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First
Witness to Waive Anonymity Alleges Abuse by Priests
Irish Times February 12, 2014
http://www.irishtimes.com/news/social-affairs/first-witness-to-waive-anonymity-alleges-abuse-by-priests-1.1688890
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An internal view of the
courtroom at Banbridge, Northern Ireland where public hearings
into allegations of historical child abuse are taking place.
Photograph: : Paul Faith/PA Wire
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The first witness to waive her right to anonymity has
told the Historical Institutional Abuse inquiry of allegations of
beatings and sex abuse at the hands of senior girls and two
priests at a care home in Derry.
Kate
Walmsley, now in her late fifties, further alleged that a nun
facilitated the abuse by one of the priests. She said when the
girls at Nazareth House residential care home queued for
confessions on a Saturday, this nun would ensure she was at the
end of the line.
She alleged that the priest brought her into his side of
the confessional and abused her.
The witness repeatedly broke down and was very
distressed. At one point, inquiry chairman Sir Anthony
Hart suspended proceedings for a time to allow Ms Walmsley to
recover.
When she returned, the witness confirmed various
allegations contained in a lengthy statement which has been
submitted to the inquiry.
This included allegations of beatings carried out by
senior girls at the institution and by nuns.
She told the inquiry how a nun had force-fed her during
a meal time causing her to get sick. The nun, she alleged, then
forced her to eat her own vomit. She said nuns told her she was
carrying a mortal sin on her soul.
“I thought my mortal sin was the biggest mortal sin,”
she told the inquiry. “I thought the devil would come and take us
away.”
She told the inquiry’s junior counsel Joseph
Aiken of sex abuse by her peers over a three-month period. She
said some other girls touched her sexually and forced her to
touch them. She said they also blackmailed her and threatened to
tell a nun that it was all her fault if she did.
“I felt I could not report it to anyone at the time,”
she said.
She told the inquiry of the horrors of having a bath
after having been abused by a priest.
“If you could understand an 8-year-old who had just been
sexually abused by a priest then put into a bath with Jeyes Fluid
and it stinging my insides,” Ms Walmsley said.
“I had to sit in the bath and suffer the pain. It was
worse than any labour pains I ever had. You had to take that and
not scream because you would have been beaten.”
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