ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

March 4, 2017

5 nuns, 2 doctors booked for hiding rape of a 16-year-old in which Priest is an accused

INDIA
India.com

By Shubhang Chauhan | Updated: March 5, 2017

Kerala, March 4: On Saturday, Kerala police booked 8 for hiding the alleged rape of a 16-year old by a church priest. Later, the 16-year-old gave birth to a boy and the baby was later shifted to an orphanage. The eight booked include 5 nuns and 2 doctors too.

The accused priest, Father Robin Vadakkumcherry was nabbed last month on February 27, he was trying to leave India. All the eight will be charged under Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO). All the 8 accused have been booked under non-bailable sections of POSCO act.They have also been booked under Juvenile Justice Act. Kannur SP Shiv Vikram was quoted by Hindustan Times saying,” we are looking at all aspects.” The SP also assured of arresting the accused one’s very soon.

Police while conducting their inquiry found that an alleged attempt was made to hide the complete incident. The hospital where the victim delivered the baby denied that they were aware of rape but as per the investigation of police, two doctors and few people of the hospital knew about it.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Kerala priest’s rape of minor: 5 nuns under scanner for role in hush up

INDIA
Deccan Herald

Mar 05, 2017

As more reports pointing at the Catholic priest’s rape of a minor girl in Kerala’s Kannur district emerged on Saturday, the police are working towards arresting several others for covering up the incident.

Six people working with a hospital and an orphanage, besides a parish assistant, are on the police radar for their role in the cover up, sources said. Five of the accused are nuns.

On February 28, the police arrested Father Robin Vadakkancheril (48), vicar at St Sebastian Church in Kottiyoor under the Diocese of Mananthavady, for the rape of the 17-year-old girl.

Administrators at the Christuraj Hospital in Koothuparamba in Kannur and the Holy Infant Mary Convent in Vythiri, Wayanad, have been accused of concealing information about the minor girl delivering a baby and the child’s subsequent admission to the convent, run by nuns.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Pretendere che i sacerdoti non abusino di minori è contrario alla fede? Lo chiedo alla Congregazione che dovrebbe difenderla

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

Che cosa pretende un credente da un sacerdote della sua Chiesa? A nessuno qualche anno addietro sarebbe venuto in mente di dire: «Che non commetta crimini». Si tratta di una cosa talmente scontata che a precisarla ti saresti sentito un po’ pazzo e un po’ blasfemo, comunque irrispettoso della tua Chiesa. Oggi, se sei cattolico, lo devi precisare. Oggi, se si cattolico, devi gridare a gran voce che non vuoi che un sacerdote della tua Chiesa abusi sessualmente di minori, tra i crimini, probabilmente il più viscido, il più disonorante, il più oltraggioso. Laceri un’anima per sempre. Ti servi del corpo di un bambino per il piacere di un istante che se non fossi depravato non riusciresti nemmeno a provare.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Church will not protect priests guilty of sexual abuse: Cardinal

INDIA
The Times of India

Kochi: In a sign that ecclesiastical authorities are finally ready to admit the magnitude of the problem, Cardinal George Mar Alencherry, head of the Syro Malabar church, said on Saturday that the church unequivocally condemns clergy members involved in sexual abuse and child molestation cases and will under no circumstance protect the accused.

Referring to the Kottiyoor incident, where a 16-yr-old girl gave birth to a child last month following a relationship with the local parish priest, Cardinal Alencherry said, “The incident cannot be tolerated. It is highly condemnable. The church will not protect such offenders”.

Pointing out that the accused should be punished under the law of the land, Cardinal Alencherry said, “The church and the entire community of believers should be cautious in avoiding such incidents in the future”. The cardinal was speaking after a prayer meeting for Father Tom Uzhunalil, who was abducted in Yemen by suspected Islamic State militants exactly a year ago.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Boy Scouts says it banned priest who admitted he molested Guam kids

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

Neil Pang | The Guam Daily Post

The Boy Scouts of America banned from the scouting movement a priest accused of pedophilia who faces multiple sex-abuse cases in Guam, according to the head of the organization’s Aloha Council.

The council, which has jurisdiction over the Boys Scouts’ Guam chapter, was commenting on recent court cases filed in federal court against Louis Brouillard, a former Guam priest and former Boy Scouts troop master.

Fifteen claims of sexual abuse of children filed recently allege that Brouillard, while on Guam, used his position in the local Boy Scouts chapter to prey on young boys in the 1970s.

“The behavior included in these allegations is abhorrent and runs counter to everything for which the Boy Scouts of America stands,” said Jeff Sulzbach, chief executive officer of the Boy Scouts of America Aloha Council. “Upon learning of these reports, we took immediate action to preclude this individual from any further participation in the scouting program.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

‘I ended up in hospital covered in scabs’ – abuse survivor Rosemary Adaser on life in a mother-and-baby home

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Sasha Brady
March 4 2017

Rosemary Adaser spoke about the abuse she suffered growing up mixed-race in Ireland’s mother-and-baby homes and industrial schools.

Ms Adaser was born to an Irish mother, who worked as a telephonist at Dublin’s Rotunda Hospital, and a black Ghanaian father, who worked as a doctor there. Shortly after her birth, her mother was forced to place her in St Clare’s Convent in Stamullen, Co Meath.

In 1958, when she was just 18-months-old, Ms Adaser was admitted to a mother-and-baby home on the Navan Road in Dublin. When she was six-years-old, she was transferred to St Joseph’s industrial school in Kilkenny where she suffered systematic abuse.

Speaking on Friday night’s The Late Late Show, Ms Adaser gave a harrowing account of her time in industrial care.

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COMMENT Tuam’s tiny victims had no voice then – which is why we must shout for them now

IRELAND
Her

BY GILLIAN FITZPATRICK

Joseph Ward was aged just seven months when he died in 1928. Mary Teresa Drury was a year old when she died in 1931.

In 1937, Mary Kate Cahill was two weeks old when she died. In 1943, a baby died a day after being born – and is known now simply as Baby McNamara.

Vincent Keogh was five months (1947); Patrick Hardiman was six months (1952); Imelda Halloran was two years old (1954); Gerard Connaughton was 11 months (1956), and Dolores Conneely was seven months (1959).

These names – as detailed today by TheJournal.ie – make up a mere handful of the 796 babies who died at the Bon Secours Tuam Mothers And Babies home from the 1920s to the 1960s.

Close-to 800 tiny, beautiful children who lived short lives, died and were buried without dignity or respect.

They were for decades silent, nameless victims – muted by a society that bowed down to Catholic autonomy, and never insisted on State accountability.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Babies that died in Tuam horror home were thrown out ‘like garbage’ says survivor

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

BY JAMES FOGARTY
4 MAR 2017

Infants and children that died in the Tuam Mother and Baby horror home were thrown out “like garbage”, a survivor of the institution told the Sunday Mirror.

JP Rodgers was born in the home in 1947 and at just one years old he was separated from his mother Bridie, who was sent to the Magdalene Laundry in Galway city.

He said : “There were hundreds of children at the home. To my eyes as a little child, it was like a rabid colony.

“Everyone was suffering from something. I would spend hours standing on my own in the middle of that institution because I was terrified, because I didn’t know who to trust.

And I was sick for months and months on end. But I survived that and I recovered.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Diarmaid Ferriter: Catholic Church remains out of touch

IRELAND
Irish Times

Diarmaid Ferriter

In his marvellously acerbic memoir Against The Tide, published in 1986, former minister for health Dr Noël Browne describes an encounter with the Catholic Bishop of Galway Dr Michael Browne in 1951 when the minister was attempting to win support for his Mother and Child scheme: “He handed me a silver casket in which lay his impeccable hand-made cigarettes. ‘These cigarettes,’ he intoned, ‘I had to have made in Bond Street.’ Then he offered me a glass of champagne. ‘I always like champagne in the afternoon,’ he informed me in his rich round voice. My feeling of awe was mixed with a sense of astonishment that this worldly sybarite considered himself to be a follower of the humble Nazarene.”

Browne subsequently had an audience with Cardinal John D’Alton of Armagh, whom he described as “a pleasant, withdrawn, scholarly looking man. Our conversation was stilted and formal”. In relation to a query about the justification for the Catholic hierarchy’s opposition to Browne’s health scheme given the use by Catholics in Northern Ireland of the National Health Service, D’Alton was disdainful: “We are prepared neither to apologise, nor to explain.”

I was reminded of Browne’s encounters when thinking about the recent death of Cardinal Desmond Connell and the news this week that clerical child abuse victim Marie Collins has resigned from the Commission for the Protection of Minors due to her frustration with some officials in the Roman Curia and a Vatican department that would not commit to acknowledging letters from victims of abuse.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

‘I was so badly whipped I had to be taken to hospital’ – Mother and baby home survivor

IRELAND
The Journal

ROSEMARY ADASER, A survivor of mother and baby homes has spoken of her time in the institutions.

Adaser last night spoke of her time as a child and mother in the homes. In 1958 she was taken to a home in Dublin aged just 18 months. 15 years later she became pregnant and was sent to a home in Meath. There, her child was taken away from her.

Speaking to Ryan Tubridy on the day that investigators for the Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Inquiry confirmed both that they had uncovered “a significant number” of children’s remains at the Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in Tuam – and that they dated back to the era during which the home was operational, Adaser outlined life in the institutions.

What I have clear memories of are an older woman. She’d strip me and put her gardening gloves on, go to the garden, cut a rose bush off, pick the roses off and whip me. That was a very frequent occurrence.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Mother and Baby Home group says Tuam case ‘tip of the iceberg’

IRELAND
Connacht Tribune

A group representing survivors of ‘Mother and Baby’ homes has described the Tuam case as ‘just the tip of the iceberg’ – and says the worst is yet to come.

It follows yesterday’s revelation that the remains of a “significant” number of young children and babies have been found at the site of the former home at the Athenry Road.

The Commission of Investigation examining the issue says the shocking discovery was made in 17 of 20 underground chambers intended to be used as part of a sewage system.

Children’s Minister Katherine Zappone says the discovery is not unexpected, but is deeply disturbing and must be appropriately responded to – however, she says no decision has been made yet on how to proceed from here.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Kerala Bishop apologises for alleged rape by priest after Catholic body’s bizarre excuse

INDIA
The News Minute

Bishop of Mananthavady Archdiocese, Jose Porunnedom has apologised to the family of the survivor, who was allegedly raped and impregnated by Kottoyoor Parish vicar Fr. Robin Vadakkancheril.

In a letter written by the Bishop, appointing a new Vicar to the parish, he says that the incident has caused shame and spiritual loss to the diocese. He also said that he can understand the pain of other church representatives at Kottiyoor parish, who are struggling to come to terms with this situation and are not knowing how to react. He also urged the parish representatives like nuns, committee members and other priests to stay strong in their faith.

Addressing the victim and the family, the Bishop said what happened is unacceptable.

“Here the person who had to guard his followers himself has assaulted them. How will I console the daughter who was victimised and her parents? Dear ones I remember you in my prayers, I join my tears with yours and I understand your pain. I can only say this to you – Sorry,” the Bishop’s letter says.

He also concludes the letter by offering blessings of mother Mary to the victim’s family.

However, the reaction of other Catholic institutions like its mouthpiece Sunday Shalom and Kerala Catholic Bishops’ Council’s (KCBC), to the issue has been apathetic.

In an article, Sunday Shalom even went to the extent of criticising the victim. The article quoted a social media comment and said that it was very true in the case.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Former priest’s aggravated sexual assault trial ends in mistrial

TEXAS
Beeville Bee-Picayune

Gary Kent Mar 3, 2017

BEEVILLE —A former priest in a week-long trial on a charge of aggravated sexual assault learned late Friday that a seven-woman, five-man jury was not able to come up with a unanimous verdict.

