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  Belgian Report Shows That Hundreds of Abusive Priests Went Unpunished

National Secular Society
January 16, 2011

http://www.secularism.org.uk/126345.html

Only 16% of priests involved in 134 cases of child abuse in the Belgian Catholic Church have been prosecuted, a new report shows.

The report, which was handed to the Government in December, was reported in the daily Le Soir this week. It details 134 cases of alleged abuse by priests over several decades.

The report, compiled by the secretary of Belgium's episcopal conference, Etienne Quintiens, indicated that ninety priests are still alive involved with 134 cases of alleged child sex abuse. A further 50-odd complaints not yet on the list have been lodged since a church-backed commission last September revealed nearly 500 cases of abuse by priests and church workers since the 1950s, including 13 victims who committed suicide.

The church document shows either the church or the judiciary received complaints in 70 per cent of the cases.

"Globally, less than one abuser out of six was inflicted the maximum penalty available to the bishop: definitive suspension. And even fewer, 16 per cent, were effectively condemned by the judiciary," Le Soir said.

The situation differed from one part of the country to another, with no judicial action at all in the Hasselt diocese, though the church transmitted 90 per cent of alleged cases to prosecutors, while in Ghent, 73 per cent of alleged cases were prosecuted and sentenced.

The largely Catholic country of 10 million is still reeling from the 2010 revelations as the new year begins, with fresh allegations of abuse in institutions run by nuns.

The former head of Belgium's Roman Catholic Church last month denied before a parliamentary panel that top bishops "consciously" covered up abuse cases. Cardinal Godfried Danneels, who was quizzed for hours by Belgian MPs, expressed his "horror" at the reports but said "there was no drive to consciously cover up the sexual abuse or deny it".

Daneels, who led the Church between 1979 and 2009, said perpetrators should "pay damages as established by justice" but refused to say if the church itself should pay victims.

His successor, Archbishop Andre-Joseph Leonard, on Tuesday opened the door to possible compensation. "It's not excluded that we voluntarily show solidarity with these people," he said in an interview on the Flemish television network VTM.

 
 

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