The Government is to consider extending the scope of the Magdalene redress scheme to include former residents of Bethany House.
Taoiseach
Enda Kenny told the Dáil today that Minister for Justice Alan Shatter
was “looking at the question” of payments for survivors of the
Protestant-run home for unmarried mothers.
“Not being adversarial, not being a gravy train for those who might
assume so from a legalistic point of view — that’s a very strong wish
and a very strong desire expressed by the women who were in the
Magdalene laundries, and that’s what we want to try to achieve here,” Mr
Kenny said.
Survivors can register with the Department of Justice from today to
ensure they are included in the compensation scheme.
People can contact
the department at 01- 476 8649 .
They can also write to:
Magdalen Laundry Fund
c/o Department of Justice and Equality
Montague Court
Montague Street
Dublin 2
info@idcmagdalen.ie
Mr Kenny apologised "unreservedly" yesterday to those who spent time in
the Magdalene laundries and said the Government would establish a fund
to assist the women within three months.
Mr Kenny’s voice choked
with emotion as he concluded his address to the Dáil when former senator
Martin McAleese’s report on the institutions was discussed in a rare
non-partisan atmosphere.
“I, as Taoiseach, on behalf of the State,
the Government and our citizens, deeply regret and apologise
unreservedly to all those women for the hurt that was done to them, and
for any stigma they suffered, as a result of the time they spent in a
Magdalene laundry.”
Speaking directly to the women, some of whom
sat in the public gallery, Mr Kenny said: “This is a national shame, for
which I again say, I am deeply sorry and offer my full and heartfelt
apologies.”
Mr Kenny’s statement was described today by President Michael D Higgins as “very generous”.
Speaking
in Paris the President said: “I know the emotional strength with which
it was delivered, and I'm even more pleased that those who were
affected, the women, were very pleased with it. They felt that it not just recognised a wrong but also recognised the necessity to respond to it.”
"I
think as well that the Taoiseach's statement, the announcement of
practical steps to now consider the situation in which these women, and
particularly those families of the women who are no longer with us, will
be considered. And I think as well to end the quibble as to the
extension to those institutions [which] may not have been originally
covered. I think everybody will have been pleased with the
statement, but what was most important was that the women themselves
were very satisfied and were generous in their acknowledgement of what
the Taoiseach had done on behalf of all the people of Ireland."
However,
he said the women deserved more.
The president of the Law Reform
Commission, Mr Justice John Quirke, would recommend criteria to be
applied when assessing what help the Government can provide in terms of
“payments” and supports such as medical cards and counselling services.
When
Mr Justice Quirke reports within three months, the Government will
establish a fund to assist the women based on his recommendations.
TDs in the packed Dail chamber gave a standing ovation to the women in the public gallery when the Taoiseach concluded.
Memorial funded
Separately, the Government will fund a memorial “to remind us all of this dark part of our history”, Mr Kenny said.
He
said the report showed the State was directly involved in more than a
quarter of admissions to the laundries and the Government had decided to
include all the Magdalene women in its response regardless of how they
were admitted.
Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore said the religious orders
that ran the laundries should make a “fair contribution, along with the
taxpayer”. He said he was proud of the role Labour had played in
transforming Ireland from a “subservient State”.
Fianna
Fáil leader Micheál Martin said he was sorry the women’s suffering had
not been addressed earlier. “I am sorry that that did not happen over
the last decade when I was a member of government,” he said.
Speaking
outside Leinster House, Magdalene Survivors Together member Maureen
O’Sullivan said the Taoiseach’s words were “fantastic”.
“He didn’t
hold back on anything, he really did us proud. Now we can get on with
our lives, now that we have an apology and they’ve taken responsibility.
It’s just fantastic.”