Minutes after receiving a note from jurors after more than nine hours of deliberation, District Judge Starr Bauer called the jury back into the courtroom and declared a mistrial.

Bauer told the jurors, “You all worked extremely hard for your $40.”

The defendant, defrocked Catholic priest Stephen Dougherty, was met by family members and friends immediately after Bauer sent the jury home.

Testimony in the trial had started Tuesday morning in Bauer’s courtroom with Assistant District Attorney Terry Breen and San Antonio defense attorney John Penckney III calling witnesses.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Many victims of sexual abuse are ‘crying silent screams’, says Bishop of Derry at a special service in the city for survivors and victims of such abuse

NORTHERN IRELAND
Derry Now

Bishop of Derry, Donal McKeown, has said that many people are ‘crying silent screams’ because of sexual abuse.

Bishop McKeown led a service at St Eugene’s Cathedral in Derry last night as part of the Catholic Church’s Worldwide Day of Prayer for survivors and victims of sexual abuse.

Speaking during his homily, Bishop McKeown described a famous painting by the Norwegian artist Edward Munch, called The Scream.

“Painted with broad bands of garish colour and highly simplified forms, its portrayal of a person screaming silently reduces the figure to an almost hollow cloak in the throes of an emotional crisis,” he said.

“Some people who have experienced abuse in their lives suggest that this picture is one they can identify with.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Kerala priest admits to raping minor girl: Now 5 nuns charged for covering up details!

INDIA
Financial Express

It is shocking how a Catholic priest, who held high positions within the Church and used to coordinate with the media on several occasions, has now been caught by the police for raping a minor girl.

The latest development in this is as follows:

Kerala police have now brought eight people including 5 nuns under its scanner for their involvement in Father Robin Vadakkumchery’s case where he admitted to raping a sixteen-year-old girl, who had given birth to a baby few weeks ago. The involvement of five nuns – Sisters Tessy Jose, Ancy Mathew, Aneesa, Lissy Maria and Ophilia have been charged with non-bailable offenses under Protection on Children from Sexual Offences Act and their role in trying to protect the accused and cover up the crime of rape are to be probed further by Kerala police.

A case has also been filed against the management of Christuraj Hospital in Koothuparamba where the minor girl had given birth. According to local TV reports, hospital officials may be arrested as they are supposed to inform the police in cases like this within 24 hours and in this case, they did not do so.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Seven persons booked under POCSO for covering up alleged rape of Kerala minor by priest

INDIA
The News Minute

In a major development, the Kerala police have booked seven more persons under POCSO, including five nuns, in the rape of a minor girl allegedly by a priest. These seven people have been booked for allegedly helping Father Robin Vadakkumchery cover up the rape, and the resultant pregnancy of the 16-year-old.

Police sources have told TNM that Thankamma Nelliyani, who aided the survivor during her pregnancy and childbirth has been named as Accused no. 2. Dr Tessy Jose, a nun and gynaecologist at Christu Raj Hospital Thokkilangadi, who delivered the survivor’s child, is Accused no. 3 in the case. Dr Hyderali and Sr Ancy Mathew, the hospital administrator, are Accused No. 4 and 5.

Liz Maria, a nun from a convent in Thonichal who helped the priest hide the crime, Sr Aneesha, a nun at an orphanage where the infant want taken to, and Sr Ophilia, the Supernatant of the Orphanage are Accused No. 6, 7 and 8.

All the accused will be charged under POCSO, so they will not be able to get bail, police sources told TNM. All the accused will be arrested soon, the police said.

The main accused in the case, Fr Robin, is on remand in Kannur Sub Jail.

Father Robin, who was posted at the Church run by Catholic Diocese of Mananthavady (Wayanad) in Kannur district almost two-and-a-half years ago, also served as the manager of a school attached to the church. The survivor, Asha*, was a student at the school.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

5 nuns among 8 people booked for hiding rape of minor girl by Kerala priest

INDIA
Hindustan Times

Ramesh Babu
Thiruvananthapuram

Kerala Police on Saturday booked eight persons, including five nuns, for allegedly covering up the rape of a 16-year-old girl by a church priest. The girl later gave birth to a baby boy in a hospital and the child was shifted to an orphanage controlled by the church.

The main accused, Father Robin Vadakkumcherry, vicar of the St Sebastian church in Kottiyoor, was arrested on February 27 while planning to flee the country.

All the accused, including two doctors and five nuns, will be charged under POCSO (Protection of Children from Sexual Offences).

“We are investigating all angles. All accused will be arrested soon,” Kannur superintendent of police Shiv Vikram told Hindustan Times.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Five nuns among accused in Kerala priest’s sexual abuse case

INDIA
Gulf News

Published: March 4, 2017

Akhel Mathew, Correspondent

Thiruvananthapuram: In a serious blow to the image of the Catholic Church in Kerala, as many as five nuns are among the eight accused in the case pertaining to a priest who charged with sexually abusing and impregnating a 16-year-old school student at Kottiyoor in Kannur district.

The girl gave birth to a baby boy in early February. It has now come to light that the priest, Robin Vadakkumcherry, 48, and his accomplices tried to cover up the matter. The schoolgirl was admitted to a church-run hospital for delivery and the new-born was taken away to an orphanage run by nuns a day after birth.

The nuns who stand accused include two who are doctors, Tessy Jose and Ancy Mathew, who work with the Christu Raja hospital at Thokkilangadi where the schoolgirl delivered the baby.

The other accused nuns, Aneeta, Ophelia and Lissy Maria, are attached to the orphanage that took charge of the baby.

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DeSoto Parish youth pastor, high school student arrested on child porn charges

LOUISIANA
KSLA

[with video]

By Jeff Ferrell, Reporter

STONEWALL, LA (KSLA) –
An ArkLaTex youth pastor and North DeSoto High School student have been arrested and charged with pornography involving juveniles, according to the Desoto Parish Sheriff’s Office.

Detective Adam Ewing says they arrested 25-year-old Zachary Almarode on Thursday night along with 18-year-old Lauren Maschino.

Ewing says the arrests came as the result of a tip from a”concerned subject” about possible inappropriate contact on school property between a youth minister and a student. Investigators determined that the contact did not take place on school property, but child pornography was allegedly found on cellular devices belong to both Almarode and Maschino.

Almarode works as a youth pastor at Salem Baptist Church in Stonewall and was approaching his third anniversary on the job. Pastor Dr. Mike Hawkins confirmed Friday morning that Almarode was terminated from that position after word of the arrest.

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Hobart Calvin Christian School believes child abuse claims despite decision not to prosecute

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Bianca Gurra

A Tasmanian Christian school has declared it believes sexual abuse took place at the school more than 25 years ago, despite police ruling they can not take the matters further.

In March 2015, a former student at the Calvin Christian School south of Hobart made an accusation against a male teacher at the school.

The teacher left the school soon after the incident in the 1980s, and he is now believed to be overseas.

Christian Schools Tasmania (CST), the association that operates the school, released a statement saying it had spoken to abuse victims in relation to incidents alleged to have taken place in the 1980s and 90s.

In the statement, CST said their claims were accepted, and the Police and the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse were notified as soon as the issues had come to light.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

50th anniversary commemoration of Magdalene Laundry in New Ross

IRELAND
New Ross Standard

David Looby
March 4 2017

This Sunday marks 50 years since the closure of the Good Shepherd’s Magdalene Laundry in New Ross and to remember the victims of the laundry the fourth annual Flowers for Magdalenes memorial ceremony takes place at 2 p.m. at St Stephen’s cemetery, Irishtown.

Flowers for Magdalenes is a family event and children are welcome to attend. The laundry was located in the Irishtown on the site where the Mercy Convent now stands. It was one of the ten laundries in Ireland and closed its doors in 1967. With the demolition of St Aidan’s Industrial School in December 2015 the communal grave at St Stephen’s cemetery remains the only focal point for Magdalene survivors and their families.

Last year’s intergenerational gathering attracted a large crowd and saw young children, teenagers and older members of the New Ross community gather together respectfully to commemorate the Magdalene women through poetry, song, reflection and the laying of flowers. A musical composition entitled ‘The Emasculated Magdalened Innocence’, penned and performed by local musician Michael Fottrell completed the homage.

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Ireland after the Brits left was never a republic – it was a priest-ridden theocracy which treated women and children as scum

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

BY PAT FLANAGAN
4 MAR 2017

The history books are all wrong. Ireland after the Brits left was never a republic – it was a priest-ridden theocracy which treated woman and children as scum.

How else can you explain the secret burial of hundreds of babies by demonic nuns in a disused septic tank?

The land of saints and scholars was really a Catholic North Korea which had concentration camps for children born outside wedlock and their mothers.

Like the regime of the Kim’s in Korea there was no escape except in death and even then the innocent little ones were dumped in a cesspit instead of being given a Christian burial.

A few years ago Ireland went bust but the revelation that up to 800 children and babies were dumped in a septic tank proved this has always been a morally bankrupt nation.

While it was depraved nuns who did the dirty work, it must never be forgotten that these children were supposed to be in the care of the Irish State.

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We can no longer pretend that the Vatican is getting to grips with the abuse crisis

UNITED KINGDOM
Catholic Herald

by Fr Alexander Lucie-Smith
posted Thursday, 2 Mar 2017

The Pope’s commission has failed to deliver. Marie Collins’s resignation is just the latest example

Marie Collins has resigned from the Pope’s Commission for the Protection of Minors, and her explanation makes damning reading. While some commentators have been pessimistic, others take the view that this is by no means a major piece of news, and is not a sign of trouble for the Pope. John Allen goes so far as to think it may be a blessing in disguise. Austen Ivereigh insists that the resignation is not a sign that the Commission is not working.

We have been here before. Marie Collins is not the first abuse survivor to leave the Commission. Last year Peter Saunders left the Commission on “leave of absence”, and has been discouraged from returning. Some two years ago, John Allen himself pointed out:

It’s not clear if Francis fully grasped this at the time, but when he named survivors to that group, he was handing them significant control over his reputation. If Collins and Saunders were ever to walk out, saying they’d lost confidence or feeling that they’d been exploited for a PR exercise, it would have a vast media echo.

That judgment, from just under two years ago, is surely the right one. The credibility of the Commission depended on its ability to get things done; and the confidence that it would get things done rested largely on the fact that Peter Saunders and Marie Collins were among its members. Now Saunders and Collins have walked, and the reason in both cases is the same: the Commission was not bearing fruit. It was all talk, no action.

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BC Prof: Survivor’s Abuse Panel Resignation Reveals ‘Deep Resistance’ In Vatican To Reforms

MASSACHUSETTS
WBUR

[with audio]

March 02, 2017

By Bob Oakes

The only survivor of clergy sexual abuse on the Vatican commission looking into the abuse crisis has quit. Marie Collins, of Ireland, stepped down on Wednesday saying the commission’s work was met with resistance from some higher-ups in the Vatican. The commission is led by Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley.

Boston College professor Thomas Groome joined Morning Edition to discuss what this resignation means for the investigation into clergy sex abuse.

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Vatican Commission will continue to promote child protection worldwide

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

[with audio]

(Vatican Radio) Survivors of sexual abuse by priests have reacted with concern to the news that Irish abuse survivor Marie Collins has resigned as a member of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors.

In an interview with Vatican Radio on Wednesday, Collins spoke of her frustration at the lack of cooperation from other offices of the Roman Curia with the Commission, set up by Pope Francis in 2014.

