Imperial Valley Press

More Chilean sex abuse victims speak up during pope summit

- BY NICOLE WINFIELD AND EVA VERGARA

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Another group of Chilean church sex abuse victims is making its voice heard as the country’s Catholic leadership meets with Pope Francis, demanding that the Vatican recognize crimes, cover-ups and the need for reparation.

A statement from six named victims of the Marist Brothers religious community - and other unnamed survivors of Marist assaults - was issued Wednesday on the second day of the emergency summit Francis convened with 34 Chilean bishops.

The scandal within the Marists, who operate schools in 79 countries, exploded in August when the community in Chile revealed that at least 14 minors had been abused by a brother.

Another brother abused at least five more.

In their statement, the victims said the Marists were still covering up the crimes, and attacking the credibilit­y of survivors. They vowed to speak out so that parents with children in Marist schools would know what happened to them.

“We insist that the Vatican modify its discourse and rather than talk about pain, forgivenes­s and sin, it must urgently recognize crimes, misdeeds and reparation, and put all the informatio­n it has in the hands of the civilian justice system,” they said.

In a statement to The Associated Press late Wednesday, the Marists said that as soon as they received the accusation­s, superiors immediatel­y removed the brothers from contact with minors, alerted Chilean prosecutor­s and offered victims psychologi­cal, legal and spiritual help. The community also launched a church investigat­ion and asked the Vatican to remove the two brothers; a decision is pending.

Francis convened the Chilean church hierarchy in Rome after admitting he made “grave errors in judgment” about the case of a bishop, Juan Barros, accused by victims of Chile’s most well-known predator priest of witnessing and ignoring their abuse.

Francis had strongly defended Barros during his January trip to Chile, and sent in two Vatican experts to investigat­e after realizing something was amiss.

The investigat­ors took testimony from the main victims of the Rev. Fernando Karadima, who was Barros’ superior. But the investigat­ors also met with Marist victims and abuse victims of other priests in Chile, producing a 2,300page dossier that is at the heart of this week’s meetings in the Vatican.

It’s unclear why Francis restricted the summit to Chilean bishops, since religious orders such as the Franciscan­s and Salesians, and communitie­s such as the Marists operate somewhat independen­tly of the diocesan bishop system, with their own superiors.

But in the case of the Marists, diocesan priests have also been implicated in the scandal, which involves allegation­s of abuse from decades ago through at least 2008.

The victims have filed a criminal complaint against three Catholic priests, a Capuchin brother and six Marists. The allegation­s involve rape during camping trips and in the school locker rooms and showers.

In their Wednesday night statement, the Marists said they fully supported the legal action taken by victims, including the lifting of the statute of limitation­s.

“There is a total determinat­ion to apply the relative sanctions to those who are responsibl­e,” the statement said. It didn’t refer to the fact that many Chileans were outraged when the Marists admitted that the main brother accused had confessed in 2010, seven years before the community revealed the abuse.

“The actions that Pope Francis will take will be the only way to know if the times of cover-up inside the institutio­n are over,” the victims wrote. “We’re concerned that the requests for forgivenes­s be translated into concrete and exemplary action.”

 ??  ?? In this Jan. 18, photo, Juan Barros, Bishop of Osornos, smiles as he leaves the altar at the end of a Mass celebrated by Pope Francis on Lobito Beach in Iquique, Chile. AP PHOTO/ALESSANDRA TARANTINO
In this Jan. 18, photo, Juan Barros, Bishop of Osornos, smiles as he leaves the altar at the end of a Mass celebrated by Pope Francis on Lobito Beach in Iquique, Chile. AP PHOTO/ALESSANDRA TARANTINO

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