Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Leah Farrell

Our systems are not working to prevent child sexual violence, even after it is reported

Of all reported cases of child sexual violence only 2% end in a conviction. Children whose disclosures don’t result in a criminal conviction still need protection, writes Dr Clíona Saidléar.

IN HER ADVANCE report on Ireland released this month, the UN Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children, Maud de Boer-Buquicchio, made the observation that:

“A culture of silence around issues of childhood sexual abuse and exploitation…. means systems are not in place to prevent or quickly respond to violations.”

You would be forgiven for thinking she was referring to our well documented historical failings in responding to child sexual violence, but unfortunately, she was referring to what is happening to child victims of rape today.

The report also noted “a lack of a dedicated and integrated strategy to respond to sexual violence against children”.

The question of how our children are currently protected is disturbingly difficult to answer in any detail.

This is the question that the Rape Crisis Network Ireland laid before the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Justice and Equality as it seeks to understand the reform needs of the family law system in Ireland.

According to the report: Sexual Abuse and Violence in Ireland, around one in five children is a victim of sexual violence, so it stands to reason that this issue features heavily in the family courts, yet these courts have little by way of specialist practitioners to deal with it. 

The vast majority of reported cases of child sexual violence never go to court – so what is being done to protect those survivors? 

Getting data

As observed by the Rapporteur, there are gaps in the data we would need to begin to answer that question.

What we do know is the following:

Tusla receives approximately 3,000 referrals of child sexual violence every year. The corresponding number of children will be fewer and that number does not appear to be currently published.

Of those referrals, some will be mistaken or false, at a rate of approximately 2% – 8%, according to a range of research.

After that, according to a sampling done by the Garda Inspectorate in their Report of December 2017, there is a 4% prosecution rate for child sexual violence investigations with less than 2% of investigations resulting in a criminal conviction.

Therefore, our criminal justice failure rate in reported and true child sexual violence is between 90% and 96%.

Unfounded

Children whose disclosures result in no criminal conviction still need protection.

The protection of these children is one of the complex tasks we expect families and communities to undertake informally and which we have mandated Tusla to undertake formally on all our behalf.

Tusla’s response is dictated by its categorisation of these cases, after assessment as either ‘founded’ or ‘unfounded’.

Contrary to what might be a common understanding of the word ‘unfounded’, when Tusla categorises a report as ‘unfounded’ that doesn’t always mean that the sexual violence never happened.

What Tusla seems to mean by ‘unfounded’ by and large, is that it hasn’t found sufficient evidence to categorically say the violence did happen.

Is this categorisation misleading for other agencies?

A series of Parliamentary Questions have elicited the answer from Minister Zappone that Tusla ‘does not collate’ how many child sexual violence cases it categorises as founded or unfounded.

It is imperative that we find out what percentage of child sexual violence reports are treated as unfounded?

Do the other agencies, professionals and vitally, the child’s circle of trust, have a shared understanding of their obligations when there is an ‘unfounded’ finding?

Family Court

To further add to the complexity of child protection the National Rape Crisis Statistics 2015 found that for children under 13 who experience sexual violence, 62% said that the perpetrator was a family member.

Where a child discloses abuse within the family, this disclosure will in many cases result in his or her family breaking up.

All told this means that we can expect that a significant proportion of family separation and child custody cases going through our family courts, involve the rape and sexual abuse of children by family members in the absence of a parallel criminal conviction.

The Family Court Services process on average 11,600 guardianship, custody and access cases every year but we have no statistics from the Courts Service on how many of these cases contain evidence of domestic and sexual violence.

These family courts are held in camera. This means that apart from the very welcome Child Care Law Reporting Project and the work of the Child Rapporteur there is little by way of transparency for insight and reassurance.

The statistics on how many private family law cases involve allegations of child sexual violence is an imperative matter of justice, child protection and public interest.

The fact is our family courts are handling criminal matters of a child protection nature in unknown numbers, in the absence of standardised and fully regulated specialisation.

Almost all advocates are agreed that our family courts need improved specialisation to deal with these complex matters.

Ensuring transparency, accountability and specialisation would form part of a national strategy on child sexual violence. Such a strategy does not exist.

A national strategy would place responsibility somewhere for oversight of whole-of-government child protection activity.

This oversight responsibility is currently not held by any specific government department or agency. 

What we have is a system lacking transparency and poorly joined up which, in short, is a system vulnerable to failure.

Where a system suffers from this flawed design, it is not only likely to fail to achieve its child protection objectives but, as history teaches us, it often causes further harm to the very children it is meant to serve.

We need action urgently.

Dr Clíona Saidléar is the Executive Director of Rape Crisis Network Ireland which is a specialist sexual violence policy NGO owned and governed by rape crisis centres.  

Close
12 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Pius Flynn
    Favourite Pius Flynn
    Report
    Apr 2nd 2019, 7:23 AM

    Why is this considered news now, this information has been available for years.
    What we should be asking is why nothing is being done about it.

    49
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Adrian
    Favourite Adrian
    Report
    Apr 2nd 2019, 10:01 AM

    @Pius Flynn: because our politics isn’t working either.

