Pubdate: Sat, 26 Aug 2000
Source: Irish Times, The (Ireland)
Copyright: 2000 The Irish Times
Contact:  11-15 D'Olier St, Dublin 2, Ireland
Fax: + 353 1 671 9407
Website: http://www.ireland.com/

DEAD AT FIFTEEN

When a tragedy such as the death of 15 year-old Kim O'Donovan occurs, it is 
natural to look for someone to blame. When it emerges that the child has 
been in residential care, the spotlight immediately turns on the health 
board concerned. People naturally ask if this could have been prevented if 
various services had been in place or had behaved differently.

Yet children run away from residential care centres every week. By and 
large they are troubled children and, in many cases, they do not want to be 
in care. It is doubtful if there is a residential care centre in the State 
which is so amply staffed that it can go and look for children who abscond. 
The most they can do is rely on the efforts of the Garda or hope the child 
will make contact with relatives or with another service and can be brought 
back.

[Would] I have done more to find her? The Garda have said they did not 
notify her disappearance to guesthouses where homeless people stay or 
organisations working with drug abusers because this would amount to 
publicity and they did not have a family request to publicise her case. 
This begs the question: if the Garda did not contact guesthouses or drug 
support groups, what did they do? Did they do anything?

Responsibility for this girl's death undoubtedly lies with the pusher who 
sold her drugs and with all those involved with the importation and sale of 
these drugs. Nevertheless, we are entitled to question the response of the 
statutory organisations which are charged with dealing with such cases. We 
need a better and more detailed account of what the Garda did about this 
case, not for the purpose of laying blame but for the purpose of improving 
practice in the future.

We also need to put the case in context. That context concerns the needs of 
children with behavioural problems. We know, from the parade of cases 
before Mr Justice Kelly in the High Court, that our social services often 
do not cope very well and sometimes do not cope at all with the needs of 
these children. If we, as a society, can examine how her situation 
developed and how the social services responded to her needs and those of 
her caring, and now bereaved, adoptive family, some good may come of her 
death. How can such an examination be conducted? Barnardos, a committed, 
careful and responsible body, has sought a public inquiry which would focus 
on the factors that led to this system failure rather than on the actions 
of individual, hard-pressed frontline staff. Such an inquiry can be 
designed and conducted with full regard to the suffering of the girl's 
family and of those who have tried to help her or have loved her during her 
short life.

In the meantime, we should not forget the children with whom she was living 
while in residential care. For them the events of the past few days must be 
shocking. It is vital that care staff can get any professional resources 
they may need for these children not only now, but over the coming months.
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D