Another founding member of the Commission, Jesuit Father Hans Zollner, said on Thursday that despite her resignation, the group would continue its crucial work of promoting a culture of child protection throughout the Church worldwide.

Fr Hans, who also heads the Gregorian University’s Centre for Child Protection, spoke to Vatican Radio’s Alessandro Gisotti..

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Give abuse victims’ families redress: CLAN

AUSTRALIA/NORTHERN IRELAND
9 News

AAP

The families of Australian child sex abuse victims who die while waiting for compensation should receive three-quarters of their redress payments as recommended by a Northern Ireland inquiry, a victims’ advocate says.

Care Leavers Australasia Network CEO Leonie Sheedy says secondary victims should be entitled to compensation, despite Australia’s child sex abuse royal commission rejecting the idea.

Ms Sheedy backed Northern Ireland’s Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry’s recommendation that where victims die before their redress claim has been dealt with, families should be entitled to 75 per cent of the compensation that would have been paid.

‘That’s what should be happening in Australia,” Ms Sheedy told AAP.

“There are secondary victims from this abuse. They’ve been hurt and traumatised by living with people who have been abused in Australia’s orphanages and they’ve suffered a different level of trauma.”

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Kerala priest’s rape of minor: 12, including 5 nuns, may be charged under POCSO

INDIA
The New Indian Express

KOCHI: In a major development in the case related to the rape of a 16-year-old girl, in which a catholic priest in Kannur, the prime accused, has been arrested, the police may book 11 more persons including five nuns under the POCSO (Protection of Children from Sexual Offences) Act.

According to sources, Police is likely to record the arrest of two women on Saturday. The needle of suspicion is also turning against the Child Welfare Committee in Wayanad in northern Kerala where the crime took place.

An anonymous letter received by Childline, the helpline for children, has brought to light a major cover up in the rape of a minor girl by the priest. She delivered a baby nearly a month ago, and attempts were made, allegedly, by nuns to hush it up, instead of reporting the crime of rape.

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Latest: Groups representing families of babies who died in mother and baby homes not informed

IRELAND
Breaking News

Update – 10.15pm: Groups representing the families of babies who died in mother-and-baby homes were not informed that remains have been found at one site.

Today’s media coverage was the first time that many relatives were officially told there were remains at the site in Tuam.

Anna Corrigan’s two brothers were born in the home – but a death certificate was only ever issued for one of them.

She says the Commission is being used to stop a formal investigation into her brother’s disappearance

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‘It was a prison’: Man born in Irish orphanage where mass grave discovered demands apology

IRELAND
CBC News

[with audio]

A man who was born in a former Catholic home for orphans and unwed mothers in Ireland where a mass child grave has been discovered is demanding an apology from church and the government.

P.J. Haverty was born at the state-sanctioned and church-run Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, Galway County, in 1951. He lived there until he was 6 1/2 years old, at which point he was put into foster care against his mother’s will, he said.

“They call it a home, but I call it a prison, ’cause that’s what it was, it was a prison,” Haverty told As It Happens guest host Helen Mann. “There was no love, no nothing.”

A judge-led government commission announced Friday the discovery of an underground structure at the site of the home containing “significant quantities of human remains.”

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Demanding the truth and answers: ‘Significant quantities’ of child remains confirmed at Tuam site

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Saturday, March 04, 2017

Conall Ó Fátharta and Fiachra Ó Cionnaith

Excavations at other mother and baby homes are being demanded after the discovery of “significant quantities” of infant remains at Tuam.

The Mother and Baby Homes Commission announced its findings after the completion of a test excavation of the site which made global headlines after research by local historian Catherine Corless revealed 796 children died in the home run by the Bon Secours Sisters from 1925-1961.

Following test excavations in November/December 2016 and in January/February this year, two large structures were found. One appears to be “a large sewage containment system or septic tank” that had been decommissioned and filled with rubble and debris and covered with top soil.

The second structure is long and divided into 20 chambers. The commission has not yet determined what the purpose of this structure was but it “appears to be related to the treatment/containment of sewage and/or waste water”. It has not yet determined if it was ever used for this purpose.

In the second structure, “significant quantities of human remains” have been discovered in at least 17 of the 20 underground chambers. The dead babies’ ages range from approximately 35 foetal weeks to two to three years.

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Tuam babies scandal will only get more ‘shocking’

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Saturday, March 04, 2017

By Conall Ó Fátharta
Irish Examiner Reporter

The crucial point to note here is that despite all the hand-wringing by politicians, and the repeated utterances of that word “shocking” — the State was well aware of issues around infant deaths and Tuam long before Ms Corless’ work became global news, writes Conal Ó’Fartharta

“Shocking” was the word used by the Mother and Baby Homes Commission and Children’s Minister Katherine Zappone in reacting to the discovery of “significant quantities” of human remains at Tuam.

It’s a word that crops up again and again in relation to the story of Ireland’s mother and baby home system.

That very word was used in an unpublished internal HSE report in 2012 to describe the “wholly epidemic” levels of child death in Cork’s Bessborough Mother and Baby Home — 472 infants and 10 women in a 19-year period.

Two government departments were aware of this information — but an inquiry wasn’t launched for almost another two years.

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‘They were known as the children of sin’

IRELAND
Irish Times

Lorna Siggins

They were known as the “home babies”, and Kevin O’Dwyer says he can still hear the clatter of their hobnail boots on the way to primary school.

O’Dwyer, a retired school principal and longtime resident of Tuam, was reared on the old Athenry road close to the Bon Secours institution.

“We’d hear the boots on the road in the morning,” he says.

”They were always kept back so they wouldn’t arrive at school the same time as the rest of us. That also meant they got a slap for being late – every single day.”

“They had to wear uniforms when the rest of us didn’t, they were put into separate lines, they had a separate area in the playground, and we never even got to know their names,” he says.

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Wider search sought after remains found at Tuam home

IRELAND
Irish Times

Elaine Edwards, Fiach Kelly

Women who were in mother-and-baby homes as recently as the early 1990s have called for investigations into at least two other sites where children were buried after the remains of “several hundred” infants were found at a former home in Tuam.

Gardaí confirmed they were liaising with the coroner’s office in Galway after the Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation said excavations had uncovered “significant quantities” of foetal remains, as well as those of children aged up to three years.

The commission, chaired by Judge Yvonne Murphy, said it was shocked at the discovery.

The remains were contained in at least 17 of 20 underground chambers in what appeared to be a sewage-related structure. It is understood the initial investigation confirmed several hundred bodies located there.

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Fears that Tuam mass grave may extend beneath local houses

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Declan Rooney, Shane Phelan and Kevin Doyle
March 4 2017

Residents fear that the mass grave in Tuam may stretch beyond the mother and baby home and below local houses.

An information meeting for the residents of the Tobar Jarlath and Dublin Road estates in Tuam was called at short notice yesterday by Galway County Council.

But only three residents attended the meeting with local elected representatives and council staff.

According to Cllr Peter Roche, short notice was the reason for the lower-than-expected turnout.
Cllr Roche confirmed that there were concerns locally that the site might be bigger than first thought and could actually stretch into some private residences.

The Tuam Mother and Baby Home closed in 1961 and a few years later the Dublin Road and Tobar Jarlath estates were constructed on and beside the site.

“The residents for the best part chose not to attend the meeting. There was a lot of fear, a lot of emotion and for one reason or another they chose to be briefed at home. And that’s perfectly acceptable,” Cllr Roche said.

“They [the residents] weren’t angry, but they are deeply traumatised, because the suspicions they had for many, many years were confirmed.”

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‘I’m so lucky, I could have been one of the babies’

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Ryan Nugent
March 4 2017

A woman who grew up in the Tuam Mother and Baby Home has admitted she is “lucky” to be alive – following the discovery of human remains at an excavation site in the area.

Significant discoveries were made by the Mother and Baby Homes Commission of children between the ages 35 foetal weeks to 2-3 years.

A woman – known as Breda and who grew up in the home – has admitted her shock at yesterday’s revelations.

Speaking to RTÉ’s ‘Liveline’, Breda, who was there for most of the 1950s, said she found the news “so upsetting”.

Identity

She said that she had been one of the lucky ones and has her foster mother to thank for it.
In recent years she has been in contact with her birth mother along with a number of her extended relations.

“I have met my birth mother, but we don’t get on too well. I met her lots of times and I’m in touch with her,” Breda said.

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I had no idea my simple research would finish up as a major scandal

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Catherine Corless
March 4 2017

When I started out on my research into the Tuam Mother and Baby Home, for the local ‘Historical Journal’, I had envisaged that this was to be just a simple story outlining the history of the home and perhaps getting a story or two on those who were born there.

I had no idea at the time what a storm would emerge as a result of my research into this home.
I revealed my shocking findings locally at first to the religious and those in authority.

But as time went on I became dismayed that there was not much interest in what I was saying.
I had disclosed that I had found the deaths of 798 babies and young children in the Tuam home during the years of its existence – 1925-1961 – and worse, I could not find any details of where they were buried. No one seemed to know.

The only piece of concern and empathy came from a few residents who lived in the new estate that was built on the home grounds, near the burial area, who, in 1974 took it upon themselves to care for this area, after the boys found skeletons in the tank.

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These were the 796 children who died at Tuam Mother and Baby Home

IRELAND
The Journal

THE REMAINS OF infants and toddlers lay for decades at the site at the Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, unmarked, unvisited, unknown.

Investigators for the Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Inquiry yesterday confirmed both that they had uncovered “a significant number” of those children’s remains – and that they dated back to the era during which the home was operational.

Very few pictures from the home exist but thanks to the tireless work of historian Catherine Corless, we do have the names of 796 children who died there between 1925 and 1960.

The infant mortality rate at the home was double that of even other mother and baby homes around the country at the time. Young children in the Tuam home succumbed to deaths from afflictions as heartbreakingly banal as the flu and, although only in a small number of cases, ear infections.

The most common causes of death were “debility from birth” (25%), 15% from “respiratory diseases”, 10% each from influenza and the measles, 8% born too premature to survive, 6% from whooping cough and in smaller numbers of epilepsy/convulsions, gastroenteritis, meningitis, congenital heart disease and congenital syphilis, skin diseases, chicken pox and one per cent – 10 children – of malnutrition.

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Infant and Fetus Remains Are Found at Ex-Home for Unwed Mothers in Ireland

IRELAND
New York Times

By SINEAD O’SHEA MARCH 3, 2017

DUBLIN — The local historian had been telling the authorities for years that dead infants might have been buried in an old sewage system on the grounds of a former home for unmarried mothers and their children in the west of Ireland.

Little attention was paid to her claims at first, but the questions eventually led to the establishment of a state-financed investigation. And on Friday, the investigators said that the remains of babies, small children and fetuses had been found where she said they would.

The discovery, in the County Galway town of Tuam, was announced on the website of the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes. “The commission is shocked by this discovery and is continuing its investigation into who was responsible for the disposal of human remains in this way,” the agency said in a statement.

From 1925 to 1961, the St. Mary’s home was run by the Sisters of Bon Secours, a Roman Catholic order, but was financed by the Irish government. Tests showed that most of the remains were “likely to date from the 1950s,” according to the statement, which added that further examinations were being conducted.