    16
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Anna Kavanagh
    Favourite Anna Kavanagh
    Report
    Apr 2nd 2019, 9:22 AM

    Clíona Saidléat is to be commended for her campaign for justice for the child victims of sexual abuse

    33
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Joe Burns
    Favourite Joe Burns
    Report
    Apr 2nd 2019, 2:55 PM

    I wonder how many people know that if a child is raped in Irish State Care that you could be jailed for reporting the rape to Gardai?

    Gardai won’t investigate crimes against children in Care as they won’t accept complaints from the public. Gardai also have to go to court against Tusla to obtain search warrants as Tusla block attempts at investigation.

    Are we ready for Ryan Report Two to expose what Tusla are doing to children yet?

    18
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Bee Johnson
    Favourite Bee Johnson
    Report
    Apr 3rd 2019, 2:33 PM

    @Joe Burns: that is complete and utter nonsense

    3
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Joe Burns
    Favourite Joe Burns
    Report
    Apr 2nd 2019, 3:00 PM

    Why are the government suppressing the publication of details of the largest investigation of children of 3 families who were apparent victims of a paedophile network?

    We’re those children in Irish State Care at the time?

    16
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mark Lamb
    Favourite Mark Lamb
    Report
    Apr 2nd 2019, 4:24 PM

    Tusla & Katherine Zappone are “Misleading ” People in this Report as the Word “Alleged ” is missing from Tusla & Katherine Zappone Statement data from Tusla is Saying 3000 Referrals of Child Sexual Abuse Every Year so is Tusla say 3000 Referrals are “Guilty ? where is the word” Alleged” in Tusla Data?

    12
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mark Lamb
    Favourite Mark Lamb
    Report
    Apr 2nd 2019, 3:12 PM

    Tusla get around 3000 Referrals a Year of Alleged Child Sex Abuse . 2% Per Cent go to to Criminal Court that is around 60 out of 3000 Referrals go to Criminal Court . 62% Per Cent of the 3000 Tusla Referrals of Alleged Child Sex Abuse go to Family Law Courts where there is Bitter Break ups & Child Custody Battles where Child Sex Abuse are A quote from the Irish Independent by Mark O Regan 26.02.2017 Sexual Abuse Claims “Weapon of Choice in Child Custody Battles ” . A quote from the Irish Independent by Niall OConnor 25.2.2015 Alan Shatter “Accuses some Mothers of Using Children as “Pawns” in Custody Battles . A quote from The Journal .ie 13.03.2019 Dr Geoffrey Shannon “Parents Focus on Winning Custody is “Harming Irish Children.

    14
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mark Lamb
    Favourite Mark Lamb
    Report
    Apr 2nd 2019, 9:00 PM

    Rory Connor Over 62% per cent of Tusla Case where in Family Law Courts where Hear Say Evidence was used to take Children into Care & Child Custody Battles between both Man &Women even when Innocent Men /Women are cleared by the Gardai . Tusla Social Workers then the use the same Allegation Inflated them Falsified them like Maurice McCabe in front of Family Law Judge your name is then Destroyed for the rest of your life the also send A Notification of Suspected Child Abuse to Gardai with A “Tick The Box Neglect Sexual Physical Emotional this is Done in “Secret” its in Power of the Hands of Tusla Social Worker Tick The Sexual Boxes that it your life is over.

    9
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mark Lamb
    Favourite Mark Lamb
    Report
    Apr 2nd 2019, 4:42 PM

    Tusla Data of those Referrals some will be “Mistaken” or “False ” at A Rate of Approximately 2% -8% How many of the 3000 Alleged “Allegation of Child Sex Abuse end up in Criminal Court Convicted of Making “False Allegation of Child Sex Abuse this is missing from this report why is that? I can not find a single Person Jailed for this Evil Crime .How Many of the 3000 Referrals are Made by a 3rd Party Allegation made to get Custody of Children by A Father our Mother that is all so missing from this Tusla & Katherine Zappone Statement Why?

    7
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Rory Connor
    Favourite Rory Connor
    Report
    Apr 2nd 2019, 7:59 PM

    There have been a small number of people jailed for making false allegations of rape or of child abuse. I list SEVEN cases here in article “Are There Very Few False Allegations of Rape and Child Abuse? [1]” where accusers were exposed as liars
    http://irishsalem.blogspot.com/2017/10/are-there-very-few-false-allegations-of.html
    Note that not all false accusers went to jail although some did.

    It is very difficult to PROVE that someone lied. In all 7 cases, either the accuser was VERY stupid OR the accused was VERY lucky or both!

    5
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Christine Reid
    Favourite Christine Reid
    Report
    Jun 5th 2019, 10:52 PM

    We have no mechanism to hold the government or its institutions to account, after decades and decades of scandals in this country , when has anyone ever been held to Account ? It’s shocking how Irish citizen’s continue to vote under the terms and conditions of the constitution, that gives us no accountability, no enforceable rights, Article 6 in the constitution tells us we vote in Ruler’s not representatives, to change the systems that are in play, we need to bring them all down , the constitution was brought in by plebiscite which means the people can revoke it, take our consent back , and untill we do this our children and grandchildren and our great grandchildren will suffer for our ignorance,

    1
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

Leave a commentcancel