The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Sexual abuse report faults former Pope

- GEIR MOULSON

Along-awaited report on sexual abuse in Germany’s Munich diocese has faulted retired Pope Benedict XVI’S handling of four cases when he was archbishop there in the 1970s and 1980s.

The law firm that drew up the report said that Benedict strongly denies any wrongdoing.

The report also faulted the current archbishop, a prominent ally of Pope Francis, in two cases.

The archdioces­e commission­ed the report from law firm Westpfahl Spilker Wastl nearly two years ago, with a mandate to look into abuse between 1945 and 2019 and whether church officials handled allegation­s correctly.

The archdioces­e and the law firm said that top church officials were not informed of the results ahead of its publicatio­n. The archbishop, Cardinal Reinhard Marx, declined an invitation to attend the presentati­on.

His predecesso­rs in the job include the former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who served in Munich from 1977 to 1982 before becoming the head of the Vatican’s Congregati­on for the Doctrine of the Faith and later being elected as Pope Benedict XVI.

“In a total of four cases, we came to the conclusion that the then-archbishop Cardinal Ratzinger can be accused of misconduct,” said one of the report’s authors, Martin Pusch.

Two of those cases, he said, involved perpetrato­rs who offended while he was in office and were punished by the judicial system but were kept in pastoral work without express limits on what they were allowed to do. No action was ordered under canon law.

In a third case, a cleric who had been convicted by a court outside Germany was put into service in the Munich archdioces­e and the circumstan­ces speak for Ratzinger having known of the priest’s previous history, Pusch said.

When the church abuse scandal first flared in Germany in 2010, attention swirled around another case: that of a suspected paedophile priest whose transfer to Munich to undergo therapy was approved under Ratzinger in 1980.

In 1986, the priest received a suspended sentence for molesting a boy.

In an extraordin­ary gesture last year, Marx offered to resign over the Catholic Church’s “catastroph­ic” mishandlin­g of clergy sexual abuse cases, declaring that the scandals had brought the church to “a dead end”.

Francis swiftly rejected the offer but said every bishop must take responsibi­lity for the “catastroph­e”.

In 2018, a churchcomm­issioned report concluded that at least 3,677 people were abused by clergy in Germany between 1946 and 2014. More than half of the victims were 13 or younger and nearly a third served as altar boys.

 ?? ?? CRITICISED: Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was elected as Pope Benedict XVI.
CRITICISED: Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was elected as Pope Benedict XVI.

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