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Address by Mr David Stanton T.D., Minister of State at the Department of Justice and Equality Missing Persons Day

Address by Mr David Stanton T.D.,


Minister of State at the Department of Justice and Equality


Missing Persons Day – 7th December, 2016


Farmleigh, Dublin

Ladies and gentlemen,


I am privileged to join the Deputy Commissioner and all of you present here


in Farmleigh today on what has appropriately become an annual


commemoration: Ireland’s national Missing Persons Day.

Today, we gather together to commemorate the members of your families who


have gone missing. We also commemorate all of Ireland’s missing persons,


because, of course, not every family who has lost a loved one is


represented here today.

I know our MC, Barry Cummins, has spoken about many people who have gone


missing at today’s ceremony. This is what Missing Persons Day is all about.


Commemoration. Remembering in a special and respectful way. After all, this


is how we would all wish to be remembered.

Today you commemorate your missing loved ones. It is not the day on which


your family member went missing. It is a day to remember your family member


as a person, and not merely as a missing person.

I would like to thank the families who have spoken about their missing


loved ones today. Thank you Diane, Sandra, Berna, Nuala and Seamus. It is


very upsetting to hear about your sister’s disappearance; your brother’s


disappearance; your son’s disappearance. It is upsetting to hear about how


you and your families were affected in the immediate aftermath of your


loved one’s disappearance. And it is upsetting to hear about the profound


and long-lasting effect of their loss on each of your lives in the years


that have followed. It takes great courage to share your family’s


experience and grief.

It is my sincere hope, each year at Missing Persons Day, that your powerful


stories will resonate with people who may have information; people who may


hear your family’s story in your own words in the vital media coverage that


follows today’s ceremony; people that decide now that they too must be


brave and come forward with the information they have. That is why it is my


wish that your stories will travel far beyond Farmleigh and today’s


ceremony.

I also want to acknowledge the importance of sharing your family’s story


for other families in similar circumstances. I know Nuala made a similar


point in her words when she spoke about the programme of family support


days that the National Missing Persons Helpline is running early next year.


The value of sharing your experiences with each other cannot be overstated:


it is hugely important for other families to know that they are not alone


in this most tragic journey that was not of their choosing.

I would like to thank Deputy Commissioner O'Cualáin for his opening words


and I commend An Garda Síochána for the pivotal role many members play in


the lives of the families and friends gathered here today and across the


country. I am often told that the greatest impact that An Garda Síochána


makes in most people’s lives is at a community level. And what we have here


is a community of families and friends, bound by their loss and love.


Communities must always be supported. And An Garda Síochána does just that.


So today, I pay tribute to the Gardaí involved in the investigation of


missing persons cases, the Missing Persons Bureau, the Family Liaison


Officers, and the Gardaí in the local Garda stations.

Missing Persons Day also offers the opportunity to highlight the other


support services which are available to families and friends.


Organisations such as the National Missing Persons Helpline, Searching for


the Missing and the WAVE Trauma Centre provide advisory and support


services when a loved one has disappeared, or has been located. To these


organisations, I say thank you. We commend your work and your dedication to


families and friends all over Ireland and beyond. I would also like to


thank these same organisations for their continued support for Missing


Persons Day and their input into the ceremony each year. We value your


partnership.

Missing Persons Day is a commemorative day for the whole of Ireland and I


would like to extend a warm welcome to those who have travelled from


Northern Ireland and to the members of the Independent Commission for the


Location of Victims Remains, who contributed here last year.

I also want to highlight the unfailing contribution made day in, day out by


our voluntary land and sea search and rescue organisations. I think the


entire nation was particularly struck by the bravery of Irish Coast Guard


volunteer, Caitriona Lucas, who gave her life in the line of duty in


September this year.

This time last year the Tánaiste spoke about the launch of our new


state-of-the-art DNA Database System to assist An Garda Siochána in finding


and identifying missing or unknown persons. The capability of this database


to link missing persons, or persons who are unable to identify themselves,


to their close family relatives is a truly positive milestone. As Dr.


Ramsbottom explained earlier, this database has the potential to bring some


element of closure for families searching for their loved ones, such as in


the case of the family of Pauline Finlay. I would like to thank Dr.


Ramsbottom, Dr. Williams and Dr. Sheila Willis, Director of Forensic


Science Ireland, together with An Garda Síochána, for facilitating the


collection of reference samples at today’s ceremony.

I mentioned community earlier. The sad fact is that few communities in


Ireland have been spared the sorrow and bewilderment that is felt when a


person goes missing. I need not remind you that embedded in Irish culture


is a strong sense of community. This can be seen in the numerous


connections in all our daily lives. All these connections pull tight in


times of need and through our actions we support each other. The ongoing


assistance provided by all community networks during difficult times – be


it local networks such as GAA, soccer clubs, the Irish Farmers Association


and Muintir na Tire - are examples of community in the very best sense of


the word.

As some of you may be aware, today’s ceremony grew from an idea, which has


its origins in a project by students of Davis College, Mallow, Co. Cork.


These students shared their idea with others, including with the Joint


Oireachtas Committee on Justice, Defence and Equality, which I was Chair of


at the time and heard this important message. So it is a great privilege to


be here today to speak at this 4th Annual National Missing Persons Day.

Finally, I would like to thank our Master of Ceremonies, Barry Cummins, for


his significant contribution to Missing Persons Day, today and over the


past three years. As most of you are aware, Barry has a genuine interest in


raising public awareness of the cases of missing persons and has developed


a close relationship with many families of missing persons throughout the


country. I speak on behalf of the numerous families when I say that we are


lucky to have such a sincere and committed advocate. Thank you.


I wish you all a healthy and peaceful Christmas and New Year.