The Borneo Post

Pope Francis admits ‘grave mistakes’ in Chile sex abuse scandal

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VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis admitted he had made ‘ grave mistakes’ in his handling of a sexual abuse scandal in Chile as he looks to quell the latest controvers­y to rock the Roman Catholic Church.

In a letter to 32 Chilean bishops released by the Vatican, Francis said he intended to summon them to Rome to discuss an investigat­ion into an alleged cover-up by Bishop Juan Barros of abuse by paedophile priest Fernando Karadima during the 1980s and 1990s.

Francis expressed his ‘shame’ and ‘ pain’ for the suffering of the victims and pledged to meet them.

“I have made grave mistakes in the assessment and my perception of the situation, especially due to a lack of truthful and balanced informatio­n,” Francis wrote.

He made no specific mention of Barros, who was appointed Bishop of Osorno in Chile, despite being accused of concealing and even witnessing abuse carried out by Karadima.

A 2,300-page report sent to the pope includes testimony gathered from 64 people in New York and Santiago.

The pope asked the bishops to Rome to discuss the findings of the probe by Archbishop Charles Scicluna and requested their ‘collaborat­ion and assistance’ in finding measures that can ‘repair the scandal as much as possible and restore justice’.

“The present difficulti­es are also an opportunit­y to restore confidence in the Church, a confidence broken by our mistakes and sins,” Francis wrote.

During a trip to Chile in January, the pontiff had strongly defended Barros, who appeared at public masses celebrated by the Pope in three different Chilean cities, causing a public outcry. Francis said that he was convinced of Barros’ innocence and demanded ‘ proof’ of abuse before he would speak out against him.

“There is not a single piece of proof against him. Everything is slander. Is this clear?” Francis said.

However, he later apologised to the victims and dispatched Scicluna, a renowned Vatican investigat­or, to Chile to collect evidence. Scicluna returned at the end of February.

Karadima, an influentia­l Chilean priest, was convicted by the Vatican in 2011 of abusing teenage boys and sentenced to a life of penitence.

Civil charges against him in the Chilean courts were dismissed because of a lack of evidence.

The president of the Episcopal Conference of Chile, Bishop Santiago Silva, said that the church ‘had not done enough’ in the case.

“Our commitment is that this does not happen again,” he added.

Silva said the meeting of Chilean bishops with the pope in Rome would take place on the third week of May.

Scicluna, Archbishop of Malta, was until 2012 a prosecutor in the Vatican Court to investigat­e cases of paedophili­a among priests, making a name for himself with his determinat­ion.

He allowed the opening of an investigat­ion into Father Marcial Maciel, Mexican founder of the congregati­on of the Legionarie­s of Christ and the perpetrato­r of numerous cases of paedophili­a. — AFP

 ??  ?? Silva, speaks to the media after receiving Pope Francis’ letter stating, that the pope may summon Chile’s bishops to Rome for a meeting on the country’s sexual abuse crisis, in Punta de Tralca. — Reuters photo
Silva, speaks to the media after receiving Pope Francis’ letter stating, that the pope may summon Chile’s bishops to Rome for a meeting on the country’s sexual abuse crisis, in Punta de Tralca. — Reuters photo

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