PSNI begins outreach for victims of historical institutional abuse
Police have so far received 57 reports, including from mothers who have never met their children.
Police in the North have started a programme of community outreach to speak with victims of historical institutions for women.
Thousands of women and girls in the north spent time in mother and baby homes, Magdalene Laundries and industrial schools over the last century.
Last year, a major academic research report was published outlining the scale of mistreatment endured in the institutions, the last of which closed in the 1990s.
An investigation into allegations of abuse is under way, while a public inquiry is expected to take place in the future.
Police have so far received 57 reports, including from mothers who have never met their children. The PSNI has now tasked neighbourhood officers to engage with the community groups in the areas they work with to spread the word about the investigation.
Adele Johnstone, from Birth Mothers and their Children for Justice, has urged others who spent time in institutions to come forward and speak to police.
The Armagh woman was adopted from a mother and baby home, and also spent time at the Marianvale Home in Newry as a teenager.
"I'm an adoptee, I'm also a birth mother, so I would like people to come forward and speak to the PSNI, and to also engage with the truth and recovery process," she said.
"A lot of people have been shamed and stigmatised for years, and it has been done by the institutions, by the government of the day, by social workers.
She said for herself, the criminal investigation isn't a big issue. It is more bring peace and justice for what happened to her and others in the institutions.
"A lot of the girls and women were very young girls, they were children, and it is time this was addressed and brought out into the public domain.
"It haunted me all my life. As far as I am concerned, I lived a life of lies, I told lies all my life because I didn't want people to know the truth about where I came from, my adoption, my pregnancy, my child, and I lived with that all my life until the last few years when I got involved with Birth Mothers and their Children for Justice.
Detective Superintendent Gary Reid is leading a full-time investigation team into the institutions.
He said: "When we first launched our investigation, we used to use the more traditional types of media. This is the next phase, trying to get out into community groups to people who maybe wouldn't access their news through those particular mediums," he said.
The dedicated Mother and Baby Institutions, Work Houses and Magdalene Laundries Investigative Team can be emailed at MotherBabyHomes.Magdalenelaundries@psni.police.uk.



