It surprised me
that Jersey’s new Children’s Commissioner has made 20 trips outside the Island
since her appointment in January 2018 “learning on the job and staying
connected.”
I should have hoped
that she might bring sufficient knowledge with her.
After all, there is
a very full Independent Jersey Care Inquiry Report already published to guide
her and she is “an ex police officer, teacher and director of children’s
services from the UK” where more than enough
has been researched and written about child welfare and safeguarding in
the past 50 years to satisfy any thirst for theoretical knowledge.
And it’s not as
though she has to do the job in Jersey on her own because there is a Children’s
Minister, a Director General for child welfare and Charlie Parker to support
her besides which there is a virtual army of trained social workers,
psychiatrists, medics, teachers and carers etc working out of several interlocking
government departments with specific duties towards children besides a myriad
of official groups and committees designed to catch any who fall through the
wellbeing net.
Not to mention that
all 49 elected States Members are supposed to have an individual responsibility
for children in Jersey and they have been invited to sign up to the Chief
Minister’s “Pledge to Jersey’s Children and Young People”…and of course there
is a multitude too of voluntary and semi-voluntary supportive net-working
organizations who are in position to observe - and if necessary influence - the
healthy development of children from the moment they are born.
Besides which the
welfare of children is now the “number one priority” in the Jersey Strategic
Plan and the Island has even signed up at long last to the highest standards
laid down in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child which already have
attracted a lifetime of wise application by reason of their acceptance by most
countries across the world.
So what could
possible go wrong now?
Sadly of course,
the recent international record demonstrates that the welfare of children is in
a very serious state of neglect across the world.
Even within the UK the
mammoth Child Abuse Inquiry for England and Wales has only just managed to
publish its first interim report.
If that Inquiry
does ever complete its task this will be several years in the future.
The Scottish Child
Abuse Inquiry established in 2016 is also rumbling on - whilst the N. Ireland
Inquiry looking at the years 1922-1995 has now reported but it is not clear
what might happen next.
And the particular
role of the Church in N. Ireland is also a factor in other territories which
many are reluctant to deal with.
In Jersey, the Independent
Care Inquiry has reported (as referred to above) but already there is a plan to
extend the terms of reference of the “compensation” scheme to include about 75
more people whose ill-treatment as children in the care of official agencies
has been previously omitted.
Significantly, the
initiative for this latest action arises from the work of a UK lawyer pressing
for justice within the Island and not from Jersey lawyers or agencies of the
Jersey government.
Now, so far as
Jersey is concerned, shall that finally be the end of the matter?
Clearly not, after
all, seemingly every week new cases are reported of the abuse of children in
Jersey, with some cases appearing in the Courts whilst the AG has declared that
he is not satisfied with the low rate of conviction of abusers and he has
promoted law revisions.
Unfortunately,
because the general public is largely excluded from official hearings in Jersey
where children are concerned and public reporting is minimal, very little
factual knowledge is made available.
Ignorance prevails
along with the secrecy.
However, it is
significant that the abuse of children takes place especially where conditions
of poverty, limited education, social deprivation and neglect prevail.
From Pitcairn and
many other Pacific Islands, the Falklands, St Helena, throughout the Caribbean,
off shore Australia, the problem of child abuse is common-place and in some
instances excused as “part of the culture.”
In the Isle of Man,
the Knottsfield Children’s Home has been exposed as a place of abuse over
several decades and is an interesting example to cite in the context of Jersey
where UK style professional standards have supposedly been followed over many
years.
Inevitably, those
same standards have proved wholly ineffective in so many places in the UK but
the failures of care do not by-pass cities or areas of industrial activity any
more than finance centres….
….Except that
Guernsey does not seem to have produced a comparable institutional child-abuse
problem.
Why should this be?
Has Guernsey’s child-abuse
scandal yet to be revealed or should the Children’s Commissioner and her
multi-layered team be better employed seeking guidance in the other Bailiwick
rather than Scandinavia or Scotland?
Has the much talked
about CIs mutual co-operation more to offer then we realize?
It's still the same old game I'm afraid Tom, public money into private pockets and controlled operatives who will obey orders if the situation, or need, arises! "THEY" have been playing the same tune for an absolute eternity, and it ain't stopping now mate. As an aside, I hope you are well my friend, kindest regards.
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