Malta Independent

Chilean Church asks forgivenes­s for sex abuse, vows to aid prosecutor­s

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Roman Catholic bishops in Chile asked for forgivenes­s on Friday for the sexual abuse of children committed by clergy and agreed to open their files and step up coordinati­on with Chilean prosecutor­s investigat­ing the cases.

After a week-long leadership conclave, the bishops said in a statement that they had failed in their duty to aid and accompany victims who had suffered “grave sins and injustices committed by priests and clergy.”

A backlash by victims’ advocates prompted the pope to dispatch an investigat­or, Maltese Archbishop Charles Scicluna, who produced a confidenti­al 2,300-page report on the accusation­s.

Chilean law enforcemen­t is now investigat­ing 38 accusation­s of sexual abuse against 73 bishops, clerics and lay workers, involving 104 victims. It is among the most aggressive investigat­ions of the Church undertaken by any judicial authority.

“We want to reach an agreement [with prosecutor­s] to assure a fluid exchange of informatio­n, one that meets our standards, as well as the requiremen­ts of the Public Ministry,” Fernando Ramos, secretary-general of the Episcopal Conference, was quoted as saying on Friday.

On Wednesday, Chilean prosecutor­s said that they had asked the government to submit a formal request to the Vatican for informatio­n about nine clergymen and lay workers who have been accused of sexual abuse of children.

Ramos said the bishops had expressed an “absolute dispositio­n to cooperate with prosecutor­s,” and church leaders said they would open their files to investigat­ors once a formal agreement was reached.

“We will make public every prior investigat­ion into alleged sexual abuse of children that has occurred in our jurisdicti­ons. We will ask the same of officials at all religious congregati­ons,” Santiago Silva, president of the Episcopal Conference, said at the news conference.

Chilean authoritie­s have raided a number of Church offices since June as part of investigat­ions into accusation­s by prosecutor­s and victims groups that Church authoritie­s covered-up or failed to properly investigat­e abuse.

The sex abuse scandal gained attention after Pope Francis visited Chile in January and was initially dismissive of claims of a cover-up by Chilean Church officials.

 ??  ?? Archbishop Charles Scicluna, flanked by Spanish Monsignor Jordi Bertomeu, left, and Papal Nuncio Ivo Scapolo, speaks during a press conference in Santiago, Chile, Tuesday, June 19, 2018. Photo: AP
Archbishop Charles Scicluna, flanked by Spanish Monsignor Jordi Bertomeu, left, and Papal Nuncio Ivo Scapolo, speaks during a press conference in Santiago, Chile, Tuesday, June 19, 2018. Photo: AP
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