New Zealand / Crime

Abuse in Care inquiry to begin: 'You just hope it would never happen again'

05:14 am on 13 June 2022

The state foster-care system comes under the scrutiny of the Royal Commission into Abuse in Care starting today.

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It is the 12th public hearing carried out so far by the commission, set up in 2018 to look into historical abuse in both state and faith-based care between 1950 and 1999.

Five hundred people have come forward to the inquiry saying they were abused while in foster care.

Counsel assisting Aroha Fletcher said instead of being loved and supported, some survivors were treated inhumanely.

She said survivors will speak of being chained like a dog to the table and forced to eat like one, not being given the necessities of life most take for granted, and some were sexually and physically abused.

Fletcher said some of them were belittled and made to feel they did not exist and were nothing.

She said it is important survivor stories are heard.

''The purpose of this hearing is to give them a platform so they can teach the commissioners what they went through and we look at what we need to change going forward so that these abuses don't happen in foster-care again.''

''Unfortunately with what they have been through they will be sharing the abuses that happened while they were in the foster-care environment, so that's where the state intervened and took them away from their families and placed them into alternative arrangements.''

She said some of the survivors went through multiple placements.

''As a child they started off in one foster family home and they ended up being 37 placements later in another one.''

She said it was very hard for the children to form relationships with secure connections to people.

''That would have impacted some of them in later life as adults when you go out into the wild world and you expect yourself to be a reasonable adult and try and form relationships.''

Fletcher said the evidence from survivors continued to surprise her.

''You can't believe what some people had to go through as a child.''

''Some of these people were only two, three years old.''

''When you read these stories it is always shocking. It is not something you would ever expect.

"You just hope it would never happen again to anyone.''

The Royal Commission will hear from survivors and some expert witnesses over the five days set aside.