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Town committee is working with state on child sex abuse reporting

MASSACHUSETTS
The Foxboro Reporter

By Bera Dunau The Foxboro Reporter Mar 2, 2017

The Foxboro Child Sexual Abuse Awareness Committee is hitting the books

At its February meeting, the committee discussed the input it received on Jan. 23 from Massachusetts State Rep. Theodore Speliotis, D-Danvers on its effort to expand the definition of a mandatory reporter for child abuse and neglect in Foxboro. Speliotis is the House Third Reading Committee Chairman, and he expressed a preference for expanding the definition statewide, as opposed to just in Foxboro.

“He alluded that they (the legislature) don’t like to do that, because it confuses people,” said Foxboro Child Sexual Abuse Awareness Committee Chair Bob Correia.

Two bills have been submitted in the legislature, one which would expand the definition statewide and another that is a home rule petition that would just do so in Foxboro.

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More delays for Moravian pastors on sex charge

JAMAICA
Loop

The application to have the sex cases of two Moravian clergymen transferred to Kingston from Manchester was again postponed Thursday.

The matter is now rescheduled for May 24 in the Manchester Circuit Court. The postponement this time is due to the prosecution asking for time to peruse documents disclosed on it by the defence.

The prosecution is to ask for the case against Rev Paul Gardner and Pastor Jermaine Gibson to be transferred to the Home Circuit Court for trial.

Gardner and Gibson were arrested Monday, January 23 and charged with carnal abuse in relation to the reported incident that occurred in 2002 and 2004.

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New Ulm Diocese to file for Chapter 11 protection

MINNESOTA
The Journal

MAR 4, 2017

KEVIN SWEENEY
Editor
ksweeney@nujournal.com

NEW ULM — The Diocese of New Ulm is filing for Chapter 11 reorganization as it seeks to settle the lawsuits filed against it as a result of clerical sex abuse of children.

The Minnesota Child Victims Act lifted the statute of limitations for victims of child sex abuse, setting up a three-year period when victims of past sexual abuse could seek damages. That period ended last May, and the Diocese of New Ulm and some of its parishes are facing 101 lawsuits.

The Diocese is the third in the state to seek protection under U.S. bankruptcy laws for its sexual abuse lawsuits. The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, and the Duluth Diocese are the other two. The diocese is filing its petition with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Minnesota.

Bishop John LeVoir, head of the New Ulm Diocese, said Friday the diocese is seeking reorganization to assure that all claimants will be fairly compensated with the assets the diocese has available. If the diocese tried to handle each case separately it would exhaust its resources after the first few cases, leaving nothing for the rest of the victims.

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Pastor rape case: Church must stand by the victims and not protect its own

INDIA
One India

Written by: Vicky Nanjappa Updated: Saturday, March 4, 2017

The case of Kerala priest Robin Vadakkumchery who was finally caught after the victim became pregnant reminds me of the movie Spotlight. In that movie it is shown how the Boston Archdiocese was aware of instances of sexual abuse by priests. It also shows how influence was wielded on the police, media as well the judiciary to hush up the matter.

In Kerala, the public anger is clear against the Catholic Church after allegations of the shielding the pastor accused of raping a minor girl cropped up. It was a call that was made to a helpline which led to the tracing of the new-born child to a church-run orphanage.

Allegations of a cover up cropped up during the course of the investigation. It was found that the pastor had convinced the father of the victim to take the blame.

The Kerala police must probe further into this case. The victim gave birth at a hospital and then the baby was sent to an orphanage. Who were the persons who abetted this cover up? It was all hush-hush until that anonymous call was made by a Good Samaritan to the government child helpline.

The police say that in such cases, the victims go directly to the higher ups in the church. “They should come to the police station instead. The problem is that they fear social stigma, and hence seek recourse in the church itself. There are also several cases where the victims have remained quiet about it and suffer in silence. This should change and if victims and their parents go to the police, then the problem could be sorted out,” a police officer says.

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Release of Catholic priest accused of sexual abuse of children prompts backlash

CANADA
Global News

By Gloria Henriquez

The release of a Montreal priest accused of sexually assaulting children has prompted swift backlash.

56-year-old Brian Boucher is facing several charges related to the sexual abuse of children.

He was released on bail on Thursday with several conditions, including staying away from minors.

The Committee of Victims of Priests says the fact that Boucher was transferred from church to church was a sign something was wrong.

The group’s members believe it’s time for an investigation into the upper echelons of Quebec’s Catholic Church.

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Canon lawyers weigh in on Vatican’s Guam investigation

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio , heugenio@guampdn.com March 4, 2017

Canon lawyer Jennifer Haselberger said she does not wish to say anything critical of the victims or their attorneys, but thinks it was a mistake not to participate in the Vatican canonical trial process.

Haselberger is one of two canon lawyers, as well as a longtime Catholic church blogger, who weighed in on the Vatican’s ongoing investigation on Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron. Apuron is accused of sexual abusing altar boys in the 1970s.

On advice from their lawyer David Lujan, former altar boys accusing Apuron of sexual abuse did not meet with the Vatican team when it traveled to Guam in mid-February, because Lujan was not allowed to be present.

The Vatican tribunal led by Cardinal Raymond Leo Burke came to hear from witnesses as part of the Apuron investigation.

“Without the evidence provided by the victims, it is possible that the tribunal will not have enough upon which to base an affirmative decision,” Haselberger told Pacific Daily News. “And yes, the tribunal may consider that their refusal to participate reflects negatively on their claims.”

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March 3, 2017

GUAM ARCHBISHOP: SETTLEMENTS PROMISING END TO ABUSE LAWSUITS

GUAM
Associated Press

BY GRACE GARCES BORDALLO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

HAGATNA, Guam (AP) — The leader of Guam’s Catholic Church believes financial settlements could be a good solution for the archdiocese, which is facing $115 million in civil lawsuits alleging child sexual abuse at the hands of priests.

Archbishop Michael Byrnes told The Associated Press Friday that settling with the alleged victims would be a “real promising option,” but he did not elaborate.

In 2016, the Rev. Louis Brouillard told the AP that he molested about 20 boys while he was a priest in Guam over a 30-year period, starting in the 1940s.

Byrnes said the 95-year-old Brouillard is the main figure in the 23 lawsuits, and that the church will pay for some of the priest’s legal fees.

“We’re not paying the legal defense of the accused,” Byrnes said. “In the specific case of Father Brouillard, we are going to pay for a lawyer for his deposition.”

Byrnes says the archdiocese has revamped its sexual abuse policies and will have greater financial transparency, adding that the archdiocese would like to avoid bankruptcy.

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Police seek more alleged victims of priest charged with sexual offences

CANADA
Montreal Gazette

JOHN MEAGHER, MONTREAL GAZETTE

Police believe there may be more alleged victims of Brian Boucher, a Montreal priest who is facing several charges related to sexual offences against minors allegedly committed between 1994 and 2011.

Boucher was charged Thursday with sexual assault, sexual touching, sexual interference and breaking and entering.

He was first arrested Jan. 12, but later released under strict conditions. However, he was arrested again on Wednesday after two more complaints surfaced.

Police said Boucher, 56, was still working as a priest when he was arrested this week, but the Archdiocese of Montreal released a statement Thursday that suggests otherwise.

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Tuam babies: PR chief Terry Prone: ‘there appears to be a lot more to it’

IRELAND
Irish Times

Mark Hilliard

The head of a PR company who appeared to play down concerns surrounding the mother-and-baby home in Tuam two years ago has conceded there now “appears to be a whole lot more to it”.

Terry Prone, whose company The Communications Clinic acts for the Bon Secours religious order at the centre of the investigation, wrote to a French TV company when the issue first arose saying they would find “no mass grave” at the Tuam home.

“If you come here you’ll find no mass grave, no evidence that children were ever so buried and a local police force casting their eyes to heaven and saying, ‘Yeah a few bones were found – but this was an area where famine victims were buried. So?’,” Ms Prone wrote to the France 2 documentary producer who had contacted the order looking for information on the subject.

She continued: “Several international TV stations have aborted their plans to make documentaries because essentially all that can be said is Ireland in the first half of the 20th century was a moralistic, inward looking, anti-feminist country of exaggerated religiosity which most of us knew already.”

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Nevada Assembly panel OKs bill extending statute of limitations in child sex abuse cases

NEVADA
Las Vegas Review-Journal

By BEN BOTKIN
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

CARSON CITY — The Assembly Judiciary Committee on Friday passed a bill that would give child sexual abuse victims another decade to sue their perpetrators.

Assembly Bill 145 would extend the Nevada statute of limitations for victims to sue by another decade, from 10 years to 20 years. The clock on the statute of limitations would start after a victim turns 18 or discovers an injury was caused by the abuse, whichever comes later.

Supporters say the measure would help victims who often take years to realize that they were victimized as children and confront their abusers.

The measure passed unanimously and now goes to the full Assembly for a vote.

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Woman went to Tuam home after seeing child with ‘skull on a stick’

IRELAND
Irish Times

Elaine Edwards

A woman who visited the site of the Tuam mother and baby home four decades ago has recalled seeing what appeared like mineral bottles rolled up in cloth on top of each other when the ground collapsed under her.

“I was a few feet away from something I couldn’t explain. Now I would describe it as a Cidona bottle or a Coke bottle rolled up in a cloth and they were all piled on top of each other like sausages,” said Mary Moriarty.

Speaking on RTÉ’s Liveline programme on Friday, she said she was later told by a woman who had worked on the grounds that they were the “little baby graves”.

She had gone to the site in the summer of 1975 after a child on the street “had a skull on a stick, shaking it”. She said there was “rubble and stuff” where the home was being demolished and the existing graveyard there was overgrown and covered in bushes. The ground collapsed beneath her and she “landed down in something”.

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Social media ‘lights up’ in memory of Tuam mothers and babies

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Catherine Devine
March 3 2017

Social media users have paid tribute to all the mothers and babies who were at the Tuam Mother and Baby Home.

It emerged today that significant quantities of human remains were discovered at the site excavated by the Mother and Baby Homes Commission.

In the memory of all those who were at the home, social media users are lighting a candle in their homes to remember those who suffered.

Colm O’Gorman from Amnesty International Ireland set up the initiative asking people to “light up twitter and our homes in memory of those children”.

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IRELAND’S “MASS GRAVES” STORY IS FAKE NEWS

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on news stories that Catholic nuns in Ireland housed a mass grave of babies:

It was a lie in 2014 and it is a lie in 2017. There is no evidence of a mass grave outside a home for unmarried women operated by nuns in Tuam, Ireland, near Galway, in the 20th century. The hoax is now back again, and an obliging media are running with the story as if it were true.

Any objective and independent reporter would be able to report what I am about to say, but unfortunately there are too many lazy and incompetent reporters prepared to swallow the latest moonshine about the Catholic Church. If there were a Pulitzer for Fake News, the competition would be fierce.

Ireland’s Mother and Baby Commission completed its inquiry into this issue and released a statement on March 3rd about its findings today. The probe was a response to allegations made by a local historian, Catherine Corless, who claimed that 800 babies were buried in a tank outside the former Mother and Baby home that was operated by the Bon Secours nuns.

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Irish survivor Marie Collins’s resignation from a papal commission on child protection exposes the Vatican

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

Joanne McCarthy
4 Mar 2017

A FORMER trainee Catholic priest who gave evidence at the child abuse royal commission has slammed Pope Francis as “all words and no action” after the sudden resignation of the only abuse survivor on a Vatican commission for child protection.

Lawyer and former trainee priest Kieran Tapsell said he did not accept commentary that the Pope was “somehow prevented by an intransigent Curia” from acting quickly and decisively to change church responses to child sex crimes, after the resignation of Irish abuse survivor Marie Collins.

Mr Tapsell argued strongly at the royal commission that the church would not change until the Pope changed canon law and removed the secrecy provisions that protected church offenders, and the church from scrutiny about how it dealt with them.

