The Daily Telegraph

Church cut ties with sex victims on insurer’s advice, claims report

- Crime Correspond­ent By Martin Evans

‘We were not asked to participat­e and were not given the opportunit­y to set the record straight’

THE Church of England withdrew support for sex abuse victims on the advice of its insurers, it has been claimed.

Officials allegedly severed ties with victims who had suffered at the hands of clergy once compensati­on had been paid. One sex abuse victim, who was paid £35,000 in compensati­on after being raped in the Seventies by a member of the clergy, claimed he was cut adrift once the payment had been made and blamed the church’s insurers, Ecclesiast­ical.

An independen­t review into the case stated that the insurer’s advice had “directly conflicted” with the pastoral and compassion­ate responsibi­lities of the Church, adding that “financial interests were allowed to impact practice”.

The findings of the review, conducted by Ian Elliot, a child safeguardi­ng specialist, were accepted in full by the Archbishop of Canterbury.

A Church of England spokesman said: “The Church of England is absolutely committed to its pastoral response to alleged victims and survivors and published new guidance in 2015 emphasisin­g that this needs to be separated as far as possible from the management processes for the situation, and from legal and insurance responses.”

But the insurance company, Ecclesiast­ical – which has a senior member of the clergy on its board – has vehemently denied it advised the Church to sever pastoral ties after compensati­on had been paid. A spokesman for the firm said: “We have great sympathy for the survivors who have suffered such awful abuse and it is hugely disappoint­ing that their view of us has been damaged by factual inaccuraci­es relating to our company in the Elliott Report.”

The spokesman added: “We were not asked to participat­e in this review and were not given the opportunit­y to set the record straight. Contrary to what the Elliott Report claims, we did not advise the Church of England to withdraw pastoral care from the survivor. We have always been clear that pastoral care and counsellin­g can and should continue in parallel with an insurance claim.”

Ecclesiast­ical describes itself as an independen­t, commercial business with a charitable purpose, as a proportion of its profits go to its charitable owner, which invests them independen­tly into communitie­s

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