Most Popular
-
1
[Weekender] Geeks have never been so chic in Korea
-
2
[KH Explains] Why Korea's so tough on short selling
-
3
[News Focus] Mystery deepens after hundreds of cat deaths in S. Korea
-
4
NewJeans members submit petitions over court injunction in Hybe-Ador conflict
-
5
N. Korea says it test-fired tactical ballistic missile with new guidance technology
-
6
‘Kim desperately wanted to denuclearize,’ Moon writes in memoirs
-
7
Actors involved in past controversies return first via streaming service originals
-
8
S. Korea's exports of instant noodles surpass $100m for 1st time in April: data
-
9
Korea set to finalize medical school expansion plans
-
10
US military commander in S. Korea during Gwangju uprising dies
NSW bill could limit the use of permanent stay law used to fight compensation claims from sexual abuse survivors
By ABC NEWS (Australia)Published : May 9, 2024 - 08:11
Laws which allow institutions to block historical sexual abuse cases from ever reaching court could be removed. A Four Corners investigation found churches and other groups have been granted permanent stays on civil claims against them, because too much time had passed. Now, a private member’s bill aims to limit the practice, so survivors can get their day in court.