Branko Medunic has been relieved of his duties as the director of the Social Welfare Centre in the eastern town of Nova Gradiska following a probe into a domestic violence case in which a two and a half-year-old girl suffered life-threatening injuries.
The decision was made by the centre’s governing council on Saturday and was announced by the Minister of Labour, Pension System, Family and Social Policy, Josip Aladrovic, at a press conference.
The girl has been admitted to Zagreb’s children’s hospital with serious injuries on her head and body, and doctors are fighting for her life. The parents have been arrested and a criminal investigation is underway.
The Social Welfare Centre has been aware of this family because the father was reported for domestic violence before. The girl was in a foster family for over a year, but the centre returned her to her parents at their request.
The parents have partly admitted the crime of violating the child’s rights, county prosecutor Mirela Šmital confirmed on Saturday. She said that the prosecution would move to have both parents remanded in investigative custody.
The mother (24) is the first defendant and is charged with five counts of violating the child’s rights and inflicting grievous bodily harm, while the father (27) is charged with four counts of violating the child’s rights and inflicting grievous bodily harm. The parents are expected to be brought before the investigating judge this afternoon.
Irregularities found at the social welfare centre
Minister Aladrovic said that Medunic was relieved of his duties after an administrative inspection found irregularities at the centre. He said that the complete results of the inspection would be available no later than Wednesday.
“Social workers do an extremely responsible job which is important for the stability of society. We must all be aware of their responsibility, but any potential irresponsibility must be penalised,” the minister said.
“Anyone who causes damage to human life or health will be penalised. We can’t afford to make any concessions in that regard. We must make a distinction between people who do their job responsibly and those who do not,” he added.
The head of the Directorate for Family and Social Policy, Marija Barilic, said that the girl had been separated early on because of the risk posed by her parents, but was later returned to her family, which she said was a mistake.
“It was a mistake. The child should never have been returned to its family. It should have stayed in the foster family,” Barilić said.
The Social Welfare Act to be amended
Aladrovic announced amendments to the Social Welfare Act to improve the quality of service for beneficiaries. He said that the amendment process had been launched before this tragic event. “I admit that we have structural problems in the social welfare domain, but I am committed to removing them,” he stressed.
The amendments would strengthen the system and reduce the work obligations of social workers to allow them to focus on the important aspects of their work. The amended law would also promote life-long learning, and a Social Welfare Academy would be established to focus on the professional work of staff at all social welfare centres.
Aladrović said that the operation of social welfare centres would be centralised to ensure more efficient management and job standardisation and to avoid cases like the one from Nova Gradiska.
He announced that under the amended law family centres would be separated from social welfare centres. “We want to empower the family, that is both our world-view position and our social responsibility.”
“We are deeply aware of the challenges we are coping with, but I want to make a clear political message that we will address these challenges efficiently and that we will overcome them,” Aladrovic said, adding that the Nova Gradiska incident had only “accelerated and simplified” the decision to amend the law.
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