Factbox: New Zealand's child abuse inquiry: facts and history

  • 12/16/2020
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WELLINGTON (Reuters) - An interim report by the Royal Commission of Inquiry into historic abuse of children in state and faith-based institutions has estimated that up to quarter of a million people were abused between 1950 and 2019. Here are the key findings and some historical context to the inquiry: - The report says up to 256,000 children, young people and vulnerable adults in state and faith-based care were abused during 1950-2019. - The inquiry also said 655,000 were in care during the period, six time more than government estimates. - A wide range of abuse and physical, emotional, psychological, medical, educational, spiritual and cultural neglect occurred. - Discrimination and racism by authorities and the public played a role in being taken into care and the treatment received in care. - Abuse in care is estimated to have cost an individual $857,000 over the course of their lifetime; the cost to society for abuse in care between 1950-2019 is up to $217 billion. - In boarding or residential schools excluding faith-based schools, rates of abuse estimated from 24% to 44%. - In faith-based institutions, child abuse was 21% to 42%, which amounts to around 42,000 to 83,000 children. - At health and disability-related institutions, abuse was 11% to 34%. - Most survivors were abused between the ages of five and 17, although the range was from nine months to 20 years. - Most survivors were abused over a period of five to 10 years. - The inquiry was established in 2018 but has been plagued with issues including the departure of the former chair of the commission, Sir Anand Satyanand. - This is one of the longest running and most complex commissions of inquiry undertaken by New Zealand.

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