable adults were abused over the span of seven decades. Sexual abuse was described as "commonplace" with abusers often grooming those in their care, while physical abuse was also prevalent across all settings. The inquiry, which is the largest and most complex royal commission to date, had a wide scope and cost around NZ$170 million. Many of those affected come from disadvantaged or marginalized communities, including Māori and Pacific people. An official apology is expected to be made on November 12, following the release of the report's findings. The inquiry has called for the government to establish a Care Safe Agency to prevent similar abuses in the future.
This is a dark and sorrowful day in New Zealand's history as a society and as a state, we should have done better, and I am determined that we will do so.
As a society and as the state we should have done better. I am determined that we will do better.
The state was supposed to care for you, to protect you, but instead it subjected you to unimaginable physical, emotional, mental and sexual abuse.
These experiences were nothing short of horrific and happened within the New Zealand health system within living memory.
It is important that, as a country, we bring to the surface and understand the hard truths of what happened so we can try and move forward together.
The people who were taken into care were babies, they were young children, they were young people, they were adults who needed care. They were taken under the guise of being supported and protected but instead they were abused and harmed.
The name of this report is named Whanaketia – through pain and trauma, from darkness to light.
This report is for us – it's explaining to the country the impact this subject has had on us all.
New Zealand State Care Child Abuse
sources
- 1.Le Monde
- 2.The Guardian
- 3.Al Jazeera
- 4.The Times of India
- 5.CNN
- 6.BBC
- 7.ABC News (Australia)
- 8.The New York Times
- 9.Agence France-Presse
- 10.Radio New Zealand
- 11.Reuters
- 12.Times
perspectives
countries
organizations
- 1.Māori
- 2.Care Safe Agency
- 3.Catholic Church
- 4.Royal Commission of Inquiry
- 5.Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care
- 6.University of Auckland
- 7.Catholic Church of New Zealand
- 8.Church With No Name
- 9.Lake Alice Psychiatric hospital
- 10.Pacific Islander
- 11.Two by Twos
persons
- 1.Christopher Luxon
- 2.Tracey McIntosh
- 3.Coral Shaw
- 4.Arrun Soma
- 5.Frances Tagaloa
- 6.Keith Wiffin
- 7.Pete McKenzie
- 8.Rawiri Waretini-Karena
- 9.Toni Jarvis