The State must fully excavate
sites at every Magdalene laundry and Mother and Baby Home where
children’s remains may have been buried, a survivors’ group has said.
The Government has not said
whether a full excavation will take place at the former grounds of the
Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, Co Galway, where a commission of inquiry
looking into the religious-run homes for unmarried mothers has found the
remains of a “significant” number of children aged under three.
Calling for a wider disinterment
programme, the Justice for Magdalenes research group said it had
compiled a list of 180 institutions, agencies and individuals charged
with the care of unmarried mothers and their children.
It also appealed for a halt to
plans to redevelop two former Magdelene laundries in Dublin until it
could be established that neither site contained children’s graves.
“In terms of the identification of
remains, a sample isn’t going to cut it. They’re all real people who
deserve to be identified and have their final resting place marked,”
said Claire McGettrick, the organisation’s co-founder.
Garda involvement
The call came as Minister for Housing Simon Coveney
said it was “hard to see that there wouldn’t be Garda involvement” in
the case of the Tuam home, which was run by the Bon Secours Sisters, a
Catholic congregation, until it closed in 1961.
Research by local historian Catherine Corless suggests 796 children died at the Tuam institution over 36 years without their burial place being recorded.
“This was a site that was owned by
the State and it’s a site that’s still owned by Galway County Council,
so there’s a significant responsibility on the State here, as well as
the Bon Secours Sisters,” Mr Coveney said.
The Garda could be called in if
the local coroner concludes there is reason to believe any of the deaths
occurred in a violent or unnatural manner.
At several packed morning Masses in Tuam Cathedral on Sunday, parishioners heard Archbishop Dr Michael Neary express his horror at discovery of the remains.
Dr Neary said his priority was to
seek, in co-operation with their families, a “dignified reinterment” of
the children’s remains.
However, residents living in
houses on the site of the home have mixed views about reinterment,
saying that an areas known as the graveyard had been blessed on a number
of occasions.