The Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission (the Commission) has told the Council of Europe’s highest body, its Council of Ministers, that a new State Redress scheme designed to meet obligations to survivors of abuse in schools has a number of significant flaws, which mean it continues to fail survivors seven years after the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) judgment was won by Cork woman Louise O’Keeffe.
In the letter published today the Commission sets out its significant concerns about 3 specific aspects of the new scheme:
- It is only open to victims who sued the State before 1st July 2021 - This is an arbitrary date and victims who sued the State are not more deserving of redress that those who did not.
- It leaves victims holding the bill for having sued the state - having required that applicants must have started legal proceedings to be included in the scheme, it fails to make adequate provision for the legal costs which survivors have incurred. Applicants are eligible for only €4,000 towards legal costs— which are likely to be substantially higher. This means the awards made to many victims will be eaten up by outstanding legal bills.
- It places the onus on victims to explain how their abuse would have been prevented - applicants are obliged to satisfy the State Claims Agency that, had the Department of Education Guidelines for Procedures for Dealing with Allegations or Suspicions of Child Abuse been in place at the time the sexual abuse occurred, there would have been a real prospect of altering the outcome or mitigating the harm suffered as a result.
“Redress for children subjected to life-changing abuses by trusted adults in what should have been a safe place of learning, is being treated by the State as a tick box exercise rather than one which responds to survivors’ needs. Once again, Ireland is failing to adopt the humility and respect required in dealing with victims of State wrongdoing, and instead taking a defensive position, informed by suspicion and distrust. “As victims grow older, we cannot allow the State to run down the clock on their right to effective redress.”ENDS/ For further information, please contact: Brian Dawson, IHREC Communications Manager, 087 0697095 bdawson@ihrec.ie Follow us on twitter @_IHREC
Notes to editor
Background to this issue – Chronology of the Commission’s Engagement.- The Commission’s December 2021 letter to the Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers is available here
- The Commission’s full June 2021 submission to the Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers is available
- The full text of the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission March 2019 submission to the Independent Assessor Mr. Justice Iarfhlaith O’Neill is available here:
- The full text of the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission December 2018 submission to the Independent Assessor Mr. Justice Iarfhlaith O’Neill is available here:
- The full text of the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission June 2018 submission to the Independent Assessor Mr. Justice Iarfhlaith O’Neill is available here:
- The Commission’s October 2016 written submission to the Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers is available here:
- The Commission’s October 2015 written submission to the Council of Europe under Rule 9 is available here