More than 200,000 people are estimated to have been abused by state and religious organizations in New Zealand that had been entrusted with their care, according to the final report from a landmark independent inquiry released on Wednesday.
The abuse included sexual assault, electric shocks, chemical restraints, medical experimentation, sterilization, starvation and beatings, said the report from the Royal Commission of Inquiry Into Abuse in Care.
Many of the victims were children who had been removed from their families and placed in state, religious or foster care.
“For some people this meant years or even decades of frequent abuse and neglect,” the report said.
“For some it was a lifetime; for others it led to an unmarked grave.”In a statement accompanying the release, Coral Shaw, the inquiry’s chair, described the abuse as an “unthinkable national catastrophe.”
Persons:
Coral Shaw
Organizations:
Royal Commission of
Locations:
New Zealand