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Kincora boys' home allegations in new cabinet papers Kincora boys' home abuse: Files handed to HIA inquiry
(about 1 hour later)
A new batch of files referring to allegations of abuse at Kincora Boys' Home in east Belfast has been released by the government. New government files containing allegations about abuse at the Kincora Boys Home in east Belfast have been handed over to the Northern Ireland Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry.
They have been given to NI's Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (HIA). The papers should have been disclosed as part of a previous search of Home Office documents.
The papers refer to key figures, including former Northern Ireland minister William van Straubenzee. However, they were not discovered as they were not properly catalogued.
The Cabinet Office says the documents were not discovered in the initial search for information because they were not properly catalogued. It is known they include Kincora abuse claims passed to the authorities by ex-Army press officer Colin Wallace.
An official review into whether there was a Westminster cover-up of paedophile activity in the 1980s concluded last November, but 114 files were never found. Review
'Miscellaneous papers' The details of the files have not been made public.
Now it has emerged that a number of those files do still exist. Some, referring to Kincora, were found in a set of miscellaneous Cabinet Office papers.. However, it is understood that the Kincora scandal is also mentioned in a file about the late former Northern Ireland minister and Conservative MP Sir William van Straubanzee, who died in 1999.
The contents of the documents have not been made public, but we do know that they have been passed to the chair of Northern Ireland's inquiry into historical abuse. That document was meant to have been destroyed in 2013.
The official documents mention allegations about high profile figures including Peter Haymand and Maurice Oldfield from MI6, and the former Northern Ireland minister William van Straubenzee. An official review into whether there was a Westminster cover-up of paedophile activity in the 1980s concluded last November, but these files were not found.
References to Mr Van Straubenzee were discovered in a number of different documents. It is not clear if they relates to allegations made in England or Northern Ireland. Accompanying the files is a letter from the Permanent Secretary of the Cabinet Office Richard Heaton in which he apologises for the errors.
In a letter, the head of the Cabinet Office, Richard Heaton says "I can also confirm that relevant papers have been drawn to the attention of the Historic Institutional Abuse Inquiry led by Sir Anthony Hart; Sir Anthony has already started to review these." "I can also confirm that relevant papers have been drawn to the attention of the Historic Institutional Abuse Inquiry led by Sir Anthony Hart," Mr Heaton writes in the letter.
"Sir Anthony has already started to review these."
Inquiry calls
Other documents not related to Kincora but thought to be relevant to the Goddard inquiry into abuse in England and Wales have also been discovered.
Among those files are government papers and correspondence about the former Home Secretary Leon Brittan, Mrs Thatcher's former parliamentary secretary Sir Peter Morrison and the former diplomat Sir Peter Hayman. All three of those men are now dead.
Analysis: Chris Buckler, BBC Ireland correspondent
The claims of a cover-up about who was involved in abusing boys at Kincora will be fuelled by the discovery of these documents.
However, at this stage we do not know if they provide any new light on what took place in the east Belfast boys home.
The Cabinet Office insists the files were not hidden - they say they simply were not originally found.
But that is deeply embarrassing, given the spotlight and scrutiny on Westminster about allegations of abuse involving people in positions of power.
What the documents do prove is that questions about Kincora were raised and discussed by government officials right through the 1980s and 1990s.
While the Home Secretary has so far refused to include Kincora in the Westminster-based Goddard inquiry, there will be mounting pressure to extend that scope.
Campaigners will argue that it is difficult to separate London and Belfast when these papers provide a trail that leads between them.
Amnesty International's Patrick Corrigan said: "The (HIA) inquiry headed by Sir Anthony Hart simply does not have the power to compel the production of documents such as these or indeed witnesses from central government to come forward and lay bare what happened at Kincora.
"The Westminster inquiry does have those powers - it is absurd that the government continues to exclude Kincora from that inquiry that actually does have the powers to finally reveal the truth."
Three senior care staff at Kincora were jailed in 1981 for abusing 11 boys.Three senior care staff at Kincora were jailed in 1981 for abusing 11 boys.
At least 29 boys were abused at the home between the late 1950s and the early 1980s.At least 29 boys were abused at the home between the late 1950s and the early 1980s.
Amnesty International's Patrick Corrigan has repeated his call for Kincora to be included in the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse in England and Wales chaired by New Zealand High Court judge Lowell Goddard.
"The (HIA) inquiry headed by Sir Anthony Hart simply does not have the power to compel the production of documents such as these or indeed witnesses from central government to come forward and lay bare what happened at Kincora," he said.
"The Westminster inquiry does have those powers - it is absurd that the government continues to exclude Kincora from that inquiry that actually does have the powers to finally reveal the truth."