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          |  |  Church 'Routinely Covered Up' 
        Child Sexual Abuse for 30 Years
 By Carl O'Brien and Patsy McGarry
 Irish Times
 November 27, 2009
 
 http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/frontpage/2009/1127/1224259548021.html
 
 [This feature includes:
 • Church 
        'Routinely Covered Up' Child Sexual Abuse for 30 Years, by Carl O'Brien 
        and Patsy McGarry, Irish Times (11/27/09)
 • Vatican 
        and Nuncio Ignored Letters on Abuse, by Patsy McGarry and Paddy Agnew, 
        Irish Times (11/27/09)
 • Murphy 
        Report: Background and Composition, by Patsy McGarry and Carol Coulter, 
        Irish Times (11/27/09)
 • 30 
        Years of Church and State Cover-Up of Child Sex Abuse, by Paul Cullen, 
        Irish Times (11/27/09)
 • Cult 
        of Loyal Obedience at Heart of Lies and Cover-Up, by Patsy McGarry, 
        Irish Times (11/27/09)
 • Garda 
        Connivance in Stifling Abuse Inquiries Deplored, by Carol Coulter, 
        Irish Times (11/27/09)
 • Abuse 
        Continued for Years Due to Protection of Priests, by Carl O'Brien, 
        Irish Times (11/27/09)
 • Bishops 
        Lied and Covered Up, by Mary Raftery, Irish Times (11/27/09)]
 FOUR SUCCESSIVE archbishops of Dublin responded to clerical child sexual 
        abuse over a 30-year period in their diocese with "denial, arrogance 
        and cover-up".
 This is one of the main conclusions of the report 
        of the Commission of Investigation into the Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin.
 
 The three-year inquiry, led by Judge Yvonne Murphy, found the "structures 
        and rules" of the Catholic Church facilitated the cover-up.
 
 "The State authorities facilitated the cover up by not fulfilling 
        their responsibilities to ensure that the law was applied equally to all 
        and allowing the Church institutions to be beyond the reach of the normal 
        law enforcement processes," the report also found.
 
 Minister for Justice Dermot Ahern, who published the report yesterday, 
        said it documented "a scandal on an astonishing scale".
 
 The report also found current child protection laws did not provide adequate 
        powers to health authorities to protect the welfare of children who are 
        abused, or in danger of abuse, by people with privileged access to children.
 
 The report, which took three years to complete, said the archdiocese had 
        an "obsessive concern with secrecy and the avoidance of scandal" 
        and had "little or no concern for the welfare of the abused child".
 
 The commission investigated the handling of allegations made against a 
        sample out of 46 priests out of 102 against whom complaints were made 
        between 1975 and 2004.
 
 Among its other main findings were:
 
        All archbishops and many of the auxiliary bishops in Dublin handled 
          child sexual abuse complaints badly. None of the four archbishops reported 
          their knowledge of abuse to gardaí "throughout the 1960s, 1970s 
          or 1980s".
 
Church authorities used the concept of "mental reservation", 
          which allows senior clergy to mislead people without being guilty, in 
          the church's eyes, of lying.
 
Senior members of the gardaí regarded priests as outside their remit, 
          with some members reporting complaints to the archdiocese instead of 
          investigating them. It said there were some courageous priests who brought complaints to 
        the attention of their superiors. But in general there was a "don't 
        ask, don't tell" policy.
 The report concluded that it is the responsibility of the State to ensure 
        that no similar institutional immunity was ever allowed to occur again.
 
 Speaking at a press conference, Mr Ahern warned: "A collar will protect 
        no criminal".
 
 Responding to the report yesterday, Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin 
        said "no words of apology would ever be sufficient" and offered 
        "to each and every survivor, my apology, my sorrow and my shame for 
        what happened to them".
 
 Catholic Primate Cardinal Seán Brady also said he was deeply ashamed and 
        saddened by the findings.
 
         
          |  |   The report is likely to place pressure on a number of senior clergy. 
        Asked if individuals named in the report should step down, Dr Martin said: 
        "I have always expressed the position that every bishop should evaluate 
        their ministry in terms of commitments they make in reality to the protection 
        of children."
 Last night Cardinal Desmond Connell, who is criticised in the report for 
        not promptly handing over information to gardaí, expressed "bitter 
        regret that failures on my part contributed to the suffering of victims 
        in any form."
 
 Bishop of Limerick Donal Murray, a former auxiliary bishop in the Dublin 
        diocese and who is strongly criticised in the report, said he regretted 
        his actions but did not intend to resign.
 
 Responding to the report's severe criticism of gardaí, Garda Commissioner 
        Fachtna Murphy said the report made for "difficult and disturbing 
        reading", in particular the failure of State authorities to protect 
        victims.
 
 The Government said it apologised "without reservation or equivocation" 
        for failures by State agencies in dealing with the issue of clerical child 
        abuse in the Dublin archdiocese.
 
 Abuse victims said they felt vindicated by the report but expressed dismay 
        that it took so long to expose wrongdoing, while campaign group One in 
        Four called for the prosecution of those who covered up abuse.
 
 "This report is a shocking indictment on the Catholic Church in Dublin. 
        Its publication, if not acted upon, will have been a wasted opportunity 
        to raise standards of child protection in this country," said Andrew 
        Madden, a victim of Fr Ivan Payne.
         
 
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