Fully inquiry into mother and baby homes called for in Northern Ireland

ireland
Fully Inquiry Into Mother And Baby Homes Called For In Northern Ireland
SDLP leader, Colum Eastwood (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
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Digital Desk Staff

The publication of the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes in the Republic has prompted calls for a corresponding inquiry in Northern Ireland.

As the Irish Times reports, The Northern Executive commissioned research into the homes in Northern Ireland which was carried out by Queen’s University Belfast and Ulster University and is due to be published at the end of January.

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Amnesty International urged the Executive to go further and initiate a comprehensive inquiry in the North. It said that there were more than a dozen Mother and Baby home-type institutions in Northern Ireland, with the last one closing its doors as recently as the 1990s.

SDLP leader Colum Eastwood has also called for an inquiry in Northern Ireland. “The research report into the operation of mother and baby homes in the North is now long overdue.

"It is unacceptable that survivors of these institutions continue to experience unjustifiable delay that compounds the pain they have to live with,” Mr Eastwood said on Wednesday.

Some 7,500 women and girls gave birth in the Northern Ireland homes, operated by both Catholic and Protestant churches and religious organisations, the organisation said.

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Tragic scandal

Amnesty cited the case of a woman who gave birth to a baby girl at a mother and baby home in 1979 in Northern Ireland and is now taking legal action against the Executive over the failure to set up an inquiry.

Northern Ireland must now follow the Republic of Ireland and instigate a full-scale inquiry into the appalling tragic scandal of mother and baby homes here,” said Amnesty’s Northern Ireland director Patrick Corrigan.

“These distressing findings echo the serious concerns we have long held about how women and babies were treated in near-identical institutions in Northern Ireland,” he said.

“Women in Northern Ireland have told Amnesty that they suffered arbitrary detention, forced labour, ill-treatment, and the removal and forced adoption of their babies – criminal acts in both domestic and international law,” he added.

“Meanwhile, their babies were branded as ‘illegitimate’ on birth, taken from their mothers as new-borns – some were adopted without consent, while others were put into loveless institutions, only to face death by malnutrition and burial in mass graves.”

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