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Three more centres for Irish victims

Posted: 22 August 2002 | Subscribe Online


Three new resource centres have been set up for victims of institutional child abuse in Ireland who now live in England.

The Irish Survivors Outreach Service has opened centres in the London Borough of Haringey, Sheffield and Manchester because existing centres at Camden, in London, and Coventry had become inundated with calls.

Funded by the Irish government, the service offers free and confidential advice and support for people who were abused as children while living in orphanages and religious institutions in Ireland between the 1930s and 1970s.
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The new centres expect to receive thousands of contacts from Irish people who migrated to the UK to live and work. It is estimated there are as many as 12,000 potential service users in London alone.

The centres can provide counselling to those who were abused and help them seek compensation under the Residential Institutions Redress Act, which the Irish government introduced in January. Assistance in obtaining records and tracing relatives is also offered, as is general advice on housing, health and welfare issues.

John O'Donovan, outreach worker at Haringey, said the service had already been contacted by 40 people, including two now living in Australia and America.

The Irish government has set a deadline of 2005 for people to apply for compensation.


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