The
Catholic Church received more than 900 complaints involving over
3,000 instances of child sex abuse in England and Wales between
1970 and 2015, and there have been more than 100 reported
allegations a year since 2016.
"This report finds that the Catholic Church repeatedly failed to
support victims and survivors, while taking positive action to
protect alleged perpetrators, including moving them to different
parishes," the inquiry said.
"Victims described the profound and lifelong effects of abuse,
including depression, anxiety, self-harming and trust issues."
The report criticised the most senior Catholic leader in England
and Wales, Cardinal Vincent Nichols, for failing to acknowledge
any personal responsibility or show compassion for victims in
recent cases examined by the inquiry.
"At times, the report finds, Cardinal Nichols has shown he cares
more about the impact of child sexual abuse on the Catholic
Church's reputation than on victims and survivors," it said.
The Vatican and the Apostolic Nuncio, its ambassador to the UK,
did not provide a witness statement to the inquiry despite
repeated requests. The inquiry said it could not understand
their lack of cooperation.
The inquiry chair, Alexis Jay, said it was clear the Church
valued its reputation above the welfare of victims.
"For decades, the Catholic Church's failure to tackle child
sexual abuse consigned many more children to the same fate," she
said in a statement.
"Even today, the responses of the Holy See appear at odds with
the Pope's promise to take action on this hugely important
problem," she added.
The long-lasting independent public inquiry, which is examining
the problem of child sexual abuse across British institutions
and society, published similar findings about the Church of
England on Oct. 6.
(Reporting by Michael Holden and Estelle Shirbon; editing by
Stephen Addison)
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