Funding boosted for Irish abuse inquiry

    The Irish Commission on Child Abuse has had
    its funding quadrupled to 12m euros by the Irish government.

    The commission is carrying out an inquiry into
    cruelty to children in care and is to start listing cases for
    private hearings soon.

    Chaired by high court judge Mary Laffoy, the
    commission was first established by the government in 1999, and has
    three functions: to listen to the victims of abuse, to investigate
    allegations of abuse, and to publish a public report on its
    findings.

    So far, more than 2,500 abuse victims are due
    to give testimony, with some estimates claiming it will take the
    commission up to five years to complete its hearings.

    Since the 1930s, more than 20,000 Irish
    children have attended 59 state-run industrial or reform schools
    but it is understood that most of the statements detail abuse
    dating from the 1950s and 1960s.

    Survivors’ group Rights of Place has said the
    majority of the victims now live in the UK, while another group,
    Aislinn, has suggested the number applying to give statements might
    be just the tip of the iceberg.

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