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Australian
Salvation Army Officers Rape, Lock Boys in Cages
By Reissa Su International Business Times
January 29, 2014
http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/536280/20140129/australia-queensland-salvation-army-child-abuse-royal.htm#.UukKIrT8KUk
The victims of child abuse in Salvation Army homes
spoke about their experiences in the first public hearing in
Sydney before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses
to Child Sexual Abuse for 2014. On Jan 28, the commission began
its fifth inquiry into the case.
Abuse victims claimed young boys were kept in a cage
for days and raped in Salvation Army homes during the 1950s, 60s
and 70s. According to revelations in the public hearing,
Salvation Army leaders failed to impose discipline or remove
those who committed abuses permanently. Perpetrators were simply
transferred to other homes where abuses continue.
Mr Beckett said the focus of the hearing would be the
response of the Salvation Army and government agencies to
charges of child sex abuse inside the homes for boys located in
Indooroopilly, Riverview Training Farm in Queensland, Bexley
Boys home in North Bexley and the Gill Memorial Home in
Golbourn.
The Royal Commission will focus on the alleged abuse
on young boys aged 6 to 17 years old by Salvation Army officers
Russell Walker, Laurence Wilson, Victor Bennett, Donald Schultz
and John McIver.
Based on testimonies heard by the commission, Mr
Beckett said the boys were punched, thrown on the ground and hit
with straps until they bled or had welts on their bodies. The
boys were anally raped by officers and forced to have oral sex
with their house parents. The victims were also abused by other
boys in homes.
One witness, who is only known as ES, is expected to
tell the commission that he was locked in a cage in the
Riverview home for nine days. After he was released from the
cage, his house parent Mr Bennett allegedly sodomised him.
Mr McIver was named as the one who broke a boy's arm
and refused to let a boy go to a hospital for a dislocated
shoulder. He allegedly forced the boy's injured shoulder to go
"back into its socket."
Mr Beckett said the victims of abuse had complained
but no one believed them. Those who complained were severely
punished.
The Royal Commission is set to hear from two former
house parents in Salvation Army homes, Cliff and Marina Randall,
who were dismissed after complaining about Mr McIver. According
to reports, only three out of five officers being charged are
still alive. They have denied allegations of child abuse.
The inquiry continues as more details of the
investigation are revealed.
Contact: editor@ibtimes.com
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