Comment: A national apology to abuse survivors, but no redress; law changes, but not reform; a Solicitor-General who says ...
One says it's just words. Another calls it a "waste of space". But the survivors RNZ spoke to all say one thing about today's national apology: don't stop there.
Investigative journalist Aaron Smale will now be allowed to attend the national apology at Parliament to victims of abuse in ...
A man forced, as a teen, to dig his own grave at gunpoint says any apology without financial compensation is "disingenuous".
Survivors and advocates are criticising the Government for failing to establish a redress scheme in time for the formal ...
In the case of abuse in care victims, even if you could afford the considerable money to try to pursue compensation in the ...
The New Zealand Press Gallery is attempting to appeal a decision by Speaker Gerry Brownlee to bar an investigative journalist from covering the national apology to survivors of abuse in care at ...
The Los Angeles-based R&B singer on Oct. 24 butchered a rendition of the National Anthem during a live broadcast on C-SPAN.
Jim LaBelle sat among the boarding school survivors in the crowd. LaBelle is an Alaska Native, and a member of the National ...
Next Tuesday the government will formally apologise to survivors of abuse in care. Between 1950 and 1999 an estimated 200,000 children, young people and vulnerable adults were abused and even more ...
Singer Loomis apologized after she "f*cked up" the national anthem and begged to start over before a live presidential debate.
Many hadn't heard of Loomis prior to last week's national anthem debacle. Now, the singer is apologizing on social media.