Thousands of children abused by members of Portugal's Catholic Church
over 70 years - report
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[February 13, 2023]
By Catarina Demony and Miguel Pereira
LISBON (Reuters) -At least 4,815 children were sexually abused by
members of the Portuguese Catholic Church - mostly priests - over the
past 70 years, a report by the commission investigating the issue said
on Monday, adding the findings are the tip of the iceberg.
"(We want) to pay a sincere tribute to those who were abuse victims
during their childhood and dared to give a voice to silence," said child
psychiatrist Pedro Strecht, who headed the commission. "They are much
more than a statistic."
Strecht said the 4,815 cases were the "absolute minimum" number of
victims of sexual abuse by clergy members in Portugal since 1950.
Most perpetrators (77%) were priests and most of the victims were men,
Strecht said, adding that they were abused in Catholic schools,
churches, priests' homes, confessionals, among other locations.
The majority of the sexual abuses took place when the children were aged
10-14, with the youngest victim being just two-years-old.
Jose Ornelas, head of the Bishops' Conference, attended the final
report's presentation and will respond to it later on Monday. The Church
has previously said it was prepared to "take appropriate measures".
The Portuguese Catholic Church was rocked last year by cases of alleged
cover-up of sexual abuse including by bishops who remain active in
church roles. The commission said it was preparing a list of accused
priests still working.
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A church is seen on the day Portugal's
commission investigating allegations of historical child sexual
abuse by members of the Portuguese Catholic church will unveil its
report, in Lisbon, Portugal, February 13, 2023. REUTERS/Pedro Nunes
The Portuguese commission started its work in January 2022 after a
report in France revealed around 3,000 priests and religious
officials sexually abused over 200,000 children.
The abuse allegations have come from people from various
backgrounds, from every region of the country and also from
Portuguese nationals living in other countries in Europe, Africa and
the Americas.
The commission spoke with over 500 victims, analysed historical
church documents and interviewed bishops and other clergy members.
A total of 25 of the testimonies heard by the commission were sent
to the public prosecutors' office for investigation as all others
were committed over 20 years ago and legal proceedings can no longer
be initiated.
The commission said the law should be changed so legal proceedings
can be initiated for historic crimes committed 30 years ago.
The commission, which says it is independent, was financed by the
Catholic Church. Asked by Reuters in December 2021 if that could be
a threat to the commission's independence, Strecht said he would be
the first to walk out and denounce it if the church intervened in
the process.
(Reporting by Catarina Demony; Editing by Andrei Khalip, Jon Boyle
and Mike Harrison)
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