Victims call Italy Church's abuse report 'shamefully' limited
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[November 17, 2022]
By Philip Pullella
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Italy's Catholic
Church on Thursday released its first report on alleged sexual abuse of
minors and vulnerable individuals but victims' advocates said the number
of cases was likely much higher and denounced its limited scope as
shameful.
The 41-page report, the first of two, covers only 2020-21. A second,
promised report will cover abuse going back to 2000, although it is not
clear when that will be released.
Victims have called for a thorough outside investigation going back many
decades, such as those in France and Germany.
The report on 2020-21, which covers cases reported during those years
but not necessarily taking place in that time, was done by a Catholic
university in northern Italy. It said 89 people presumably had been
abused by 68 alleged abusers, including priests as well as lay people
such as church workers and religion teachers.
The data stemmed from "listening centres" in dioceses and is limited to
information from those who came forward. About 53 percent of the alleged
cases were recent and the others took place in the past, although the
report did not specify when.
"This is absolutely unsatisfactory and shameful," said Francesco Zanardi,
51, head of Rete l'Abuso (The Abuse Network), which has one of the
largest digital archives on clerical sexual abuse in Italy.
"It was already shameful that the (second study) would cover only cases
from 2000 onwards," he told Reuters from his home in northern Italy.
Still, Zanardi said the report's numbers were significantly higher than
he expected.
"If these numbers are correct, they are already high, but the real
numbers are higher," he said. Extrapolating on statistics in the report,
the number of victims in the last 22 years would be at least 2,000, he
said.
Church leaders presenting the report at a news conference defended it.
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Francesco Zanardi, 51, a victim of
church sexual abuse, and founder and president of Rete l'Abuso (The
Abuse Network), poses for a photograph after holding a flash mob
outside the Vatican embassy to Italy, calling for an investigation
into sexual abuse in the Italian Catholic Church, in Rome, Italy,
May 27, 2022. REUTERS/Remo Casilli/File Photo
"It is just a start," said Archbishop Lorenzo Ghizzoni, adding that
he expected more victims to step forward as the reporting system
involved and became more victim friendly.
He said the Italian Church wanted to make it easier for victims to
come forward, including locating the "listening centres" outside
Church buildings that could be intimidating, and having them staffed
by lay people, particularly women.
Father Gianluca Marchetti, a abuse expert from northern Italy, told
the new conference that the listening centres did not intend to
discourage victims from going directly to civil authorities and
encouraged them to do so.
Victims groups in Italy have expressed frustration with the Church
for years. They have called for an overarching independent
investigation going back to at least part of the past century, when
much of the abuse took place in the post-World War Two period.
Zanardi was abused by a priest before 2000, meaning his case would
not figure in the next report. His group says Church authorities
either failed to intervene, covered up, or acted too late to stop
abuse from being repeated.
The worldwide sexual abuse crisis has done massive damage to the
credibility of the Roman Catholic Church and cost it hundreds of
millions of dollars in settlements, with some dioceses in other
countries declaring bankruptcy.
(Reporting by Philip Pullella; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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