A call has been made for the re-opening of an investigation into former nun Nora Wall, resident manager in the 1980s of St Michael’s Child Care Centre in Cappoquin, Co Waterford.
Speaking in the Dáil tonight, Fine Gael justice spokesman Charlie Flanagan said she "exposed the children in her care to unacceptable risks by allowing male outsides to stay overnight at the Cappoquin care home centre in Waterford".
He said: "It has been suggested that there were frequent visits to the Cappoquin home by some clergy from Mount Melleray Abbey. Access to children may have been a key motivation for these visits."
"We must bear in mind that that very Abbey, Mount Melleray was selected by the notorious paedophile Father Brendan Smyth as a holiday destination or a haven to escape when he was on the run from the authorities in Northern Ireland. This issue needs to be re-visited."
Mr Flanagan was speaking during the second night of the Dail debate on the Labour party Private Member's Institutional Child Abuse Bill which provides that no abuse victim should be denied justice through the redress Bill. The Bill also removes any record for children incarcerated in reformatory schools by criminal conviction.
It was rejected by the Government but the Labour party did not call a vote tonight on the Bill. Minister of State Barry Andrews said the Bill contained a number of good measures and there was some valid criticism of the speed with which the indemnity deal was concluded.
The Fine Gael spokesman also said there were "issues in relation to the charging and release of Nora Wall that need to be revisited by way of investigation. And it is a matter of some concern that reports about interference with witnesses and attempts to buy their silence have been made. I believe this particular aspect needs to be fully investigated because any secret payments made by religious institutions to individuals need to be fully probed and examined."
Deputy Flanagan also called for the Education Finance Board, which has a budget of €12.7 million, to appear before the Public Accounts Committee. "The board administers a very large budget. Concerns have been brought to my attention in respect of what some considered to be rather ad hoc and casual approach to awarding money."
Ms Wall, had a conviction in 1999 for the rape of a 12-year-old girl in her care declared a miscarriage of justice. Mr Flanagan said the Ryan Commission report into child abuse described her management of children in her care as "alarming", "disastrous", "inappropriate and dangerous".
He said: "One particularly worrying aspect of the Ryan report refers to an incident where a resident of the home with an intellectual disability was sexually assaulted by a colleague in a hotel where he worked part-time. The parents of the boy went to the gardaí. They confronted the abuser, who admitted the abuse. The boy later told the house parent that he did not want to pursue the matter. It was later noted that the boy had a new radio. He told her that Nora Wall had given him a new radio and a new bicycle. This is quite a sinister revelation that needs to be probed further."
Mr Flanagan referred to the alleged involvement of a senior departmental official in a Dublin-based child sex ring, "at a time he was supposed to have been investigating child abuse. That individual had investigated the home run by Nora Wall and given it a clean bill of health at a time when there were serious problems at the home as now identified in the Ryan Report."