SCOTLAND’s children’s commissioner has said that there should be
an inquiry into allegations of sexual abuse at the Fort Augustus Abbey
school in the Highlands.
Tam Baillie’s comments follow allegations that a third Australian monk was part of a suspected paedophile ring at the school.
The
Scottish Government has insisted so far that the allegations were
matters for the Catholic Church in Scotland, and were for Police
Scotland to investigate.
But Mr Baillie, commissioner for children
and young people, said that in light of the widening extent of the
abuse, the government should set up an inquiry.
Speaking
yesterday, he drew parallels with the abuse scandal surrounding Jimmy
Savile: “I am actually appointed by parliament, not by the Scottish
Government, and the Government has to listen to the lobby, if you like,
the views, the judgment – and in my judgment this requires an
independent inquiry.
“There are echoes here of what is happening
down south with regard to Savile and the number of inquiries that has
spawned, and there are even more distant echoes of what happened in
Ireland in the 1980s and 1990s.”
The abuse was reportedly carried
out by monks over several decades at Fort Augustus and its preparatory
school in East
Lothian, Carlekemp, both of which are now closed.
The
scandal which is believed to have involved at least 50 victims, and the
surrounding cover-up was revealed in a BBC investigation broadcast last
month.
Mr Baillie’s comments came in the wake of further
revelations relating to the controversy.
One of the school’s
headteachers, Father Francis Davidson, announced on Wednesday that he
was stepping down as monastic superior of St Benet’s Hall, where he was
responsible for the welfare of student monks at the Oxford College, in
the wake of direct accusations that he covered up abuse.
On Thursday, four former pupils named a third Australian monk in the child abuse scandal.
Two
men, Fr Aidan Duggan and Fr Chrysostom Alexander, had already been
accused of being paedophiles, but Fr Fabian Duggan, Fr Aidan’s brother,
was added to the list of abusers.
However, on Friday last week,
the same day that the allegations were put to Fr Fabian and the Sydney
Catholic Church, he died, aged 83.
All three Australian monks left Fort Augustus in the 1970s.
Meanwhile,
also on Thursday, Danny Sullivan, chairman of the Catholic Safeguarding
Commission in England and Wales, said the Church in Scotland would
benefit from outside scrutiny and criticised Bishop Joseph Devine, the
retired bishop of Motherwell, who has dismissed calls for an independent
inquiry.