Apology in March to victims and survivors of historical institutional abuse in North

First Minister and Deputy First Minister confirm details of an apology which was a key recommendation of an inquiry into the abuse

A public apology to victims and survivors of historical institutional abuse in the North will be given in March.

First Minister Paul Givan and Deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill confirmed details on the delivery of what was a key recommendation of a public inquiry into the abuse.

Mr Givan and Ms O'Neill will deliver the apology in Parliament Buildings in Stormont on behalf of the powersharing executive on March 11th.

There will also be statements made by representatives of state and religious institutions found by the Historical institutional Abuse Inquiry to have been responsible for the abuse.

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The announcement was welcomed, albeit with regret it will come five years after it was recommended in Sir Anthony Hart’s report following the inquiry.

The ministers outlined details of the official apology on Thursday, which is the fifth anniversary of the publication of the findings of the landmark inquiry, which was chaired by the late Sir Anthony Hart, a retired High Court judge.

The inquiry examined allegations of physical, emotional and sexual harm of children in residential institutions between 1922 and 1995.A financial redress scheme for survivors, which was another recommendation of the report, has already been set up.

“Victims and survivors of historical institutional abuse have our full support, and we are determined they will receive the acknowledgement, support, and redress they deserve,” said Mr Givan.

“Our priority remains approaching an apology with care and sensitivity, and basing it upon the experience of victims and survivors.

“Since the publication of the Hart report the priority has been to provide practical support for victims and survivors. This included establishing in legislation the Historical Institutional Abuse Redress Board, the appointment of a Commissioner for Survivors of Institutional Childhood Abuse, and the health and wellbeing support services delivered by the Victims and Survivors Service.

“We hope that a public apology will be seen as a valued means for acknowledging harm for victims and survivors of abuse, and for our society as a whole.”

Shameful failures

Ms O’Neill added: “Historical institutional abuse should never have happened. While no apology will make up for the shameful failures, and the pain that victims and survivors have endured as a result, we owe it to them to acknowledge the harm they suffered.

“We have been meeting with victims and survivors, representative groups, and the Commissioner for Survivors of Childhood Institutional Abuse to help ensure the apology acknowledges the failures of a system that should have protected vulnerable children.

“We recognise that there are many different views on the public apology. We are announcing the date in advance as we want victims and survivors to have an opportunity to tell us their views on the arrangements and content of the apology.

“This apology will be an important moment, but we understand it will be an incredibly difficult and emotional day for many.”

Five years

Fiona Ryan, Commissioner for Survivors of Childhood Institutional Abuse, welcomed the announcement of a date for the apology.

“I welcome news that finally, five years on from the publication of the report of the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry, victims and survivors now have a date for an apology,” she said.

“My hope is that this apology will be made in a genuine, unconditional, wholehearted and unequivocal way, and that it brings some closure to victims and survivors who have carried the huge burden of this pain and trauma with them during their lifetime.”

– PA