Here it is
Six institutions,
including the Jehovah's Witnesses, have been publicly named by the
Federal Government for failing to sign up to the National Redress Scheme
for victims of institutional child sexual abuse.
Key points:
- Organisations had until last night to join the program
- The Government says those which did not sign up will no longer receive Commonwealth funding
- 380 non-government institutions have signed up or intend to sign up to the scheme
Organisations
had until last night to join the program, with the Commonwealth
promising to not only reveal those which refused to take part, but also cut them off from future federal funding and consider ways to cut their charitable status.
The
six institutions are Australian Air League, Boys' Brigade NSW,
Fairbridge Restored Limited, Lakes Entrance Pony Club, Jehovah's
Witnesses and Kenja Communications.
There are 55
applications from victims of child sexual abuse that cannot currently be
processed as a result of the six groups failing to sign up.
Social Services Minister Anne Ruston was scathing as she urged the organisations to think about the consequences of not joining.
"Think
about the reputational damage by you saying, as an organisation, that
despite having a history of working with children, despite having
applications against your organisation for child sexual abuse, you still
refuse to accept your moral obligation and responsibility to come
forward and allow these people the small thing of a bit of redress and a
small amount of money to acknowledge that they actually have had wrongs
committed against them," she told the ABC's AM program.
If you or anyone you know needs help:
"I
don't understand how any organisation can take that kind of course of
action, so I'll be calling on them to actually rethink their position."
The
Commonwealth and state and territory governments have all signed up to
the scheme — covering any abuse that happened within their institutions.
In
total, 224 non-government institutions have agreed to take part in the
scheme, while another 156 have signalled their intention to join.
Jehovah's Witnesses argued it did not have the "institutional settings" needed to be covered by the National Redress Scheme.
"Jehovah's
Witnesses understand that, to date, there have been less than 10
applicants to the redress scheme who have referred to the religion of
Jehovah's Witnesses," the organisation's Tom Pecipajkovski told the ABC.
Exposing a national shame
The key moments that led to one of Australia's most shocking inquiries.
Read more"Jehovah's
Witnesses have responded and will continue to respond directly to
individual claims for redress in a caring, fair, and principled manner,
taking into consideration the unique circumstances of each claim.
"The religion of Jehovah's Witnesses also provides spiritual comfort and assistance to child abuse victims and their families."
Senator
Ruston said it was not up to Jehovah's Witnesses or other organisations
to decide whether their models suited the scheme or not.
"It's not up to you to make those decisions," she said.
"Let
the independent scheme assess the validity of the arguments you're
putting forward because they may well be correct but it's not for them
to decide.
"We have applications and we have a responsibility to process them."
The
Minister said in the future if a new non-participating organisation was
named in an application, it would have six months from when it was
notified of the application to join the scheme, or be publicly named and
be ineligible for Commonwealth funding.
Posted 38
mminutes ago
jtg.
P.S. Right on smiddy3