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The Washington Times Online Edition

British child migrants to get apology

Associated Press
Twins Brian Thomas Sullivan (left) and Kevin James Sullivan from Islington, London, were bound for New Zealand in October 1950 when Britain was sending child migrants to former colonies.Associated Press Twins Brian Thomas Sullivan (left) and Kevin James Sullivan from Islington, London, were bound for New Zealand in October 1950 when Britain was sending child migrants to former colonies.

LONDON | As many as 150,000 poor British children were shipped off to the colonies over 3 1/2 centuries, often taken from struggling families under programs intended to provide them with a new start - and the Empire with a supply of sturdy white workers.

Forty years after the program stopped, Britain and Australia are saying sorry to the child migrants, who were promised a better life only to suffer abuse and neglect thousands of miles from home.

The British government said Sunday that Prime Minister Gordon Brown would apologize for child-migrant programs that sent boys and girls as young as 3 to Australia, Canada and other former colonies. Many ended up in institutions where they were physically and sexually abused or were sent to work as farm laborers.

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd will offer his own apology Monday to the child migrants, as well as to the “forgotten Australians,” children who suffered in state care during the last century.

Sandra Anker, who was 6 when she was sent to Australia in 1950, said the British government has “a lot to answer for.”

“We’ve suffered all our lives,” she told the BBC. “For the government of England to say ‘sorry’ to us, it makes it right - even if it’s late, it’s better than not at all.”

The British government has estimated that 150,000 British children may have been shipped abroad between 1618 - when a group was sent to the Virginia colony - and 1967, most of them from the late 19th century onwards.

After 1920, most of the children went to Australia through programs run by the government, religious groups and children’s charities.

A 2001 Australian report said that between 6,000 and 30,000 children from Britain and Malta, often taken from unmarried mothers or impoverished families, were sent alone to Australia as migrants during the 20th century. Many of the children were told that they were orphans, although most had either been abandoned or taken from their families by the state. Siblings were commonly split up once they arrived in Australia.

Authorities believed they were acting in the children’s best interests, but the migration also was intended to stop them from being a burden on the British state while supplying the receiving countries with potential workers. A 1998 British parliamentary inquiry noted that “a further motive was racist: the importation of ‘good white stock’ was seen as a desirable policy objective in the developing British Colonies.”

British Children’s Secretary Ed Balls said the child-migrant policy was “a stain on our society.”

“The apology is symbolically very important,” he told Sky News television.

“I think it is important that we say to the children who are now adults and older people and to their offspring that this is something that we look back on in shame,” he said.

“It would never happen today. But I think it is right that as a society when we look back and see things which we now know were morally wrong, that we are willing to say we’re sorry.”

Britain has been trying to make amends since the late 1990s by funding trips to reunite migrants with their families in Britain.

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