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| The abuse allegations span several decades |
Australian
Prime Minister Julia Gillard has expressed shock at a report detailing decades
of sexual and other abuses in the country's armed forces.
Hundreds of
documented cases of abuse against boys as young as 13 have come to light in a
report commissioned by the country's defence ministry.
Ms Gillard
said she was now considering setting up a Royal Commission into the allegations
which go back to the 1950s.
The alleged
abuses may have continued until the 1980s.
The BBC's
Duncan Kennedy in Sydney says there are nearly 850 cases of abuse in the
military that have been recorded in the report.
Boys as
young as 13 were subjected to sexual and physical abuse in the days when they
could join the military much younger than now.
Details of
the abuses have been obtained by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation under
a freedom of information request.
Ms Gillard
said the report made "truly disturbing reading" and that the
allegations were "deeply distressing".
"We
now have to work out what's the best way of dealing with all of this given how
far back in time many of these claims go," she said.
"A
Royal Commission for this matter or at least for some of the more serious
allegations is one option."
The report
suggested paedophiles in the past joined the military to gain access to young
people in the same way they sought out positions in orphanages, schools and
churches.
"It is
certain that many boys were subjected to serious sexual and physical assault
and other serious abuse... from the 1950s through to the 1970s and possibly into
the 1980s," the summary said.
It added
that some of those who were assaulted later inflicted similar abuse on others,
warning that the trauma of victims could have led to mental health, or drug and
alcohol problems later in life.
The report
said that "there have been substantial levels of abuse" in the
military and "very little evidence that perpetrators had been called to
account".
"The
culture within parts of defence at different times has strongly discouraged
victims or witnesses from reporting abuse," it said.
Some of the
accused may now hold middle and senior management positions, it added.
In March a
review by a top legal firm concluded that Australia's military faced years of
inquiries into allegations of physical, sexual and emotional abuse.

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