The Salvation Army (Australia Eastern Territory) accepts all the Royal Commission findings presented regarding Case Study 5 and acknowledges past practices and procedures led to the abuse of children.
To confirm, The Salvation Army no longer runs any children’s homes as outlined in Case Study 5 and has implemented significant changes to ensure priority focus for its child protection policies and procedures.
The Salvation Army would again like to offer its unreserved, deepest and sincerest apologies to survivors and their families for the trauma and effect this abuse has caused all throughout their lives.
Commissioner James Condon, leader of The Salvation Army (Australia Eastern Territory) said, “The Salvation Army openly admits to serious past failures, accepts responsibility for these failures and apologises to all who were harmed including the families of survivors.”
“The Salvation Army has a no tolerance approach to any form of abuse. As an organisation, The Salvation Army is committed to ensuring no harm ever occurs again and has no tolerance for abuse of any kind. We understand that in the past we have breached the trust placed in us and we must seek to rebuild that broken trust.
“We cannot change the past and undo the wrongs committed by people in our name. However, we remain committed to acknowledging these wrongs, and ensuring we today have adequate child-protection processes and procedures to protect all children who we come into contact with.
“The Salvation Army today has best-practice child protection policies in place to ensure those policies reflect that the protection of children remains one of our most serious obligations,” said Commissioner Condon.
Prior to the release of this report by the Royal Commission and ahead of the findings of Case Study 10, The Salvation Army has already enacted a number of significant changes to ensure policies and procedures remain best-practice. With the assistance of independent, external experts, these changes include:
All these measures include specifics steps to ensure ongoing accountability to improve child protection processes so children will never be placed in situations of harm again.
The Salvation Army is committed to working with survivors in order for their healing process to begin and encourages anyone who was abused in any way to contact our Centre for Restoration directly on (02) 9266 9781 or centreforrestoration@aue.salvationarmy.org.
For more information about The Salvation Army and the Royal Commission, please visit http://salvos.org.au/royal-commission/ and http://www.childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au/public-hearings/case-studies
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