Chilean priest defrocked for sex abuse
Fernando Karadima, a Chilean priest who was at the center of a sexual abuse scandal that has recently shaken the Catholic Church in Chile and who was eventually defrocked by the pope, has died. He was 90.
Karadima died Sunday of bronchopneumonia and kidney failure in the Santiago nursing home where he had been living, according to his death certificate.
After being defrocked in 2018, Karadima was sanctioned to a lifetime of penance and prayer for having sexually abused minors in a parish in Chile’s capital.
Three of his victims said in a news release that they knew Karadima had died but that he was only “another link on this culture of perversion and cover-up in the church.” They added that they hoped such abuses never happen again.
The Chilean abuse scandal erupted in 2009, when victims accused Karadima, then one of the country’s most prominent preachers, of molesting them for years.
The Vatican eventually convicted Karadima in a church tribunal.
But some of his victims have criticized the Chilean Catholic Church and the Vatican for mishandling several cases.
During a trip to Chile in 2018, Pope Francis discredited the victims, outraging survivors and their supporters. Francis later apologized to them.
The archdiocese of Santiago said Monday that it is supporting the victims and will work to have “healthy and safe environments within the Church.”