“Pope Francis is an absolute monarch. He can change canon law imposing secrecy over all information obtained by the church on child sexual abuse cases with the stroke of a pen,” Mr Tapsell said.

“If bishops don’t do what he says, he can sack them. As Justice Peter McClellan told the royal commission, if there is to be any real change to the church in Australia, ultimately it has to come from Rome.”

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Victim backs review

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

Melissa Cunningham
@MeljCunningham

3 Mar 2017

Paul Levey has never been back to Mortlake.

Not since he was sexually abused at the hands of disgraced paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale at the age of 14, while living with him at presbytery in the small western Victorian town in 1982.

“I don’t think I could ever bring myself to go back there,” he said.

“I only have horrible memories.”

Mr Levey was said he’d been left “gutted” to learn there were still plaques in south-western Victorian Catholic schools and churches honouring disgraced former Bishop of Ballarat Ronald Mulkearns.

Bishop Mulkearns was among a number of clergy who knew Ridsdale had a boy living with him, but failed to intervene.

Mr Levey welcomed a move by Warrnambool’s St Joseph’s Primary School to review whether to retain a plaque with the name of the disgraced former Bishop Mulkearns.

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New Ulm diocese third in Minnesota to file for bankruptcy

MINNESOTA
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe | Mar. 3, 2017

A third Catholic diocese in Minnesota facing clergy sexual abuse lawsuits has declared bankruptcy, as New Ulm filed on March 3 for financial reorganization under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.

In announcing the decision, the diocese cited the 101 lawsuits brought against it during the three-year window into the state’s statutes of limitations on civil cases involving sexual abuse of minors, which was opened by the 2013 Minnesota Child Victims Act. That window closed May 25, 2016.

Since the law lifted the statutes of limitations, three of six Minnesota dioceses have filed for bankruptcy: first, the St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese in January 2015, which was followed that December by the Duluth diocese. Both of those bankruptcies remain ongoing.

In the Twin Cities case, creditors will be mailed ballots in the next 30 days to vote on two reorganization plans — one each put forth by the archdiocese and the creditors’ committee — at which point they will have 40 days to respond. The outcome will be taken into account by the judge, who will make the final decision.

Duluth is the 14th Catholic diocese in the U.S. to file for bankruptcy related to the sexual abuse of children by clergy. In addition, two religious orders have also filed for bankruptcy protection, according to Bishop-Accountability.org.

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New Ulm Diocese Files for Bankruptcy

MINNESOTA
KSTP

March 03, 2017 10:45 AM

The Diocese of New Ulm announced Friday that it has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

The diocese covers 15 counties in south and west-central Minnesota.

According to officials, the Diocese of New Ulm is the 16th diocese or religious order in the United States to file for bankruptcy in recent years.

In Minnesota, both the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis as well as the Diocese of Duluth filed for bankruptcy in 2015. Both cases are still pending.

“The (Diocese of New Ulm) bankruptcy filing does not stop the pursuit of justice for sexual abuse survivors,” Attorney Mike Finnegan said in a statement. “Survivors will continue to seek truth and accountability in the bankruptcy process.”

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New Ulm diocese files for bankruptcy in response to clergy sex abuse claims

MINNESOTA
The Catholic Spirit

Maria Wiering | March 3, 2017

The Diocese of New Ulm filed for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code March 3 in response to 101 lawsuits related to clergy sexual abuse claims made against it. The lawsuits were filed during the Minnesota Child Victims Act’s three-year lifting of the statute of limitations that ended May 25, 2015.

In a statement, Bishop John LeVoir said that “reorganization is the fairest way to resolve sexual abuse claims while allowing the Church to continue its essential work of serving people in our local communities” and reiterated his “deepest apologies on behalf of the Diocese of New Ulm to victims and survivors of clergy sexual abuse as minors.”

“Victims and survivors have shown incredible courage by stepping forward to help prevent such a tragedy from ever happening again. Victims and survivors must be treated with dignity and just compensation is owed them, as well as our daily prayers. These are integral to the healing process,” he said.

Bishop LeVoir was a priest of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis prior to his episcopal appointment to New Ulm.

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Catholic diocese in Minnesota files for bankruptcy over sex abuse

MINNESOTA
Reuters

By Jim Christie

A Catholic diocese in Minnesota filed for bankruptcy on Friday, joining more than a dozen other U.S. Catholic districts and religious orders driven to seek protection from creditors by the church’s clergy sex abuse scandal.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of New Ulm, which is southwest of Minneapolis, said in a statement it will use Chapter 11 bankruptcy to reorganize its finances and produce a plan to pay creditors.

The rural diocese is defending 101 lawsuits involving alleged sex abuse by clergy mostly from the 1950s through the 1970s. Minnesota had lifted the civil statute of limitations for a period of three years ending May 25, 2016, allowing claims from prior decades to be brought.

“It is unknown how long this will take, but we seek to complete the reorganization process as promptly and efficiently as possible,” the diocese said.

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Zappone urged to publish mother and baby homes report

IRELAND
RTE News

Two campaign groups have urged the Minister for Children to publish an outstanding report on mother and baby homes, and said the State must ensure that all human remains buried in unmarked graves at institutions in Ireland are identified.

The Adoption Rights Alliance and Justice for Magdalenes Research groups demanded that Katherine Zappone publish a five-month-old report from the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes on the issue of broadening the probe’s terms of reference.

On receiving the interim report last September, Ms Zappone said she intended to publish it after considering its findings.

She promised she would do so “as quickly as possible” because she was “mindful that many people and their families have strong personal connections to the work of this commission”.

At the time she also announced that she was sending the report to the attorney general for her advice and that she would respond to the issues raised by the statutory commission in consultation with her Cabinet colleagues.

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MASS GRAVE FIND Katherine Zappone says ‘disturbing’ discovery of children’s remains at former Tuam mother-and-baby home ‘not unexpected’

IRELAND
The Irish Sun

By Kieran Dineen, Public Affairs Correspondent and Emma O’Rourke
3rd March 2017

The Children’s Minister has said the discovery of children’s remains at the site of the former mother and baby home in Tuam was “not unexpected”.

Katherine Zappone made her remarks after the Mother and Baby Homes Commission released a statement confirming the find.

The results of the excavation dig in November and December 2016 show that “significant quantities of human remains” were discovered in at least 17 of the 20 underground chambers which were examined.

The recovered corpses range in age from 35 foetal weeks to 2-3 years old.

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Nuns who ran Tuam home have ‘no comment’ to make on today’s revelations

IRELAND
The Journal

THE RELIGIOUS ORDER that ran the Tuam mother and baby home where human remains have been found said it can make no comment on today’s announcement.

It did, however, reiterate its support for the Commission of Investigation into the home.

The Bon Secours sisters ran the home until it closed in 1961. All of the records for the home were given to Galway County Council at that time.

Today, it was confirmed that a “significant” amount of human remains were found on a site connected to the mother and baby home. The area had been flagged as a possible mass burial site by researcher Catherine Corless.

When asked for a statement on the issue, the nuns said:

The Bon Secours sisters are fully committed to the work of the Commission regarding the mother and baby home in Tuam. On the closing of the Home in 1961 all the records for the Home were returned to Galway County Council who are the owners and occupiers of the lands of the Home. We can therefore make no comment on today’s announcement, other than to confirm our continued cooperation with and support for the work of the Commission in seeking the truth about the home.

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Amnesty calls for site surveys at Mother & Baby Homes in Northern Ireland, as human remains found in Tuam

IRELAND
Amnesty International

Amnesty International has called for an inquiry into allegations of decades of abuse suffered in Mother and Baby Homes in Northern Ireland, including site surveys to check if there are unmarked burials of babies and infants.

The renewed call from Amnesty comes after Ireland’s Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes has discovered a significant number of human remains in a decommissioned sewage chamber at a Mother and Baby Home in Tuam.

The organisation has called for a probe into abuse which former residents allege occurred in Mother and Baby Homes in Northern Ireland over a period of decades.

Amnesty International’s Northern Ireland Programme Director, Patrick Corrigan, said:

“Women in Northern Ireland have told Amnesty they suffered arbitrary detention, forced labour, ill-treatment, and the removal and forced adoption of their babies – criminal acts in both domestic and international law.

“Some also suspect that there was unofficial disposal of the remains of babies and infants who died at the homes.

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EXPERTS FIND MASS GRAVE AT EX-CATHOLIC ORPHANAGE IN IRELAND

IRELAND
Associated Press

BY SHAWN POGATCHNIK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DUBLIN (AP) — A mass grave containing the remains of babies and young children has been discovered at a former Catholic orphanage in Ireland, government-appointed investigators announced Friday in a finding that offered the first conclusive proof following a historian’s efforts to trace the fates of nearly 800 children who perished there.

The judge-led Mother and Baby Homes Commission said excavations since November at the site of the former Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, County Galway, had found an underground structure divided into 20 chambers containing “significant quantities of human remains.”

The commission said DNA analysis of selected remains confirmed the ages of the dead ranged from 35 weeks to 3 years old and were buried chiefly in the 1950s, when the overcrowded facility was one of more than a dozen in Ireland offering shelter to orphans, unwed mothers and their children. The Tuam home closed in 1961.

Friday’s findings provided the first proof after decades of suspicions that the vast majority of children who died at the home had been interred on the site in unmarked graves. That was a common, but ill-documented practice at such Catholic-run facilities amid high child mortality rates in early 20th century Ireland.

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Amnesty calls for full investigation into Tuam home

IRELAND
Irish Times

Elaine Edwards

Amnesty International has called on the Government to ensure that the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes fully investigates alleged human rights abuses, following the discovery of “significant” quantities of human remains in Tuam, Co Galway.

The commission confirmed on Friday remains had been found in what appeared to be a septic tank, although it could not confirm whether the structure had ever been used for sewage.

“Today’s distressing revelations underline the need to ensure that this commission of investigation is a meaningful opportunity to finally and fully ensure truth and accountability for what happened to women and children in these institutions,” said Colm O’Gorman, executive director of Amnesty International Ireland.

“Our thoughts are very much with those most affected by today’s reports, the women who were former residents of the home and their loved ones.”

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Baby remains found in mass grave at ex-Irish orphanage

IRELAND
Aljazeera

A mass grave containing the remains of babies has been found in the sewers of a former Catholic orphanage in western Ireland, according to investigators, confirming a local historian’s suspicions of the unmarked burial of hundreds of children.

Excavations found “significant quantities of human remains” in an underground structure divided into 20 chambers at the site of the former Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, County Galway, a report from a government-appointed inquiry said on Friday.

The judge-led Mother and Baby Homes Commission said DNA analysis of selected remains confirmed the ages of the dead ranged from 35 weeks to 3 years old.

The investigators did not say how many babies’ remains were recovered, or how many might still be buried in what are believed to be the home’s sewage or waste water treatment system.

The announcement confirms decades of suspicions that the vast majority of children who died at the former home were buried in unmarked graves, a relatively common practice at such Catholic-run facilities amid high child mortality rates in early 20th century Ireland.

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Community coming to terms with discovery of childrens’ bodies at Tuam mother and baby home

IRELAND
Connacht Tribune

Galway Bay fm newsroom – The community in Tuam and affected families around the world are this evening coming to terms with the shocking confirmation that an unspecified number of babies and children were buried at the site of the former mother and baby home in the town.

The Commission of Investigation into mother and baby homes across Ireland has been carrying out excavations at the location in recent months.

The story is this evening being featured by national and international media outlets.

