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Australian
Panel Told of Sexual Abuse of Boys at Salvation Army Homes
By Jethro Mullen and Jessica King CNN January
29, 2014
http://edition.cnn.com/2014/01/28/world/asia/australia-salvation-army-abuse-hearing/
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The Salvation Army isn't
denying allegations that there was physical and sexual abuse
of boys in the care of the Salvation Army over several
decades.
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(CNN) -- An Australian commission is
hearing allegations of the physical and sexual abuse of boys in
the care of the Salvation Army over several decades.
The shocking treatment at some of the organization's
boys homes included rape, beatings, locking boys in cages and, in
one case, forcing a boy to eat his own vomit, the commission was
told Tuesday.
The public hearings, taking place in Sydney, are part of
a wide-ranging investigation into how Australian institutions
responded to cases of child sexual abuse.
The current phase is focusing on the Salvation Army's
response to abuse that took place in four of its boys homes in
the states of Queensland and New South Wales in the 1960s and
'70s.
'The greatest failure'
The Salvation Army isn't denying the abuse, which came
to light previously. It has apologized, admitting that hundreds
of boys suffered in its care.
"This hearing will bring to light the greatest failure
in the history of the Salvation Army in Australia," the group's
counsel, Kate Eastmann, said Tuesday, according to CNN affiliate
Seven Network.
The four homes at the heart of the hearings were
identified by the Royal Commission into Institutional
Responses to Child Sexual Abuse as those where the most
complaints of abuse were made to The Salvation Army.
The homes -- Indooroopilly and Riverview in Queensland,
and Bexley and Gill in New South Wales -- were all closed by
1980.
Punishment and abuse
The commission on Tuesday heard accounts of unusually
brutal or humiliating punishment, including a case at one home in
which two boys were locked in cages on a verandah.
"Other forms of punishment included sweeping the
playground with a toothbrush, cleaning 50 pairs of shoes,
cleaning the pigeon cage and on one occasion, forcing a boy to
eat his own vomit," said Simeon Beckett, the counsel assisting
the commission.
Allegations of widespread sexual assault carried out by
Salvation Army officers and some of the boys under their
supervision were also outlined.
At the Bexley home, members of the public also abused
boys, Beckett said, possibly with the knowledge of Salvation Army
staff members.
"These persons had access to the boys' dormitories at
night and would access the dormitories and sexually assault the
boys," he said.
Complaints dismissed
Evidence suggests that many of the boys didn't complain
about the sexual abuse at the time because they feared punishment
or retribution, Beckett said.
Those who did complain weren't generally taken
seriously.
"In cases when abuse was reported, the boys were often
disbelieved and were punished for reporting what were
characterized as 'lies,'" he told the hearing.
Some of the former residents of the homes who are due to
testify over the course of the hearings are expected to say that
"even when they ran away from the homes and told police of what
had occurred, they were returned to the home where they were then
physically punished," Beckett said.
Other witnesses due to appear before the commission
include staff members from the homes and officials from law
enforcement, the government and the Salvation Army.
The Salvation Army has made payments to many of the
victims of the abuses.
"The Salvation Army feels deep regret for every instance
of child sexual abuse inflicted on children in our care," the
organization says in
a statement on its website. "We are grieved that such things
happened. We acknowledge that it was a failure of the greatest
magnitude."
The investigation into the Salvation Army response is
the fifth set of public hearings carried out by the Royal
Commission. The previous hearings looked into the responses
to sexual abuse allegations by children's organizations and
churches
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