The woman who could have stopped Orkney satanic abuse scandal

BBC News/September 5, 2013

The tiny Orkney island of South Ronaldsay became the centre of a worldwide media storm in 1991 when nine children were removed from four families following allegations of satanic sexual abuse. Two decades on, Esther, who was the child at the centre of the scandal, believes none of it would have happened if she had spoken out at the time.

One mother had a son dragged from her arms and her daughter was pulled out of the bathroom, breaking the hand basin to which she was clinging.

Police officers and social workers arrived at dawn at four homes on South Ronaldsay and removed the nine children, who were taken to separate foster homes on the Scottish mainland and interviewed about ritual sex abuse.

Stories of satanic child sex abuse at a local quarry both mystified and horrified people who lived on the island, whose population is less than 1,000.

A woman says she believes she could have stopped the Orkney satanic abuse scandal if she had spoken out about her own abuse

For five weeks the parents had no contact with their sons and daughters but eventually the claims were dismissed by a sheriff as "completely unfounded".

Esther, who was in her teens at the time but is now 39, feels that she was to blame for starting the ball rolling on a terrible chain of events which ripped apart a community and affected so many lives.

She believes that if she had spoken out earlier about the genuine abuse she was suffering then none of the satanic abuse scandal would have happened.

For almost 20 years, Esther did not tell her side of the story.

But after having her first child in 2006, Esther began counselling and was advised to face head-on her own abuse and her key part in the Orkney scandal. Esther W, who still uses the name she was given to protect her identity, has now written a memoir called If Only I Had Told.

Esther says she "lived a childhood in fear" of her father who used to beat her and her 14 brothers and sisters with sticks and rubber pipes.

He would make the children stand in a bin full of nettles and treated one of her brothers like a dog, keeping him chained and not allowing him to come into the house.

"The only time he seemed to be happy was when he was inflicting pain on my brothers and sisters," she says.

In 1987, Esther's father was imprisoned for offences against his 15 children, known as the W family.

He attacked them with weapons, kicked them with steel-capped boots, stuffed nettles inside their underwear and sexually abused the eight girls.

The family was "splintered", Esther says, and the social work department on Orkney could not cope with taking so many children into care.

But despite being saved from her abusive father, Esther's situation did not improve.

Esther says she "lived a childhood in fear" of her father who used to beat her and her 14 brothers and sisters with sticks and rubber pipes.

He would make the children stand in a bin full of nettles and treated one of her brothers like a dog, keeping him chained and not allowing him to come into the house.

"The only time he seemed to be happy was when he was inflicting pain on my brothers and sisters," she says.

In 1987, Esther's father was imprisoned for offences against his 15 children, known as the W family.

He attacked them with weapons, kicked them with steel-capped boots, stuffed nettles inside their underwear and sexually abused the eight girls.

The family was "splintered", Esther says, and the social work department on Orkney could not cope with taking so many children into care.

But despite being saved from her abusive father, Esther's situation did not improve.

It was this process which led to the the satanic sex abuse allegations against the four families whose children were taken away.

Esther believes her brothers and sisters were being "coached" into revealing something which had not happened at all.

She says: "Sheriff Kelbie himself (the man who threw the allegations out of court) said it amounted to repeated coaching. It was pummelling and pummelling over and over. Even an adult would have been broken by that type of interrogation.

"It is designed to break a person down, so a four or five or six year old does not stand a chance."

Why didn't Esther say something to stop it?

She says at the time she thought the situation had gone too far.

"It was a monster completely outside my control," Esther says.

"It had evolved into these satanic sex abuse claims.

"They had tried to look for evidence of sibling sex abuse and they had failed on that. But then, not content with that, because they didn't want to return the children home, they looked to satanic sex abuse allegations."

Esther also says that as an abused child she felt everything was her fault but learned to take that blame on her shoulders.

"It is very difficult to believe that anything you are doing or saying has any truth or is ok," she says.

"You assume you are the bad guy."

After the counselling in her early 30s she came to understand and forgive her younger self.

A £6m inquiry into the scandal of the removed children produced a 363-page report which "savaged" the way Orkney's social work department handled the allegations and made 194 recommendations.

The parents and the children involved accepted a full apology from the council as well as compensation.

But the W children, Esther and her siblings, received neither.

"I just felt like we were very much an aside, as opposed to the people who were at the centre of it," Esther says.

"I never felt the truth was told but now I feel the truth has been told and it's out there."

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