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Child abuse 'New Zealand's dark side'
Ending child abuse is New Zealand's "Holy Grail",
Governor-General Dame Silvia Cartwright told a conference today Tuesday.
Dame Silvia opened the 10th Australasian Child Abuse
and Neglect Conference in Wellington by acknowledging the child abuse
issue was not new to New Zealand.
"There is a dark side to our bright country. So I
welcome this opportunity to challenge the darkness while thanking those
who seek to change it," she said.
Dame Silvia said many children whose lives had ended
prematurely through abuse were known by name to most New Zealanders.
"But each year there are many hundreds of abused and
neglected children in New Zealand who don't make the headlines and there
are millions more around the world who are forgotten, mistreated or
killed."
Internationally, child abuse reports had increased
dramatically over the last 10 years, and New Zealand was no exception to
this trend, Dame Silvia said.
"Between August 2001 and August 2004 there was a 90
per cent increase in notifications of child abuse.
"In one year, between 2004 and 2005, New Zealand's
child protection agency the Department of Youth, Child and Family
Services received more than 53,000 notifications of suspected child
abuse or neglect. "
Dame Silvia said the fundamental goal was that
children were kept safe from abuse and neglect. "A New Zealand and a world where this is always the
case is our Holy Grail."
The 2003 a UNICEF report on child maltreatment made
for "sobering reading".
"Of 27 OECD countries, New Zealand recorded the third
highest child homicide rate of children up to the age of 14. Those
figures were exceeded only by Mexico and the United States.
"We in New Zealand have repeatedly recorded our shame
at this ranking. Nonetheless, every year about 10 children are killed in
New Zealand in domestic violence."
Dame Silvia said there was no one cause of child
abuse, but if the problem was not addressed, it could pass from
generation to generation. "We know that many of today's violent offenders were
once abused children. We also know that abused and neglected children
are more likely to commit crimes, become substance and alcohol abusers
and to attempt suicide.
"We know that, unless addressed successfully, the
cycle will continue."
The problem was all too easy to state, but the
solutions remained elusive and involved a wide range of answers, she
said. "But there is hope. Every child saved from abuse and
violence today in effect will protect the children of future
generations."
NZPA
14 February 2006
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=1&ObjectID=10368239
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