How Could You? Hall of Shame-New Zealand

By on 6-26-2012 in Abuse in foster care, How could you? Hall of Shame, New Zealand

How Could You? Hall of Shame-New Zealand

This will be an archive of heinous actions by those involved in child welfare, foster care and adoption. We forewarn you that these are deeply disturbing stories that may involve sex abuse, murder, kidnapping and other horrendous actions.

From New Zealand, “a troubled teenager and victim of sexual abuse…was placed by CYF into the care of her uncle, a convicted rapist.

The woman and her first-born are HIV positive as a result of also being raped by her uncle’s friend, who has since died of Aids.

CYF apologised their part in her nightmare, but Taranaki Daily News readers felt that was not enough. [Ya think?]

More than 600 people responded to an online poll on the subject. Just five per cent felt that the government agency had done enough by saying sorry. A staggering 95 per cent felt she deserved some compensation as the victim of the ordeal.

And the woman herself believes there are many thousands of similar victims, a claim backed by a prominent Taranaki sex abuse counsellor.

Child, Youth and Family has said changes were made this year to ensure better checks were made.

She was removed from the uncle’s home when she told her social worker about the abuse.

Yesterday the woman spoke to the Taranaki Daily News, saying she believes there were “thousands” more like herself.

CYF was unable yesterday to tell the paper how many complaints of abuse they had received.

The woman, whom the Taranaki Daily News has agreed not to name, said she was continuing to work with lawyers and TV One’s Marae Investigates programme to ensure that gaps in CYF youth justice placement policies were closed. She did not want others to be abused.

The woman said both she and her child were keeping well.

New Plymouth police confirmed yesterday she was interviewed by police more than a decade ago.

New Plymouth’s Safer Family Centre counsellor Bob Stevens spoke to the Taranaki Daily News yesterday, after the teenager’s story was revealed on Sunday.

Mr Stevens said he had sympathy with social workers who were often put under pressure to place an at-risk child.

“I do really appreciate the difficulty that there is for social welfare agencies to find a place for a child. It’s a multifaceted problem and hasn’t got a simple solution.

“I’m encouraged they have put that prevention into their system rather than go on about what happened that you can’t change.

“I do not believe that a social worker that I know of would deliberately throw a child to the wolves, as such, for the sake of expediency, but then sometimes expediency demands this child goes into a placement and you take the calculated risk, I suppose.

“Personally, I have dealt with too many cases to want to remember, including recently, in situations I believe were avoidable,” Mr Stevens said.”At times I’ve despaired at a system that has allowed a child who has been abused to be put in a placement where the abuse is ongoing by other offenders,” Mr Stevens said.

Child Alert director Alan Bell said yesterday CYF assurances still left room for doubt.

“Even though this occurred some years ago in 2001, it seems incredible that such a thing could happen.

“It is an absolute travesty that a government agency could actually place a 16-year-old girl for safekeeping with a convicted sex offender.

“The New Zealand record of child abuse is dismal … When abuse occurs after children at risk have been taken into care by a government agency the public are justified in requiring the highest standard of safeguarding them from that point on.”

Source:

Readers back rape victim

[Stuff 6/26/12 by Lyn Humphreys]

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