WARNING: This post deals with widespread institutional sexual abuse and may be distressing for some readers.
There are so many elements about this, which are shameful.
The shameful way a student was made to detail the sexual abuse that occurred.
The shameful way a principal has finally admitted his ‘incompetency’.
The shameful way an assistant principal was clearly not equipped to deal with the situation.
The shameful way an abuser was allowed back to work with other children following his sacking.
The shame of a school, a diocese, a Church.
In this lies the shame. In these places, in these people.
These people and institutions.
The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining how staff and Catholic Church officials at a Toowoomba primary school in south-east Queensland dealt with allegations of sexual offences against girls between 2007 and 2008.
Allegations that were not initially dealt with properly and led to the abuse of even more children.
In 2010, teacher Gerard Vincent Byrnes pleaded guilty to child sex offences committed against 13 girls and was sentenced to 10 years’ jail.
The Royal Commission is taking a closer look at how the school dealt with the complaints, and sadly the overwhelming factor is that the abuse could have been prevented.