The Daily Telegraph

Church should not investigat­e sex abuse ‘as victims cannot trust it’

- By Gabriella Swerling Social and Religious affairs editor

THE Church of England should be stripped of its power to investigat­e and punish sexual abusers because victims cannot trust it, an independen­t report has found.

In a damning report, the former chair of the government-ordered Independen­t Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) said safeguardi­ng within the Church is “flawed” and “cannot be sufficient­ly improved whilst it remains within Church oversight”. Prof Alexis Jay CBE concludes in the report, published today: “[The Church] needs to fundamenta­lly change in order to restore the confidence of victims, survivors and others, including clergy.

“This can only be achieved by being delivered by a fully independen­t body.”

She added: “Further tinkering with existing structures will not be sufficient to make safeguardi­ng in the Church consistent, accountabl­e and trusted by those who use its services.”

Prof Jay was appointed by the Archbishop­s of Canterbury and York to develop proposals for a fully independen­t structure to provide scrutiny of safeguardi­ng within the Church of England and how victims of abuse are treated and supported.

Her appointmen­t came after the panel that had been tasked with investigat­ing abuse in the Church were sacked after they claimed they were being obstructed in their work and treated with “hostility”.

Prof Jay’s independen­t report, entitled The Future of Church Safeguardi­ng, also recommende­d the Church establish two separate charities: one for independen­t operationa­l safeguardi­ng and one for independen­t scrutiny of safeguardi­ng.

These charities should, the report says, be funded by the Church but structural­ly independen­t of them.

Meanwhile, the Archbishop­s issued a statement saying that they will “take forward this work as swiftly as possible to give everyone confidence and trust in our structures and processes”.

Yesterday, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev Justin Welby, and the Archbishop of York, the Most Rev Stephen Cottrell, issued a statement thanking Prof Jay for her report, adding that it “will provide a vital next step as we move forward”.

“We recognise her criticism of our safeguardi­ng structures and processes and we welcome this scrutiny and challenge.

“For the sake of all those who come into contact with the Church, particular­ly victims and survivors, we welcome the plans that are in place to take forward this work as swiftly as possible to give everyone confidence and trust in our structures and processes.”

However, Andrew Graystone, an advocate for victims and survivors of church abuse, warned: “For over a decade the church has delivered a stream of apologies for failure that have resulted in no real change.

“My fear is that they will find ways of kicking the can down the road once again. What they forget is that the can they are kicking has real-life victims and survivors in it.”

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