The Commission of Investigation examining the issue says the shocking discovery was made in 17 of 20 underground chambers intended to be used as part of a sewage system.

Tests on a sample of the remains have dated to them to the 1950s – when the mother and baby home was in operation.

Children’s Minister Katherine Zappone says the discovery is not unexpected, but is still deeply disturbing and must be appropriately responded to.

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Remains of babies found at Irish home run by nuns

IRELAND
The Times

Catherine Sanz
March 3 2017
The Times

A “significant” amount of infant human remains has been discovered in underground sewage chambers at a former home for unmarried mothers and their babies in Ireland.

A commission set up to investigate alleged abuse at religious-run mother and baby homes has been carrying out an excavation at the former institution in Tuam, Co Galway, which was managed by the Bon Secours Sisters, an order of Catholic nuns.

It said it was shocked by the discovery of “significant quantities of human remains” in at least 17 of 20 underground chambers being excavated in recent weeks.

The commission was set up two years ago by the Irish government to examine state-sanctioned and mostly religious-run institutions used to house pregnant mothers.

It was charged with investigating high mortality rates at mother and baby homes across several decades of the 20th century, the burial practices at these sites and also secret and illegal adoptions and vaccine trials on children.

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‘It wasn’t a home, it was a prison’: Former residents from Tuam mother and baby home react

IRELAND
The Journal

FORMER RESIDENTS FROM the Mother and Baby Home at Tuam have described the experience of being taken away from their mothers following today’s revelation about the mass grave at the site.

Earlier today, it was announced that the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes discovered a significant number of human remains in what appears to be a decommissioned sewage chamber in Tuam.

The Commission has completed two test excavations of the Galway site and today confirmed that “significant quantities of human remains have been discovered” in a structure which appears to be “related to the treatment/containment of sewerage and/or wastewater”.

The structure where the remains were found is long and divided into 20 chambers. The Commission is not yet clear if it was ever used for sewerage or wastewater.

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Castlepollard Mother and Baby Home survivor: ‘We’re not shocked by the news’

IRELAND
The Journal

Paul Redmond was born in Castlepollard Mother and Baby Home, transferred to Saint Patrick’s Mother and Baby Home in Dublin, and then adopted at 17 days old, on mid winter’s day 1964. He has been an activist, campaigner and researcher into Mother and Baby Homes for several years, and has founded three activist or support groups.

THE SURVIVOR COMMUNITY is not shocked by the latest news that hundreds of bodies of babies and children have been “discovered” at the site of the former Mother and Baby Home at Tuam. This is something we have known for many years.

What is shocking is that once again we have to learn of this news via the media.

The communications skills of the Minister and the Commission of Inquiry leave a lot to be desired when it comes to keeping the survivor community up to date with developments.

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Child migrants ‘used for perverted desires’ in orphanage

UNITED KINGDOM/AUSTRALIA
BBC News

A former child migrant has described the Australian orphanage he was sent to as “a concentration camp”.

A statement by John Francis Hanley was read to the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA).

Mr Hanley was migrated to Australia aged six and placed in the Castledare Orphanage near Perth, run by Roman Catholic order the Christian Brothers.

The children were “beaten, abused and used for the Brothers’ perverted desires,” the inquiry heard.

Mr Hanley, who was born in 1947, described being sexually abused by two Christian Brothers, both in his bed and in their rooms.

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She was right: How Catherine Corless uncovered what happened in Tuam

IRELAND
The Journal

CATHERINE CORLESS SAYS she is not shocked by the confirmation today that a large number of children’s bodies have been found at the former mother and baby home in Tuam, Co Galway. The only thing she is surprised about is how the news is already out in the open.

“So many things get covered up these days, I am just so thankful that this has come out,” she told TheJournal.ie this afternoon. “I think I half expected that it would be toned down or covered up in some way.”

At a hastily-convened press conference this morning, Minister for Children Katherine Zappone confirmed that a ‘significant’ number of human remains have been discovered at the site of the former Bon Secours home in Tuam. A forensic analysis of some of the remains has found that they were children, ranging from tiny babies to 2-3-year-olds.

It is not yet known how many children were buried at the site. “We simply don’t know the numbers,” Zappone told the media.

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Woman who exposed Tuam mass baby grave told to ‘just leave them there’

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

BY TREVOR QUINN
3 MAR 2017

The woman who exposed the sickening Tuam mass baby grave today revealed that she had been told: “Just leave them there.”

Today brought shocking confirmation that hundreds of infants were discarded in the septic tank of a former mother and baby home, following recent digs in the Galway town.

Historian Catherine Corless, 62, who drove the campaign for justice for nearly 800 dead tots, said she was told to IGNORE their plight.

She said when she started her research it was “nicely covered in and forgotten about”.

“I was asked, ‘What are you doing? It’s a long time ago. If there’s bodies there just leave them’.”

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‘VERY DISTURBING’ Mass grave containing remains of babies discovered in sewage tank at notorious mother and baby home where ‘800 children died’

IRELAND
The Sun

By John Shammas
3rd March 2017

A MASS grave thought to contain the remains of babies and young children has been discovered at a former Catholic orphanage in Ireland where almost 800 perished in deaths that were never documented.

The Mother and Baby Homes Commission said excavations since November at the site of the former Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, County Galway, had made disturbing discoveries.

Investigators have found an underground structure divided into 20 chambers containing “significant quantities of human remains”.

DNA analysis of selected remains confirmed the ages of the dead ranged from 35 weeks to three years old and were buried mainly in the 1950s.

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Mother and Baby Homes commission uncovers the dark legacy of a submissive society

IRELAND
Irish Times

The scale of remains found in Tuam burial ground has caused profound upset

Confirmation that the remains of a significant number of babies and infants up to three years of age, probably in their hundreds, have been found on the site of the former mother and baby home in Tuam, Co Galway, has prompted profound upset.

It follows an investigation by the Commission on Mother and Baby Homes which carried out planned excavations there in 2015. The commission’s admission that it was “shocked” by the scale of the discovery reflects the disturbing circumstances of what has the hallmarks of inhuman burial.

Test trenches were dug revealing two large structures. The fact that one structure appears to be a sewage containment system or septic tank that had been decommissioned and filled with rubble adds to the distress of those trying to come to terms with this dark episode. The second connected structure is divided into 20 chambers; 17 of which contained remains.

These related to individuals with age-at-death ranges from approximately 35 foetal weeks to two to three years. Radiocarbon testing suggests they date from the timeframe relevant to the operation of the home, from 1925 to 1961. This was not (as suggested by some) a Famine grave from the mid 19th century when mass burial became the norm in desperate times.

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NEW ULM DIOCESE IN SOUTHERN MINNESOTA FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY

MINNESOTA
Associated Press

BY AMY FORLITI
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minnesota diocese filed for bankruptcy protection on Friday, the 14th nationwide and third in the state to do so in the face of mounting claims of sexual abuse by clergy.

The Diocese of New Ulm, which covers 15 counties in rural south and west-central Minnesota, said in a statement that filing for bankruptcy protection is the fairest way to compensate victims of clergy sexual abuse while continuing its operations. Bishop John LeVoir also apologized to victims and abuse survivors.

“Victims and survivors have shown incredible courage by stepping forward to help prevent such a tragedy from ever happening again,” LeVoir said in a statement. “Victims and survivors must be treated with dignity and just compensation is owed them, as well as our daily prayers.”

The diocese and some of its parishes faced 101 lawsuits under a Minnesota law that created a three-year window for victims of past sexual abuse to file claims. That window closed in May 2016. The diocese said that reorganization will help make sure all victims are compensated, noting that if the cases were resolved one by one, available assets and insurance would be used up before all cases could be heard.

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Diocese of New Ulm to file for Chapter 11 over sex abuse claims

MINNESOTA
The Journal

NEW ULM — Bishop John LeVoir of the Diocese of the New Ulm has instructed attorneys to file for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy code as it deals with the lawsuits that have been filed alleging childhood sexual abuse by diocesan priests.

A total of 101 lawsuits were filed against the diocese during three-year term set up by the Minnesota Child Victims Act, which lifted the statute of limitations on historical childhood sexual abuse claims.

The reorganization doesn’t include parishes, Catholic schools or other Catholic organizations served by the diocese.

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Abus sexuels en Valais: l’évêque de Sion promet d’enquêter en cas de soupçon

SUISSE
Le Nouvelliste

[Sexual Abuse in Valais: The Bishop of Sion promises to investigate suspicion of abuse.]

PAR CHRISTINE SAVIOZ

PEDOPHILIE – Après l’interview de Jean-Marie Fürbringer, l’une des victimes valaisannes du capucin pédophile, l’évêque de Sion a accepté de réagir. Il l’affirme: les prêtres abuseurs seront poursuivis.

A la découverte du témoignage de Jean-Marie Fürbringer abusé par le Père Joël à Saint-Maurice dans les années septante (voir le Nouvelliste de mercredi), Mgr Jean-Marie Lovey confie avoir été «très ému. J’ai été touché par la souffrance qu’il ressent tant d’années après les faits.»

En réponse à Jean-Marie Fürbringer qui dénonce «un manque de courage» du diocèse de Sion dans la lutte contre les abus sexuels commis par les prêtres, Mgr Lovey a accepté de répondre.

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Abus sexuels: le Valaisan victime du capucin pédophile témoigne

SUISSE
Le Nouvelliste

PAR CHRISTINE SAVIOZ

ABUS – Né à Saint-Maurice en 1963, Jean-Marie Fürbringer est l’une des victimes du Père Joël, le capucin pédophile dénoncé par Daniel Pittet dans son livre-témoignage récent. Etabli aujourd’hui à Lausanne, devenu physicien, il raconte son parcours. A découvrir en vidéo.

«Je dois m’occuper de cet enfant de 11 ans abusé qui est en moi.» Dans son salon familial à Lausanne, Jean-Marie Fürbringer (53 ans) prononce ces mots avec émotion. Ce Valaisan de naissance, physicien de métier, est l’une des nombreuses victimes du père Joël, le capucin dénoncé par le fribourgeois Daniel Pittet dans un livre-témoignage. Jean-Marie Fürbringer est la seule personne abusée en Valais à avoir déposé plainte à Saint-Maurice contre son abuseur en 1995. Plainte cependant refusée pour cause de faits prescrits. Pour rappel, le père Joël a passé trois ans au foyer des capucins agaunois dans les années septante (voir «Le Nouvelliste» du 15 février 2017).

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Auch Walliser Opfer von Joël Allaz erzählt von Übergriffen

SCHWEIZ
cath.ch

[The accused pedophile Kapuziner Joël Allaz has also committed sexual assaults in the Valais. Now a victim in the newspaper Le Nouvelliste (March 1) speaks of what the Capuchin has done to him.]

Sitten SV, 2.3.17 (kath.ch) Der pädophile Kapuziner Joël Allaz hat auch im Wallis sexuelle Übergriffe begangen. Nun spricht ein Opfer gegenüber der Zeitung «Le Nouvelliste» (1. März) von dem, was ihm der Kapuziner angetan hat. Das Opfer Jean-Marie Fürbringer (53) wirft dem aktuellen Bischof von Sitten, Jean-Marie Lovey, in einem weiteren Beitrag der Zeitung (2. März) zudem einen «Mangel an Mut» vor im Kampf gegen sexuellen Missbrauch.

