The Taoiseach is expected to travel to England over the coming days
to hold further meetings with survivors of the Magdalene Laundries.
Enda
Kenny revealed plans for the trip as he accused Fianna Fáil of showing
disrespect for the women by pressing ahead with last night’s Dáil motion
calling for a state apology.
Fianna Fáil announced the motion
before Mr Kenny’s meeting with six victims on Monday when he signalled
that an apology would be issued next Tuesday.
During Leaders’
Questions, Mr Kenny suggested Fianna Fáil should withdraw the motion,
pending a Dáil discussion next week on the Magdalene Laundries report by
Martin McAleese.
“I would have thought that having given a
clear signal of what we would like to do here, that a political motion
put in this way shows scant respect for the authors of the report and
less respect for the persons for whom it’s about,” Mr Kenny said.
Earlier, Fianna Fáil moved to prevent the motion from backfiring,
issuing a statement saying it was “time to put politics aside and unite
in an apology”.
Its justice spokesman, Niall Collins, said the
motion focused on more than just the need for an apology “but also on
the need for a thorough and co-ordinated response from the State to the
McAleese report”.
Fianna Fáil is proposing the establishment
of a unit within the Department of Justice to handle all forms of
redress for the Magdalene survivors.
Mr Kenny told the Dáil:
“It’s quite complex in the various circumstances and directions from
which and through which people arrived at the Magdalene Laundries and
the difficulties that they encountered.”
The Taoiseach praised
the women who met him on Monday and “the way they spoke, their stories,
their personal accounts of their childhood and their reflections 50
years on”.
He repeated the words of one woman who said “there
is a corridor in my mind and I never go into the room in the back cause
it’s there every day, every day”.
Mr Kenny told the Dáil: “I hope before the weekend to have a couple of other engagements, both here and abroad.”
Transport Minister Leo Varadkar said he expected there will be an
apology but “the nature of the apology has to be worked out”.