The Phnom Penh Post

Priests linked to Chile sex abuse stripped of duties

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FOURTEEN priests involved in a sex abuse scandal in Chile – which has rocked Pope Francis’s papacy – were defrocked on Tuesday.

“Fourteen priests no longer are allowed to carry out their duties . . . These priests have taken part in actions that may be civilian crimes as well as within the Church,” the bishop’s office in the city of Rancagua said. Nicknamed “the Family”, the group of priestly offenders commited sex abuses with young people including minors, churchgoer Elisa Fernandez said last week.

A priest said in that report aired last week that the group formed a sex abuse ring a decade ago, and engaged in sex acts with no regard for whether victims were minors or of age. In addition, offenders used social media to control their interactio­ns with victims and used church money for trips abroad as well as expensive car services with young friends, the report added.

Just Friday, 34 Chilean bishops announced their resignatio­n over the child sex abuse scandal.

The striking announceme­nt came after the pontiff summoned the bishops over the scandal.

Several members of the Chilean Church hierarchy are accused by victims of ignoring and covering up child abuse by Chilean pedophile priest Fernando Karadima in the 1980s and ’90s.

On Thursday evening, Francis prom- ised “changes” to the Chilean Church to “restore justice” in a short declaratio­n to the bishops, which was made public. But in a confidenti­al 10-page document leaked on Friday by Chilean TV channel T13, the Argentine pope goes much further in his indictment of the Chilean Church.

The letter – handed to the bishops at the start of their meetings with Francis – evokes “crimes” and “painful and shameful sexual abuse of minors, abuses of power and conscience by ministers of the Church”. It qualifies the removal of certain prelates from their roles as necessary but “insufficie­nt”, calling for “the roots” that allowed such abuse within an “elitist and authoritar- ian” Chilean Church to be examined.

Some analysts note Chile’s tradition of having the Church not subject to civilian law lent itself to impunity.

The damning letter also outlines findings of an investigat­ion, ordered by Pope Francis, into the abuse allegation­s.

It says the probe found senior Church officials had destroyed proof in cases of sex abuse, and that certain members of the clergy who had displayed immoral behaviour had been transferre­d to other dioceses after attempts to “minimise” the gravity of their actions.

Grave accusation­s “were superficia­lly qualified as improbable”, the letter says, denouncing bishops for “terrible negligence in protecting children”.

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