Chile authorities raid sites linked to church sex abuse

Students demonstrate against the sexual abuse scandal within the Church in Chile as Vatican’s top abuse investigator Maltese archbishop Charles Scicluna (R) visits Catholic University in Santiago on June 13, 2018.
Scicluna arrived in Chile on Tuesday, a day after Catholic Pope Francis accepted the resignation of three bishops from the scandal-wracked Chilean Church. Maltese archbishop Charles Scicluna and fellow papal envoy Jordi Bertomeu arrived to take witness statements from victims of sexual abuse within the Church and provide instruction to Chilean dioceses to respond adequately to any new complaints. / AFP PHOTO / CLAUDIO REYES

 

SANTIAGO, Chile (AFP) — Police on Wednesday seized church files in raids in Santiago and Rancagua, as the Catholic Church scrambled to try to put a better face on a sex abuse scandal that has rocked Chile.

The surprise operations came as Maltese archbishop Charles Scicluna and fellow papal envoy Jordi Bertomeu are visiting for a second time to take witness statements from victims of sexual abuse in the church and provide instruction to Chilean dioceses to respond adequately to any new complaints.

Prosecutor Emiliano Arias confirmed two “landmark” raids and said he was pleased with how they went. Precisely because church officials long were not subject to civilian authority in Chile, this marked a dramatic shift.

General view of the cathedral in Rancagua, Chile on May 23, 2018.
Fourteen priests involved in a sex abuse scandal in Chile — which has rocked Catholic Pope Francis’s papacy — were defrocked on Tuesday, May 22,  following the resignation of 34 Chilean bishops summoned by the pontiff last week. / AFP PHOTO / CLAUDIO REYES

“This is not an investigation against the Catholic church,” Arias said, but rather an investigation of reports of sex abuse by members of the church who abused minors.

Several members of the church hierarchy, including former bishop Juan Barros, are accused by victims of ignoring and covering up years of child abuse by Chilean pedophile priest Fernando Karadima during the 1980s and 1990s.

(FILES) In this file picture taken on January 17, 2018, the bishop of Osorno, Juan Barros (R), takes part in an open-air mass celebrated by Catholic Pope Francis (L) at Maquehue airport in Temuco, 800 km south of Santiago, on January 17, 2018.
Pope Francis accepted on June 11, 2018 the resignation of three Chilean bishops including that of controversial Juan Barros following a child sex abuse scandal in Chile which has come to haunt his papacy. Several members of the Chilean church hierarchy are accused by victims of ignoring and covering up child abuse by Chilean paedophile priest Fernando Karadima during the 1980s and 1990s. The pontiff himself became mired in the scandal when, during a trip to Chile in January, he defended Barros who was accused of covering up Karadima’s wrongdoing.
/ AFP PHOTO / Claudio Reyes

Catholic Pope Francis appointed 61-year-old Barros as bishop of Osorno in 2015, when victims’ allegations against him were already widely known.

The pontiff himself became mired in the scandal when, during a trip to Chile in January, he defended Barros, who was accused of covering up Karadima’s wrongdoing.

Karadima was suspended for life by the Vatican over the allegations of child molestation, and Barros was one of three bishops whose resignations Francis accepted on Monday.

Scicluna and Bertomeu visited Chile in February to investigate the allegations and meet with victims. Their report to Rome noted the existence of a “culture of abuse” within the Chilean Church.

In a letter to Chileans released at the end of last month, the pontiff voiced “shame” that the Catholic Church failed “to listen and react in time” to the allegations of sexual abuse by Chilean clergy.

He has since received two groups of Karadima’s victims at the Vatican.

Since 2000, about 80 Catholic priests have been reported to authorities in Chile for alleged sexual abuse.

Earlier Sciclina told reporters “it is so important to show a sign of willingness to cooperate.”


© Agence France-Presse