New cases of sex abuse of minors by Catholic priests in Chile discovered; cases triple to 119

A demonstrator holds a placard reading “Devils Disguised as Priests” during a protest against the sexual abuse scandal which continues to rock the Catholic Church, in front of the Santiago Metropolitan Cathedral in Santiago on August 20, 2018. / AFP PHOTO / Martin BERNETTI

 

by Paulina Abramovich
Agence France Presse

SANTIAGO, Chile (AFP) — Scores of new cases of priestly sexual abuse of minors have come to light in Chile, public prosecutors said Friday, deepening a crisis in the country’s Catholic Church that has embroiled its Pope Francis.

The country’s chief prosecutor’s office said the number of cases it was investigating had soared to 119 as more victims came forward.

A total of 167 bishops, priests and lay members of the church are now under investigation for sexual crimes committed in the South American country since 1960.

Seven of those under investigation are bishops and 96 are priests, but it was unclear from the figures released Friday how many were currently serving.

Among those implicated is the country’s most senior Catholic figure, Santiago Archbishop Ricardo Ezzati, who faces accusations he helped cover up sexual abuse in his diocese.

Most of the evidence against him was gathered during a search of the archdiocese offices in Santiago earlier this month.

Santiago’s Archbishop Ricardo Ezzati is pictured as he leaves a convention center in Punta de Tralca, west of Santiago, after holding a meeting with members of the Chilean Episcopal Conference, on August 03, 2018, to analyze the roots of the current crisis that the Catholic Church is experiencing in the country, burdened by the scandals of sexual abuse and cover-up, and how to overcome it.
Chile is investigating more than 150 members of the country’s embattled Catholic Church — both clergymen and lay people — for perpetrating or concealing the sexual abuse of children and adults, prosecutors said last week. / AFP PHOTO / Martin BERNETTI

The search was ordered by the prosecutor in charge of the investigation, Emiliano Arias, after the church refused to hand over files to investigators, citing the need to respect victims.

Ezzati has denied allegations that he covered up cases of abuse, including those of a top aide, 56-year-old Oscar Munoz, who was jailed in July while a probe into allegations he raped at least seven children continues.

– Public outrage –
Reflecting public outrage over the investigation’s findings, the Chilean parliament has begun moves to withdraw citizenship from the naturalized Italian-born Ezzati, who has protested his innocence.

A recent opinion poll by pollsters Cadem showed 96 percent of Chileans believe the church systematically covers up abuse by priests.

Catholic Church’s Pope Francis has already apologized repeatedly to Chileans over the scandal, admitting the church failed “to listen and react” to the allegations, but vowed to “restore justice.”

In May, the Argentine pontiff accepted the resignation of five Chilean bishops amid accusations of abuse and related coverups.

(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 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

Francis himself became mired in the scandal when, during a trip to Chile in January, he defended 61-year-old bishop Juan Barros, who was accused of covering up abuse by pedophile priest Fernando Karadima in the 1980s and 1990s.

Karadima was suspended for life by the Vatican over the allegations of child molestation.

Francis eventually accepted he was wrong to defend Barros and subsequently accepted his resignation.

Pope Francis answers journalists during a press conference on board of the plane on January 22, 2018, during his flyback of a seven days trip to Chile and Peru. / AFP Photo / Vincenzo Pinto

State prosecutors began investigating scores of abuse cases following outrage around the country over the church’s own probe into decades of abuse by priests, crimes over which it often failed to take any action or handed down lenient punishments.

Now bishops and other priests accused of abuse in Chile will face the full force of secular law.

– Number of cases triple –

Prosecutors initially indicated that 38 cases had been opened in the first weeks of their probe, which began in July.

“The number of investigations into sexual crimes committed by members of the Catholic Church has reached 119 cases,” the state prosecutor said Friday in a statement.

Many of the cases have come to light after recent searches of properties belonging to the Marist Brothers religious order.

The Vatican recently defrocked a Marist priest Abel Perez, who confessed to sexually abusing 14 minors in the 1970s.

He admitted the abuses in 2010, but the Marists only reported his crimes to the authorities seven years later.

Earlier this month, Episcopal Conference president Santiago Silva announced a series of measures to “at least begin to resolve the serious problem we have in the church.”

In an attempt to douse the fires of the crisis engulfing the Catholic Church in the South American country over the deluge of accusations against clergy, bishops have decided to publicly disclose the previous investigations on alleged sexual abuse of minors.

Previously, bishops had insisted that canonical law prevails over criminal law.

Juan Carlos Claret, the leader of a campaign group that opposed the Catholic Church’s policy of transferring priests accused of abuse rather than sacking or turning them over to judicial authorities, told AFP the Episcopal Conference knew as early as 2007 of 120 priests involved in sexual abuse.

Church authorities “could have, and should have” acted against abusers of children, the country’s president Sebastian Pinera said.

© Agence France-Presse