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Five win pay-out for years of abuse

Posted: 30 January 2003 | Subscribe Online


Five people who allegedly endured a regime of physical and emotional abuse at a children's home in the 1960s and 1970s have been awarded a total of £142,000 in an out-of-court settlement.

The London Borough of Kensington & Chelsea, which placed the five at Barlavington Manor in Petworth, West Sussex, agreed to the settlement last week without admission of liability. Allegations were also made against Southwark Council in London and Hampshire Council.

The five unidentified claimants, now in their 30s, said they had been beaten with a bat, forced into boxing matches with older boys and underwent induced drowning.
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Their counsel, Elizabeth Gumbel, told the High Court that the "repeated acts of abuse" should have been detected by the councils, which had breached their duty of care.

She added that the home's managers, John and Anna Ellis, both of whom are now dead, were "unfit to care for children in public care".

Kate Thirlwell, representing the local authorities, said her clients were "unaware" of the alleged brutality at the home and had only settled in the light of "commercial realities".

Although 13 former Barlavington residents sued, five other cases, including one against Southwark, were withdrawn and three were settled by Hampshire before the hearing.


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