Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Monday, April 30, 2018

Analysis: Rundown of sex abuse within the Catholic church


by Louise Healy, Elodie Bagnol, and Biodun Iginla, France24 News Analysts, MELBOURNE, Australia/ROME


    © AFP | Cardinal George Pell, the third highest member of the Vatican hierarchy, has been ordered to stand trial on "multiple" historical sex charges, which he denies

    MELBOURNE, Australia/ROME - 
    Vatican finance chief Cardinal George Pell on Tuesday became the highest-ranked Catholic ever to be sent to trial for sex offences, adding to a series scandals facing the church globally.
    Here is a rundown of notable cases:
    - Australia -
    Cardinal George Pell, the third highest member of the Vatican hierarchy, has been ordered to stand trial on "multiple" historical sex charges, which he denies.
    His case coincided with a public enquiry that found that seven percent of priests were presumed to have committed paedophilic acts in Australia between 1950 and 2010.
    - Austria -
    Two scandals forced the Vatican to revoke two high-ranking ultra-conservative clerics, Viennese Archbishop Hans Hermann Groer in 1995 and the bishop of Sankt-Poelten, Kurt Krenn in 2004.
    - Belgium -
    In 2010, the bishop of Bruges, Roger Vangheluwe, resigned after acknowledging sex abuse of two nephews. Since 2012 the Catholic Church in Belgium has received hundreds of complaints and paid almost 4.13 million euros in compensation.
    - Canada -
    In the late 1980s, a huge scandal broke out regarding the mistreatment of children at an orphanage in Newfoundland in the 1950s-1960s.
    - Chile -
    Some 80 members of the Chilean clergy have been implicated in a series of sex abuse affairs over the past few years.
    Controversy over the bishop Juan Barros, accused of covering for a paedophile priest, marred Pope Francis' trip to the country in January 2018 when he hugged and defended the bishop.
    - France -
    In 2016 the case of priest Bernard Preynat, accused of abusing scouts in his Lyon parish, tainted the image of Cardinal Philippe Barbarin for allegedly covering up for him.
    Barbarin will be tried along with six co-defendants in January 2019.
    - Germany -
    Since 2010, hundreds of cases of sex abuse against children or adolescents in religious institutions have emerged. The most high-profile ones involve Jesuit-run Canisius college in Berlin.
    - Ireland -
    Accusations against Catholic institutions began to emerge early in the millenium, and covered several decades prior to that. The number of underaged victims was estimated at around 14,500. Several bishops and priests accused of committing or covering up the abuse have been punished.
    - Mexico -
    Mexican bishop Gonzalo Galvan Castillo was forced to resign in 2015 after being accused of protecting a paedophile priest. The late founder of the ultraconservative Legion of Christ congregation, Marcial Maciel, was forced to resign in 2006, was accused of committing sexual abuses of minors.
    - The Netherlands -
    In late 2011, a study found that several tens of thousands of minors had been sexually abused within the Dutch Catholic Church institutions between 1945 and 2010. Some 800 suspects have been identified.
    - Poland -
    In 2013 Pope Francis sacked the Vatican nuncio, or ambassador, to the Dominican Republic, Poland's Jozef Wesolowski who was charged with sexually abusing minors. He died in 2015 on the eve of his trial.
    - United States -
    Between 1950 and 2013, the Catholic Church in the US received 17,000 complaints from people who said they had suffered sexual abuse from 6,400 clerics between 1950 and 1980.
    In 2012, specialists in contact with the Vatican mooted the figure of 100,000 cases of child sex abuse in the US.
    Among the senior church members forced to resign for protecting paedophile priests were Cardinal Bernard Law in Boston and Roger Mahony in Los Angeles.

    Stormy Daniels sues Trump over 'defamatory' tweet


    Stormy Daniels, seen here with her lawyer Michael Avenatti, outside a federal court in Manhattan talking to reportersImage copyrightAFP
    Image captionStormy Daniels, seen here with her lawyer Michael Avenatti, says she had an affair with the president
    by Alyssa Mann and Biodun Iginla, BBC News, New York
    Adult film star Stormy Daniels is suing US President Donald Trump over a "defamatory" tweet about alleged threats against her, her lawyer says.
    Ms Daniels, real name Stephanie Clifford, says she was threatened by a man in a Las Vegas car park to drop her allegations of an affair with Mr Trump.
    Mr Trump retweeted a sketch of the man, calling it "a total con job".
    But Ms Daniel's lawyer tweeted that Mr Trump was "well aware of what transpired".
    "Mr Trump used his national and international audience of millions of people to make a false factual statement to denigrate and attack Ms Clifford," the filing to a New York federal court reads.
    The suit says the president's tweet was defamatory as it accused Ms Daniels of "committing a serious crime" - namely, falsely accusing a person of threatening her.
    Mr Trump retweeted the sketch of the person earlier this month, calling him "a nonexistent man".
    Ms Daniels says she and the president had an affair, starting in 2006. The president strongly denies the allegation.
    She told CBS News' 60 minutes programme that following the end of the relationship, a man approached her and her daughter in a Las Vegas car park and told her to "forget the story, leave Donald Trump alone".
    Media captionStormy Daniels: 'I was threatened'
    Ms Daniels previously sued Mr Trump's lawyer Michael Cohen to end an alleged non-disclosure agreement about the relationship, which she says Mr Trump never signed.
    Mr Cohen has previously admitted giving Ms Daniels $130,000 out of his own pocket, but has not said why he did this.
    Michael Cohen photographed as he arrives at the US Courthouse in New York on April 26, 2018Image copyrightAFP
    Image captionMr Trump denies any knowledge of Mr Cohen, pictured here entering court, paying Ms Daniels
    This case was, however, halted for 90 days, when the presiding judge said Mr Cohen's rights could be put in danger if the case continued while he was under criminal investigation.
    Mr Cohen is under scrutiny as part of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential election and alleged collusion with President Trump's campaign.

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