Dem Bericht vom 1. März zufolge wohnte Allaz in den 1970er Jahren während drei Jahren im Kapuzinerkloster von Saint-Maurice VS. Jean-Marie Fürbringer war ungefähr zehn Jahre alt, als sich der Kapuziner an ihn heranmachte. Er wohnte mit seinen Eltern in Lavey, einer Ortschaft neben Saint-Maurice. Der Knabe hatte in der Schule Mühe mit der Rechtschreibung. Laut der Zeitung bot Allaz den Eltern von Jean-Marie an, ihrem Sohn Nachhilfestunden zu geben. Im Rahmen dieser Nachhilfestunden kam es zu den mehreren Übergriffen, die Fürbringer gegenüber der Zeitung beschreibt.

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Bischof von Würzburg wollte ein weiteres Gutachten

DEUTSCHLAND
Main Post

The accusation against a clergyman has ended but the Wurzburg bishop wanted another opinion.]

Missbrauchsvorwurf: Die Ermittlungen gegen einen Geistlichen sind beendet. Das war bekannt. Doch nun gibt es im Fall „Alexandra W.“ einen bislang unbekannten Aspekt.

Nun hat auch die Diözese Würzburg offiziell mitgeteilt, dass die Ermittlungen des Missbrauchsbeauftragten gegen einen ihrer Geistlichen beendet sind. Wie diese Redaktion bereits berichtete, hat Professor Klaus Laubenthal das Verfahren Ende Januar eingestellt.

Insgesamt hatte der Ordinarius für Kriminologie und Strafrecht an der Uni Würzburg zwei Vorwürfe sexuellen Missbrauchs gegen den Priester geprüft. Den ersten hat Alexandra W. 2013 erhoben. Zu diesem ersten Vorwurf gab es eine kirchenrechtliche Voruntersuchung. Dieses Verfahren wurde im Dezember 2015 eingestellt. Nach weltlichem Strafrecht war der Fall verjährt.

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Missbrauch: Vatikan weist Vorwürfe zurück

VATIKAN
religion@orf

[Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Mueller has reproached the allegation that the Vatican is not resolutely opposed to abuse.]

Kurienkardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller hat den Vorwurf, der Vatikan gehe nicht entschieden genug gegen Missbrauchstäter vor, zurückgewiesen.

„Das ist nicht der Fall. Man muss verstehen, dass wir als Kirche kein weltliches Urteil fällen“, sagte der Präfekt der Glaubenskongregation der „Frankfurter Allgemeinen Zeitung“ (Freitag-Ausgabe) im Interview. Zuvor hatte der Rücktritt des einzigen verbliebenen Missbrauchsopfers Marie Collins aus der päpstlichen Kinderschutzkommission für Kritik gesorgt – mehr dazu in Missbrauchsopfer verlässt Vatikan-Kommission.

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War der Papst zu barmherzig? -Ein Missbrauchsfall in Italien wirft neue Fragen au

ROME
cath.ch

[Was the Pope too merciful? – An abuse situation in Italy raises new questions.]

Rom, 3.3.17 (kath.ch) Im Juni 2014 stand Bischof Oscar Cantoni vor einer Aufgabe die ihm offenbar nicht ganz leicht fiel: Der Leiter des norditalienischen Bistums Crema musste seinen Gläubigen erklären, warum «die Glaubenskongregation im Namen von Papst Franziskus» die Strafe für Don Mauro Inzoli abmilderte, der mehrere Jugendliche sexuell missbraucht hatte.

Keine Sünde sei so schrecklich, dass man ihr nicht mit Barmherzigkeit begegnen könne, schrieb der Bischof in seiner Erklärung vom 26. Juni 2014. Hierbei zitierte er aus dem Buch «Barmherzigkeit» des deutschen Kurienkardinals Walter Kasper; Franziskus hatte das Werk ausdrücklich empfohlen.

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Ermittler finden Massengrab mit Kinderleichen

IRLAND
Spiegel

[Investigators in Ireland find a mass grave of children.]

Ermittler haben in einem ehemaligen Heim für unverheiratete Mütter in Irland ein Massengrab mit den sterblichen Überresten von Kinderleichen entdeckt. Wie eine Untersuchungskommission in Dublin mitteilte, wurden in unterirdischen Kammern im westirischen Tuam “erhebliche Mengen” Knochen gefunden. Einige der Leichen seien untersucht worden. Es handelt sich demnach um Föten und Kinder im Alter von zwei bis drei Jahren.

Das Heim in Tuam wurde von 1925 bis 1961 von der katholischen Kirche betrieben. Die Leichen stammen der Untersuchungskommission zufolge höchstwahrscheinlich aus dieser Zeit. “Die Kommission ist schockiert von dieser Entdeckung und ermittelt weiterhin, wer verantwortlich für die Entsorgung menschlicher Überreste in dieser Art war”, hieß es in einer Mitteilung.

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Jury fails to reach verdict in alleged historical abuse trial

IRELAND
The Anglo-Celt

Friday, 3rd March, 2017

A jury has failed to reach a majority verdict in the case of a priest from the Diocese of Kilmore accused of alleged sexual assault on a woman when she was a young teenager in the early 90s, and once in 2004.

After a three-day trial at Cavan Circuit Court, the defendant was remanded on bail to March 16 for directions from the DPP on the matter.

The defendant, who cannot be named to protect the identity of the alleged victim, had pleaded not guilty to a total of 23 charges when arraigned before Judge Martin Nolan at Cavan Circuit Court earlier this week.

The charges involved sexual assault on a female at two separate locations on dates between August 1991 and 1993, when the injured party was still in her early teens, and one charge of sexual assault on the same woman, dated in August 2004.

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Another former Delbarton student accuses priest of sex abuse in lawsuit

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Justin Zaremba | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

MORRISTOWN — Another former Delbarton School student has come forward alleging he was sexually abused by a priest at the elite boys’ prep school decades ago.

The former student is the sixth man represented by attorney Gregory Gianforcaro to accuse one of the Benedictine monks who taught at the school of sexual abuse. All six have filed civil suits against the private school.

Many of the accusations of sex abuse of students date back to the 1980s and 1990s, but, in this latest case, the man alleges he was sexually abused by the Rev. Richard Lott, also known as Edward Lott, on January 1, 1976.

The man also accused the school and its officials of negligence, misconduct and fraudulently concealing information from him in order to shield the school from criminal prosecution and scandal.

Delbarton’s attorney, Donald Okner, declined comment.

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Investigation of Fr. Wagner continues

MINNESOTA
Sleepy Eye Herald-Dispatch

On Tuesday, Feb. 28, New Ulm Police Department Investigator Jeff Hohensee confirmed that the investigation into allegations of improper conduct by Fr. Sam Wagner is not completed.

By Deb Moldaschel, Editor

On Tuesday, Feb. 28, New Ulm Police Department Investigator Jeff Hohensee confirmed that the investigation into allegations of improper conduct by Fr. Sam Wagner is not completed. Fr. Wagner had been placed on leave from ministry by the Diocese of New Ulm, earlier this month, when the allegations were brought to their attention.

“The investigation is still continuing,” said Hohensee. “I am currently conducting interviews of church members and other potential witnesses.” Hohensee said search warrants were granted in the case and he is awaiting the results of those warrants—digital evidence.

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New Ulm Diocese files for bankruptcy protection

MINNESOTA
Minneapolis Star Tribune

It is the 16th Catholic Diocese in the country to file for bankruptcy.

By Rochelle Olson and Jean Hopfensperger MARCH 3, 2017

The Diocese of New Ulm filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Friday, becoming the 16th Catholic religious organization in the nation to seek protection from clergy sex abuse claims.

The New Ulm Diocese had received 101 claims of child sex abuse in recent years, and financial reorganization was the fairest way to address the claims, said New Ulm Bishop John LeVoir in a statement.

The claims were made through the 2013 Minnesota Child Victim’s Act, which opened a three-year window for filing older abuse claims.

“Reorganization provides the diocese a process to fulfill its obligation, as much as possible, to victims and survivors of clergy sexual abuse of minors, while continuing to carry out its ministry,” LeVoir said in a statement.

New Ulm is the third Minnesota diocese to declare bankruptcy in response to an outpouring of child sexual abuse claims. The St. Paul and Minneapolis Archdiocese and the Duluth Diocese filed in 2015. The cases are making their way through federal bankruptcy court.

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Diocesan Financial Reorganization

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Diocese of New Ulm

Message from Bishop LeVoir – video

On March 3, 2017, the corporation of the Diocese of New Ulm filed for financial reorganization under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.

Chapter 11 provides a neutral, court-supervised process for the Diocese of New Ulm to establish a plan to pay its creditors while continuing work essential to its mission.

The Diocese’s creditors are victims and survivors of clergy sexual abuse as minors who filed a total of 101 lawsuits against the Diocese and some parishes within the geographic area the Diocese serves under the Minnesota Child Victims Act. That Act lifted the civil statute of limitations for a period of three years, ending on May 25, 2016. The lifting of the civil statute of limitations allowed people to file claims of sexual abuse, regardless of when that abuse happened. Most of the abuse claims stem from incidents reported to have occurred from the 1950s through the 1970s. No priests accused of abuse are currently in public ministry in the Diocese.

The Diocese and those representing victims and survivors will continue to work together, under the guidance of the court, to come to a fair resolution of claims. It is unknown how long this will take, but we seek to complete the reorganization process as promptly and efficiently as possible.

Parishes, Catholic schools and other Catholic organizations located in the geographic area served by the Diocese are not part of this filing. Parishes and other Catholic organizations are separate corporations under Minnesota law.

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News Release: Diocese of New Ulm Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

3/3/2017

(New Ulm, MN) – Today, the Diocese of New Ulm filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection. The Diocese of New Ulm is the sixteenth Catholic Diocese or Religious Order to file for bankruptcy in the United States. In 2015, the Archdiocese of Saint Paul & Minneapolis and the Diocese of Duluth filed for bankruptcy protection as well. Both cases are still pending in bankruptcy court.

“The bankruptcy filing does not stop the pursuit of justice for sexual abuse survivors,” said Attorney Mike Finnegan. “Survivors will continue to seek truth and accountability in the bankruptcy process.”

Sexual abuse survivors advocated for the diocese to release the names of credibly accused priests who worked in the Diocese of New Ulm. In March 2016, the diocese agreed to release the names of 16 priests with credible allegations of child sexual abuse.

Contact Jeff Anderson: Office/651.964.3473 Cell/612.817.8665
Contact Mike Finnegan: Office/651.964.3473 Cell/612.205.5531

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Diocese of New Ulm files for bankruptcy

MINNESOTA
Mankato Free Press

NEW ULM — The Diocese of New Ulm filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection, Jeff Anderson & Associates PA announced today in a press release.

The Diocese of New Ulm is the 16th Catholic Diocese or Religious Order to file for bankruptcy in the United States.

In 2015, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Duluth filed for bankruptcy protection as well. Both cases are still pending in bankruptcy court.

“The bankruptcy filing does not stop the pursuit of justice for sexual abuse survivors,” Attorney Mike Finnegan said in the press release. “Survivors will continue to seek truth and accountability in the bankruptcy process.”

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Pedofilia, segretario di Stato vaticano «Collins ha voluto ‘scuotere l’albero’»

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO
Corriere della Sera

Guido Vecchi

CITTÀ DEL VATICANO «Ha voluto un po’ scuotere l’albero». Il cardinale Pietro Parolin, Segretario di Stato vaticano, non si scompone dopo le dimissioni di Marie Collins, l’ultima ex vittima rimasta nella Commissione per la protezione dei minori istituita nel 2014 da Francesco contro la pedofilia nel clero. Il cardinale parla all’uscita una conferenza sull’esortazione del Papa «Evangelii Gaudium», nel seminario arcivescovile di Firenze. Marie Collins ha parlato di «bastoni tra le ruote» e «una mancanza di collaborazione vergognosa» nella Curia romana. «Ci sono stati alcuni episodi che hanno portato la signora Collins a questo passo: per quello che io conosco, lei li ha interpretati così, e ha sentito che l’unica maniera di reagire, anche un po’ per scuotere l’albero, era quella di dare le dimissioni».

