Bangkok Post

Pell denied memorial in home state

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SYDNEY: An Australian state leader yesterday emphatical­ly ruled out a taxpayer-funded memorial for Cardinal George Pell, saying it would be “deeply distressin­g” for sexual abuse survivors.

Pell, who died in Rome aged 81, was a towering figure in the Catholic Church but deeply divisive at home in Australia, where he had been accused of molesting two teenage choir boys while archbishop of Melbourne.

Born in Victoria and once celebrated within the state, he was the highestran­king Catholic to be imprisoned for child sexual abuse, before his conviction­s were quashed on appeal.

Premier Daniel Andrews yesterday said Pell’s legacy had been permanentl­y tainted.

“We will never ever forget victim-survivors of institutio­nal child sexual abuse at the hands of the Catholic Church,” Mr Andrews told reporters.

“There will be no memorial service or state funeral because I think that would be a deeply, deeply distressin­g thing for every victim-survivor of Catholic Church child sexual abuse.”

State funerals are reserved for highprofil­e figures who have made significan­t contributi­ons to Australian public life.

Pell died of heart complicati­ons related to a hip surgery he underwent in a Rome hospital on Tuesday, according to the Vatican’s official news website.

His body will be returned to Australia and buried in the crypt of St Mary’s Cathedral in Sydney, church officials said.

In a telegram, Pope Francis paid tribute to Pell’s “dedication to the gospel and to the Church”, saying he “followed his Lord with determinat­ion even in a time of trial”.

Former conservati­ve Australian prime minister Tony Abbott said his friend’s name had been tainted by a “monstrous allegation”.

Pell voluntaril­y returned to Australia in 2016 to face accusation­s that he molested two 13-year-old choirboys in the 1990s.

In 2019, he was sentenced to six years in prison and registered as a sex offender.

He spent 12 months behind bars before the Australian High Court quashed his conviction­s on appeal.

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