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Shine
the Light: Home Boys Hit, Caged, Abused
By Paul Bibby Newcastle Herald January 28,
2014
http://www.theherald.com.au/story/2051910/shine-the-light-home-boys-hit-caged-abused/?cs=391
YOUNG boys were locked in a cage for days on end as
part of a brutal regime of physical and sexual abuse for dozens
of youngsters at Salvation Army homes in the 1950s, ’60s and
’70s, a royal commission into child-sex abuse has heard.
And the Salvation Army’s leadership often failed to
discipline or remove the perpetrators, but simply moved them to
other homes where they often continued the abuse.
The revelations came during the first public hearing
in Sydney by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses
to Child Sexual Abuse for 2014.
In his opening address, counsel assisting the
commission Simeon Beckett said the focus of the hearings would
be on the ‘‘contemporaneous response by the Salvation Army and
relevant government agencies to child-sex abuse within the
Alkira home for boys in Indooroopilly, Queensland; the Riverview
Training Farm, also in Queensland; Bexley Boys home in North
Bexley; and the Gill Memorial Home in Goulburn’’.
‘‘It will examine processes at the time to identify,
investigate, discipline, remove, dismiss and/or transfer persons
accused of, or found to have engaged in, child sexual abuse,’’
he said.
‘‘The evidence will explore whether those who
maintained the homes jointly engaged in child sexual abuse and
whether the position of manager was used to frustrate the making
of complaints of sexual abuse and their investigation.’’
The commission will focus on the alleged abuse
inflicted by Salvation Army officers Laurence Wilson, Russell
Walker, Victor Bennett, John McIver and Donald Schultz on boys
aged between about six and 17.
Yesterday it heard that the violence and sexual abuse
inflicted on the boys at the homes was at ‘‘the severe end of
that examined by the commission’’ during its investigations.
‘‘The boys were frequently punched with a closed fist,
thrown on the ground with force, hit with straps until they
developed welts or bled,’’ Mr Beckett said.
They were repeatedly anally raped and forced to
undertake oral sex on their house parents. They were also abused
by other boys at the homes.
One witness, ‘‘ES’’, is expected to tell the
commission that he was placed in a cage on the veranda of the
Riverview home for nine days.
On his release, he was allegedly sodomised by Mr
Bennett, his house parent.
Mr McIver allegedly broke one boy’s arm during an
assault and refused to allow a boy with a dislocated shoulder to
attend hospital, instead forcing the shoulder ‘‘back into its
socket’’.
Boys who complained were often disbelieved and
severely punished, Mr Beckett said.
‘‘Some will indicate that even when they ran away,
they were returned to the home, where they were physically
punished,’’ he said.
‘‘Many didn’t complain due to fear of punishment and
retribution.’’
One witness would tell how, at the Riverview farm, he
was made to sort fruit and vegetables donated for the feeding of
animals and pick out what could be given to the boys, Mr Beckett
said.
If he made a wrong choice, he was flogged.
Other forms of punishment included making boys sweep
the playground with a toothbrush or clean 50 pairs of shoes, he
said.
And one boy was forced to eat his own vomit.
Mr Beckett said the Salvation Army had a policy of
simply moving officers to different homes rather than properly
disciplining them or ensuring they had no further contact with
children.
He said the commission would hear from two former
house parents, Cliff and Marina Randall, who were dismissed
after making a complaint against Mr McIver.
Three of the five officers being examined are still
alive: Mr McIver, Mr Schultz and Mr Walker.
Only one was charged – Mr Walker, with an act of
indecency.
All three deny the allegations against them.
Mr Wilson died in 2006.
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