Coming In From The Cold

26 New Zealand male survivors share their personal stories of sexual abuse

In a new publication that records the last 10 years in the development of Tautoko Tāne Aotearoa, you will read the stories of 26 Tautoko Tāne staff and clients who have generously shared their survivor experiences to raise awareness of the impacts of sexual violence and to support the important work of the only national network in New Zealand that is dedicated to enabling the wellbeing of male survivors.

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‘We had a right to expect much better’ – survivors get pay but no power

Calls for a new, survivor-driven redress system have been unanswered by Government, which chose instead to invest more in the existing state-led operation.

Seven hundred and seventy-four million dollars will be put towards redress for abuse in state care, but the redress system that survivors called for won’t materialise.

Friday’s announcement by the Government’s lead co-ordinator Erica Stanford saw increased payments for survivors, a more streamlined approach for lodging a claim and a commitment to equal compensation regardless of where the abuse occurred.

But it omitted all abuses in faith-based institutions and preserved a top-down, government-driven process. Multiple recommendations from the interim and final Royal Commission reports, as well as requests made by survivors of the abuse, had called for a survivor-led redress system: a path Stanford opted against in the name of certainty and timeliness.

Throughout the process of acknowledging, documenting and – most recently – apologising for abuse in state- and faith-based care, survivors have doubted the sincerity of the Government’s promises.

Initially, the abuse they suffered was said not to have happened. Once it was proven, it was deemed not torture. Once it was admitted to be torture, and extensive documentation produced, the investigation of said torture was overseen by people involved in its obfuscation.

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