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Archbishop Appeals for Abuse Victims to Come Forward

itv
August 30, 2012

http://www.itv.com/news/meridian/2012-08-30/dr-rowan-williams-appeals-for-abuse-victims-to-come-forward/

[Interim report]

Archbishop Dr Rowan Williams speaking at General Synod earlier this year Photo: PA Images

Dr Rowan Williams has responded to a new report on sex abuse in the Chichester Diocese and has apologised to those who have been abused as a result of failings by the Church.

Dr Williams set up an inquiry into child protection policies after abuses by East Sussex vicar Colin Pritchard and Brede parish priest Roy Cotton.

He appointed Bishop John Gladwin and Chancellor Rupert Bursell QC as commissaries to conduct the inquiry in the wake of child abuse scandals - the first such appointments for more than a century.

The Archbishop said the interim report confirmed that there had been "many and longstanding failures in implementing a robust and credible safeguarding policy in the Diocese of Chichester".

A review in May last year found serious failings among the senior clergy after Colin Pritchard and Roy Cotton were allowed to continue working despite being accused of serious child abuse offences.

Colin Pritchard was the vicar of St Barnabas in Bexhill-on-Sea, East Sussex, until 2007, despite having been first reported to police over sex offences 10 years earlier. He was later jailed for sexually abusing two young boys.

One of the boys had said he was also abused by Roy Cotton, who worked as a parish priest in Brede near Rye, but prosecutors decided there was not enough evidence to charge him before he died in September 2006.

The Archbishop said there had been much improvement in the last couple of years, but there remained areas of concern. He said the work of the commissaries would continue and they would be supervised by the Archbishop's office.

I am very grateful to those who have been conducting the Visitation in the Diocese of Chichester and to all who have co-operated with this process – not least those survivors of abuse who have shared their experience. The abiding hurt and damage done to them is something that none of us in the Church can ignore, and I am deeply sorry that they should have been let down by those they ought to have been able to trust.

I hope they will believe that we take their experience seriously: we owe them not only our words of apology but our best efforts to make sure that in the future our churches will be safe places for children and vulnerable people of all ages."

– Dr Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury

Dr Williams said guidelines laid down by the national Church and the agreed standards of best practice had not been consistently followed. He added that flaws in safeguarding practice had put children and others at risk.

The current Bishop of Chichester has also responded to the interim report.

I am deeply grateful to the Commissaries for their work in producing such a detailed, honest and wide-ranging analysis of the current situation concerning Safeguarding in the Diocese of Chichester. I have not yet officially begun my work as diocesan bishop and so, in many respects, their Report comes at an apposite time as the diocese also looks forward to a new phase in its ministry and mission.

This Interim Report reinforces for all who read it how the damage caused to each survivor is unique and intensely personal. Let us never forget that. Nor can we ever imagine that words of apology, deep and sincere though they might be, take away the damage and wicked shamefulness that survivors of abuse carry as a destructive burden.

I am particularly grateful to the Commissaries for their suggestion that I meet with all known survivors of abuse and will seek to do this as soon as my public ministry begins."

– Dr Martin Warner, Bishop of Chichester

Dr Williams said he encouraged anyone who had suffered abuse to come forward and their privacy and wishes would be respected. A special helpline has been set up in conjunction with the NSPCC on 0800 389 5344.

 

 

 

 

 




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