The Press

‘I nearly killed a priest’

- KATARINA WILLIAMS

A man who claims to have ‘‘nearly killed a priest’’ with his bare hands to stop an attempted sexual assault is calling on the Government to widen the scope of its historical state abuse inquiry.

If faith-based institutio­ns were to be incorporat­ed into the inquiry, the Catholic Church said it would ‘‘co-operate wholeheart­edly’’.

Chris Travers, husband of former Green Party chief of staff Deborah Morris-Travers, has revealed in a Facebook post that he ‘‘choked’’ his alleged abuser, a Catholic priest.

‘‘That, and only that, is what stopped him,’’ Travers posted.

In the post, Travers said he had ‘‘settled a case’’ with the Catholic Church over the alleged abuse.

He had previously been bound by a confidenti­ality agreement, but because the Church had recently acknowledg­ed those agreements were ‘‘another form of revictimis­ation’’ he felt free to speak his ‘‘truth’’.

‘‘I call on the New Zealand Government to include the Church in its inquiry into sexual abuse in state care,’’ he posted.

‘‘The Church received state funding to assist its provision of my secondary education – so then falls straight in the ball park of the terms of reference of the inquiry.’’

Travers went on to criticise the Church for its ‘‘hopeless and misguided attempt to ‘manage’ a sexual predator and paedophile’’.

When approached for comment, Morris-Travers, said her husband was unwilling to speak to media on the contents of his post.

Morris-Travers’ current occupation meant she was also unable to talk publicly about the matter.

A New Zealand Catholic Bishops’ Conference spokeswoma­n said she was unable to comment on the specific details of Travers’ case.

However, she said the Church would ‘‘co-operate wholeheart­edly’’ should the Government move to include faith-based institutio­ns in its inquiry.

‘‘We recognise there have been some atrocities in the past ... and the Church will respect any decision the Government will make on this,’’ a spokeswoma­n said.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Children’s Minister Tracey Martin last month announced there would be a Royal Commission of Inquiry into state care abuse. Martin said the inquiry would take ‘‘a broad view of abuse and consider physical, sexual and emotional abuse and neglect’’.

Former governor-general Sir Anand Satyanand will lead the investigat­ion, which will cover abuse committed in state care in the 50 years to 1999.

In late January, Ardern rebuffed calls for religious organisati­ons to be included in the inquiry, adding that it was aimed solely at state institutio­ns.

On Tuesday, she said the Government was ‘‘still consulting on some of the terms of reference for the inquiry’’.

On Tuesday night, the Catholic Bishops’ spokeswoma­n did say some parts of the Church would be involved in the inquiry because some abused children were sent to it by the state.

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