South China Morning Post

Powerful bishop jailed for sexual abuse of young men

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A Catholic bishop accused of sexually abusing young men studying to be priests has been found guilty by a court in northern Argentina, capping more than a week of often graphic testimony in the latest criminal abuse case to hit the global Church.

The high-profile trial played out in the home country of Pope Francis, the former archbishop of Buenos Aires and the first Latin American pontiff.

Gustavo Zanchetta, the former bishop of Oran in Argentina’s northern province of Salta, was convicted of sexually abusing two former seminarian­s, which prosecutor­s said in a statement was aggravated due to his status as a cleric. The court handed down a prison sentence of 41/2 years to begin immediatel­y.

Zanchetta had denied all charges in the criminal trial, as well as a separate Vatican canon law investigat­ion, insisting he had “a good and healthy relationsh­ip” with all seminarian­s, according to summaries of the closed-door trial provided by the local judiciary.

“We’re going to appeal,” Zanchetta lawyer Javier Belda told Reuters in an email.

Summaries of testimony provided by the judiciary included witnesses describing unwanted touching and sexual advances by the bishop, as well as requests for massages and gifts he doled out to seminarian­s he was said to favour.

Other witnesses testified to the discovery of pornograph­y on the bishop’s phone as well as a history of visiting pornograph­ic websites on a church computer he used.

Zanchetta often spoke about his close friendship with the Pope, according to trial testimony.

Zanchetta had worked for the Church in Rome, tapped in 2017 to help lead the Vatican’s Administra­tion of Patrimony of the Apostolic See, a financial and accounting office that also manages its properties in Italy.

He was reappointe­d to the job by the Pope in 2020 despite an ongoing criminal investigat­ion.

BishopAcco­untability.org, a United States-based abuse tracking group, hailed Zanchetta’s conviction in a statement on

Friday. “This is a stunning ruling from the Pope’s homeland. It’s a sign that even where the Catholic Church wields power, civil societies increasing­ly will not tolerate sexual abuse of young adults by powerful figures,” said the group.

It also blasted the pontiff for what it described as his “disturbing” refusal to provide prosecutor­s with files from the Vatican’s own investigat­ion into the case. “Pope Francis should finally condemn the bishop’s crimes publicly and strip him of his title and privileges,” the statement said.

The Vatican did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Three priests first accused the Argentinia­n bishop of sexually abusing seminarian­s, as well as abuse of power and financial mismanagem­ent, in 2018, which they claimed took place at the Oran seminary the bishop founded a couple of years earlier.

A local prosecutor called for Zanchetta’s arrest the following year, but the case has dragged on amid legal delays related to the Covid-19 pandemic and the Vatican’s investigat­ion.

 ?? Photos: AP ?? People embrace outside the court following the verdict in Gustavo Zanchetta’s trial in Oran, Argentina – home country of Pope Francis.
Photos: AP People embrace outside the court following the verdict in Gustavo Zanchetta’s trial in Oran, Argentina – home country of Pope Francis.
 ?? ?? Gustavo Zanchetta (left) with one of his lawyers after the conviction.
Gustavo Zanchetta (left) with one of his lawyers after the conviction.

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