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  Abusive Priests Should Turn Themselves In, Belgian Church Says

CNN
September 13, 2010

http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/09/13/belgium.church.abuse/

Belgium's Catholic Church released a report detailing hundreds of assertions of abuse of children by clergy.

(CNN) -- Catholic priests who abused children should tell their superiors, leaders of the church in Belgium said Monday.

"We want to repeat this call with force," Bishop Johan Bonny, the bishop of Antwerp, said. "It is to everyone's advantage that the abuser in a pastoral relationship communicates this fact to his superior" or to a new "center for investigation, healing and reconciliation" which he announced Monday.

Belgian Catholic Church leaders had been expected to announce a new investigation into allegations of abuse by priests, but did not.

Bonny said instead that the church "envisions the creation" of the new center. The church has identified four experts to start preparatory work on the center, he said, but he did not name them.

"We want to commit ourselves to giving the maximum support for the victims," said Archbishop Andre-Joseph Leonard, the head of the Catholic Church in Belgium. "We must listen to their questions in order to restore their dignity and help heal the suffering they have endured."

The announcement comes days after a Church-backed investigation detailed hundreds of assertions of sexual abuse of children by clergy and others working for the church from the 1950s into the late 1980s.

"We can say that not a single congregation escaped sexual abuse of minors by one or more of its members," said the Commission on Church-Related Sexual Abuse Complaints on Friday.

It was led by Dr. Peter Ariaenssens, who is both a church investigator and psychiatrist.

The commission said it received about 500 reports from alleged victims, about 60 percent of them from males.

It cited 320 alleged abusers, of whom 102 were known to have been clergy members from 29 congregations.

Thirteen of the alleged victims committed suicide, it said.

Investigators had information about when the abuse started for 233 of the alleged victims. Forty-eight were 12; one was 2; five were 4; eight were 5; seven were 6; ten were 7.

Of the 230 alleged victims about whom investigators said they had reliable information, more than 70 percent are currently between the ages of 40 and 70, it said. Ten percent are 31 to 40.

Four alleged victims are 20 to 30 years of age, and one is younger than 20, it said.

At the other end of the scale, five alleged victims are aged between 80 and 90 years old and one is older than 90.

Belgian police raided Catholic Church headquarters in the country earlier this year and questioned a cardinal over allegations of a cover-up by the church.

Belgian police questioned Gotfried Danneels, the country's former Catholic archbishop for about ten hours over accusations he knew of sexual abuse in the church but failed to stop it, the Belgian prosecutor's office told CNN in July.

Danneels was being considered a witness but could become a suspect, prosecutor's spokesman Joseph Colain told CNN.

Danneels, who was questioned July 5, could be interrogated again as the investigation continues, Colain said.

Danneels was archbishop of Belgium for more than 30 years before he stepped down in January.

Belgian police raided the national headquarters of the Catholic Church in June over allegations of child abuse, prompting an angry response from Pope Benedict XVI and other church leaders.

Investigators seized archdiocese archives covering 25 years as well as personal computers and other personal possessions, said Fernand Keuleneer, a lawyer for the archdiocese.

When police raided Danneels' private residence and the headquarters of the Catholic Church in Belgium, a meeting of bishops happened to be taking place.

They detained the bishops and other church employees -- even the cook -- for about nine hours, the Rev. Eric De Beukelaer said. Investigators also seized personal possessions and have not yet returned them, he said.

Members of a Belgian church commission that helps sexual abuse victims resigned en masse to protest the raid a week after it took place, said De Beukelaer, a spokesman for the Mechelen-Brussels Archdiocese.

The commission worked with people who have been abused by clergy members, said the spokesman.

The Belgian Prosecutor's Office said in July it is investigating death threats against witnesses and magistrates involved in clergy child abuse cases.

The Vatican criticized the raids but reaffirmed its "strong condemnation of any sinful and criminal abuse of minors by members of the church."

It cited "the need to repair and confront such acts in conformity with the law and teachings of the Gospels."

The Catholic Church is facing allegations that clergy members abused children in at least half a dozen countries, including the pope's native Germany, as well as Belgium, Ireland, Austria, the Netherlands and the United States.

 
 

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