|  | 
								Fear
										'All the Time' at Qld Salvo Farm
							 
								Australian TimesJanuary 29, 2014
 
 http://www.australiantimes.co.uk/feature/fear-all-the-time-at-qld-salvo-farm.htm
 
 
 THERE “was fear all the time” around Salvation Army
							officers, a witness has told a royal commission.
 
 “A lot of you people don’t seem to understand, you did
							not open your mouth around Salvation Army officers because you
							did not know what you were going to get.”
 
 That was the response of a witness identified as FP when
							pressed at an inquiry into child sexual abuse about whether he
							had complained of ill treatment to state welfare officers who
							regularly visited the Salvation Army Training Farm at Riverview
							in Queensland in the 1960s.
 
 FP’s evidence on Wednesday follows that of other
							witnesses who have told of frequent floggings and sexual abuse
							both by Salvo officers and older boys at the home.
 
 “Fear of what was going to happen to you if you opened
							your mouth”, was what kept him silent FP said.
 
 “It was fear all the time. Every time you walked around
							the corner, you don’t know whether you’re going to get a clip on
							the bloody ear or a kick up the arse,” he said.
 
 He told Simeon Beckett, counsel advising the commission,
							“a lot of you people don’t seem to understand what we’re coming
							on about, you know”.
 
 He said over the past few years the Salvation Army had
							been good to him and supported his efforts to commemorate the
							boys and girls who were in homes.
 
 Both FP and another witness EY told of being sexually
							assaulted by older boys.
 
 EY ran away when he was 16. Police picked him up four
							months later and he was severely flogged with a razor strap when
							he was sent back to Riverview.
 
 He did not tell police who picked him up about the
							sexual abuse at Riverview.
 
 “I knew I would get flogged but I would cop that,” he
							said.
 
 Mr Beckett said on Tuesday that the commission would
							hear that many boys who complained of sexual and other abuse were
							physically punished for making the complaints and those who ran
							away were returned by police then punished.
 
 Earlier on Wednesday Wally McLeod, who was a resident at
							Indooroopilly Boys Home and Riverview Training Farm from 1960 to
							1966, said he saw one officer, Captain Victor Bennett, grab
							children as young as four and punch them.
 
 Mr Bennett, who died not long ago, would use a cane with
							a split end to whip boys, several witness have said.
 
 The commission is examining the responses of the Eastern
							Territory of the Salvation Army and relevant government agencies
							to child abuse at four homes – two in Queensland and two in NSW.
 
 It will examine in detail the Salvation Army’s processes
							at the time to identify, investigate, discipline, remove dismiss
							and/or transfer people accused of or involved in sexual abuse.
 
 Evidence will be presented that officers were moved from
							one home to another, despite complaints about them.-AAP
 
 
								
 
 
 |