L’impegno prosegue

Il Segretario di Stato parla del lavoro della commissione e del suo presidente, l’arcivescovo di Boston Sean O’Malley: «Ho visto sempre un grande impegno del cardinale O’Malley per la protezione dei fanciulli: stanno portando avanti un bel lavoro di sensibilizzazione. Di per sé la commissione non deve occuparsi degli abusi sessuali, è la Congregazione per la Dottrina della fede che lo fa, ma deve preoccuparsi soprattutto di creare nella Chiesa un ambiente che sia tale che difenda bambini e ragazzi, li tuteli, e non permetta il ripetersi di episodi di pedofilia».

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Cardinal says abuse survivor quit papal panel to ‘shake the tree’

VATICAN CITY
Crux

Inés San Martín March 3, 2017
VATICAN CORRESPONDENT

Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin said that the commission’s work will continue under the command of Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley. The American prelate defined Marie Collin’s departure as a “blow to the commission,” but one which “increases our resolve to work harder for reform.”

ROME- According to Pope Francis’s right-hand man, a survivor of clerical sexual abuse who resigned earlier this week from a papal anti-abuse commission quit because she wanted to “shake the tree” in the Vatican.

Speaking to Crux, survivor Marie Collins had said some members of the Church’s governing body, known as the Roman Curia, have hindered and blocked the work being done by the commission. Talking to America magazine later on, she specifically named the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF).

The Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera quotes Italian Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s Secretary of State, as saying that there have been specific episodes which led Collins to take the step she did.

“For what I know, she has interpreted them as [lack of cooperation], and felt that the only way to act, even to ‘shake the tree’ a little, was to present her resignation,” Parolin said in Florence while attending a conference about Pope Francis’s apostolic exhortation Evangelii Gaudium.

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Editorial: Clergy culture sustains sex abuse scandal

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

NCR Editorial Staff | Mar. 3, 2017

EDITORIAL

The resignation of Marie Collins from the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors is a turning point in Pope Francis’ pontificate. It cannot be seen any other way. For all the hope and promise that we find in Francis and his vision for the church, we believe his pontificate teeters on the brink of failure on the issue of sexual abuse by the clergy.
For three and a half years, Francis has promised to take real action to bring accountability to the highest structures of the church and to help heal survivors. Now the commission he created to do that must confront serious questions about its credibility.

For his part, Francis must take some decisive, public action here. He must empower the commission with authority — a fully functioning commission cannot operate without a budget, permanent staff and the power to hire outside expertise. Beyond that, Francis must act to guarantee that the Vatican dicasteries and their personnel cooperate fully with the commission. Those who deliberately frustrate the commission’s work, no matter what level of the Curia they represent, must be replaced with personnel who will claim the eradication of this scandal as part of their mission.

But something deeper is at play here. If all we get are stronger managerial presences and dedicated staff and office space, we may not get the full reform of structures this issue calls out for. A resistance to change that is planted deep within the all-male clerical culture is the largely unaddressed issue at the heart of the scandal and has been since the first major story about it appeared in these pages more than 30 years ago.

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Police cannot use law that makes grooming a crime

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Fiona Hamilton, Crime Editor
March 3 2017
The Times

Police officers have been unable to use a new law to catch paedophiles because of lengthy government delays, it has emerged.

The Ministry of Justice is facing questions about why it has failed for two years to implement measures intended to prevent child grooming, even though the number of cases has more than tripled in recent years.

The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children said that the delays were a “disgrace” and called on ministers urgently to enact the law.

Sexual predators can currently only be arrested and charged if they meet a child after grooming them. However, a law was passed in March 2015 that would make it illegal for an adult to send a sexual communication to a child, either over the phone or via the internet.

The law is contained in section 67 of the Serious Crime Act but it is awaiting the “commencement order” that is needed before police forces can start using it. The NSPCC said that in the meantime children are being put at risk and pointed to a sharp rise in the number of abusers meeting children they have groomed.

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Top school suspends head of music after sex claims revealed

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Andrew Norfolk, Chief Investigative Reporter
March 3 2017
The Times

A man accused of several sex offences against a 12-year-old boy is head of music at a top public school, it can be revealed after a gagging order was lifted.

Sean Farrell’s role at Wellington College, in Crowthorne, Berkshire, was kept secret when he appeared before magistrates last week.

He is charged with sex crimes said to have been committed in North Yorkshire three decades ago against a pupil at Ampleforth College, a leading Roman Catholic school.

Reporters and the public were ordered to leave the court in York last Thursday before Deputy District Judge Edward Barr banned the media from revealing where and in what role Mr Farrell was employed.

The restriction had been requested by his former wife. It was overturned yesterday after a challenge by The Times, which said that Judge Barr had no power to make it.

Mr Farrell, 49, is a former Ampleforth pupil and his alleged victim was at Gilling Castle, the college’s prep school at which Mr Farrell had been a student music teacher between 1985 and 1986.

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Notes and Quotes… Let’s talk about it…

UNITED STATES
Father Kenneth Lasch

Thursday March 2, 2017

Website Editor’s Note: Last week, I posted a combination of several articles dealing with the unfinished business associated with the scandal of sexual abuse in the RC Church. I realize that many if not most folks in the pew assume it’s over and done with. But alas, notwithstanding Pope Francis’ intention to hold accountable bishops who defaulted on their responsibility to protect children and vulnerable adults, in fact the process of adjudication and justice has broken down. In his Apostolic Letter, ‘As a Loving Mother’, Pope Francis laid down the procedure whereby bishops are to be held accountable: “The diocesan Bishop or Eparch, or one who holds a temporary title and is responsible for a Particular Church or other community of faithful that is its legal equivalent, according to can. 368 CIC or can. 313 CCEO, can be legitimately removed from office if he has through negligence committed or through omission facilitated acts that have caused grave harm to others, either to physical persons or to the community as a whole. The harm may be physical, moral, spiritual or through the use of patrimony.” [Article One, § 1}

The Commission established by Pope Francis to deal with allegations of sexual abuse has been stalled for over two years.

In the light of so many wonderful words and counsels written and spoken that have emanated from Pope Francis moving the Church toward a renewal spearheaded by the Second Vatican Council, it is disheartening to acknowledge the fact that he has dropped the ball on following up on his own admonitions and exhortations regarding sexual abuse. There is no question that justice and mercy must embrace [Psalm 87] but there can be no mercy until there is justice, no justice until there is full disclosure and accountability.

The following video except is riveting testimony that has emerged from the Royal Commission on Sexual Abuse in Australia. It may be rightly assumed to be testimony that might be duplicated in other parts of the world. Based on the history of sexual abuse in Ireland, in the US and in other countries across the globe, it is chilling to imagine what such a commission might yield in this country. Click Testimony.

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Head of Music at £37,000-a-year top private school is suspended amid sex assault claims against a 12-year-old schoolboy from three decades ago

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By Isobel Frodsham For Mailonline

The head of music at a £37,000-a-year top private school in Berkshire has been suspended following claims he sexually assaulted a s 12-year-old boy three decades ago.

Sean Farrell, 49, was removed from his post at Wellington College, in Crowthorne, ‘several months ago’ after a police investigation commenced.

His ex-wife applied for a gagging order to prevent his workplace and job being named when Farrell appeared at York Magistrates Court last week.

However, after it was challenged, the order was lifted, according to The Times.

He is accused of two charges of indecent assault and two charges of gross indecency against a boy at Ampleforth College, in North Yorkshire, in the 1980s. Farrell denies the claims.

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Executive Council of Australian Jewry apology

AUSTRALIA
Manny Waks

3/3/2017

I’m delighted to share publicly the important letter I received today from the Australian Jewish community’s peak body, the Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ), an organisation in which I was honoured to serve as a vice president some years ago.

To me personally, and often to victims/survivors more broadly, justice and accountability is particularly important, especially in the context of the child sexual abuse scandal that has engulfed the Australian Jewish community over the last few years. To me (and to many others), the ECAJ, along with many other communal institutions, failed us. Which is why I have continued to raise the issue of justice and accountability. While many may have forgotten the extent of what transpired over many years, many of us have not. We can not. We live with different aspects of it daily. And as the target of much of the vitriol and worse over many years – for merely pursuing justice for myself and others, and to ensure our children are safe – I’ve continued to live with all of this until this day.

Which is why this powerful letter from the ECAJ is so important – to me, to my fellow victims/survivors, and indeed to many in the broader community. No doubt it will contribute to the ongoing healing process for many.

From a personal perspective, it is another important milestone in my journey. This letter effectively resolves all the outstanding personal issues I have with all Jewish Australian institutions (notwithstanding my civil case against Melbourne’s Yeshivah Centre, as well as the Jewish Taskforce Against Family Violence’s recent decision to shut their doors seemingly instead of accepting responsibility and apologising for their failures). It is also further vindication of my work to date. I hope and expect that this outcome, which is what I’ve been striving to achieve over the past few years, will lift further weight off my shoulders.

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Tuam babies: ‘Significant quantities’ of human remains discovered at excavation site

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Kevin Doyle
March 3 2017

SIGNIFICANT quantities of human remains have been discovered at a Galway site excavated by the Mother and Baby Homes Commission.

The Commission has described itself as “shocked” by the discovery made in Tuam over recent weeks.

The Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation is currently probing how unmarried mothers and their babies were treated between 1922 and 1998 at 18 State-linked religious institutions.

A small number of the remains discovered in Tuam were recovered for the purpose of analysis.

“These remains involved a number of individuals with age-at-death ranges from approximately 35 foetal weeks to 2-3 years,” the body said.

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Remains of young children and babies found in sewage chambers at Tuam mother and baby home

IRELAND
The Journal

* Human remains found at site of Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in Tuam
* They were discovered in what appears to be some type of sewage container
* Scientific analysis puts the age of death between 35 foetal weeks and 2 to 3 years
* Radiocarbon dating confirms the remains are from the time the home was in operation – many are likely to be from the 1950s.

THE COMMISSION OF INVESTIGATION into Mother and Baby Homes has discovered a significant number of human remains in what appears to be a decommissioned sewage chamber in Tuam.

The Commission has completed two test excavations of the Galway site and today confirmed that “significant quantities of human remains have been discovered” in a structure which appears to be “related to the treatment/containment of sewerage and/or wastewater”.

The structure where the remains were found is long and divided into 20 chambers. The Commission is not yet clear if it was ever used for sewerage or wastewater.

There were remains found in at least 17 of the 20 chambers. A small number of the remains were recovered for testing. A scientific analysis has put the ages of the deceased at between 35 foetal weeks to two to three years old.

Radiocarbon dating suggests that they are from the time the Bon Secours home was in operation between 1925 and 1961. A number of the samples are likely to be from the 1950s.

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Tuam babies: ‘Significant quantities’ of human remains discovered

IRELAND
BBC News

“Significant quantities” of human remains have been discovered at the site of a former mother and baby home in County Galway.

In October 2016 the Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation began test excavations at the site in Tuam.

The commission was established following allegations about the deaths of 800 babies in Tuam and the manner in which they were buried.

It said it was “shocked” by the discovery.

The Tuam home was one of 10 institutions in which about 35,000 unmarried pregnant women are thought to have been sent.

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