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O'Keeffe
Ruling Offers Hope to Victims
By Peter Murtagh Irish Times January 29, 2014
http://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/o-keeffe-ruling-offers-hope-to-victims-1.1671248
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Abuse reported to the
Department of Education in the early 1980s. Photograph: Eric
Luke
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‘I was by no means the first person to report this 30
years ago,’ says Tim O'Rourke, who was abused by teacher
Tim O’Rourke was sexually abused by a teacher and is one
of several dozen, perhaps several hundred, similar abuse victims
for whom yesterday’s victory by Louise O’Keeffe at the European
Court of Human Rights brings renewed hope of vindication by the
State.
Mr O’Rourke was abused by a teacher, Donal
Dunne, while attending Walsh Island National School in Co
Offaly. Dunne, identified in the Ryan report into child abuse as
John
Brander, is now dead but was prosecuted three times, was
convicted and sent to jail.
Dunne was a Christian Brother who abused children
repeatedly as he was moved from Christian Brothers school to
Christian Brothers school, and also while a teacher at national
schools in Dublin, Longford, Laois and Offaly.
Mr O’Rourke was abused by Dunne in the mid-1960s. “I
reported this, along with many others,” he says, but nothing was
done.
Mr O’Rourke, who is now 58 and himself a retired
teacher, reported the abuse to the Department of Education in the
early 1980s. He also reported it to Cardinal Tomás Ó Fiaich, his
local bishop, as well as numerous TDs and Senators.
“I was by no means the first person to report this 30
years ago,” he said yesterday, adding, however: “I got nowhere.”
Dunne was still teaching at the time.
When the redress board compensation system was set up
after the Ryan report, Mr O’Rourke was one of a number of
victims, at that time numbering over 300, whom the government
deemed excluded from its remit. Those who challenged this and
took legal actions against the State were warned in writing that
they would be pursued for costs if they lost. Many felt
intimidated and withdrew.
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