Current:Home > MarketsSpain’s bishops apologize for sex abuses but dispute the estimated number of victims in report -Excel Money Vision
Spain’s bishops apologize for sex abuses but dispute the estimated number of victims in report
View
Date:2025-04-16 14:23:32
MADRID (AP) — Spain’s Catholic bishops on Monday apologized again for sex abuses committed by church members following a report by Spain’s Ombudsman that accused the church of widespread negligence.
But the bishops dismissed as “a lie” media interpretations of the official report that put the number of victims involving the church in the hundreds of thousands. They said this was misrepresentative given that many more people had been abused outside of the church.
“I reiterate the petition for pardon to the victims for this pain,” the president of the Bishops Conference, Cardinal Juan José Omella, told a press briefing.
He added that the church would continue working “together on the comprehensive reparation of the victims, on supporting them and deepening the path to their protection and, above all, the prevention of abuse.”
The bishops said the church would contribute to any economic reparation program once it included all victims of child sexual abuse, not just those abused within the church itself.
The briefing was called to evaluate the ombudsman’s report released Friday that said the church’s response had often been to minimize if not deny the problem.
The report acknowledged that the church had taken steps to address both abuse by priests and efforts to cover up the scandal, but said they were not enough.
Included in the report was a survey based on 8,000 valid phone and online responses. The poll found that 1.13% of the Spanish adults questioned said they were abused as children either by priests or lay members of the church, including teachers at religious schools. The poll said 0.6% identified their abusers as clergy members.
Ombudsman Ángel Gabilondo did not extrapolate from the survey but given that Spain’s adult population stands close to 39 million, 1.13% would mean some 440,000 minors could have been sexually abused by Roman Catholic priests, members of a religious order or lay members of the church in recent decades.
Omella said the media’s extrapolation of the survey results “does not correspond to the truth.” The church maintained that going by the survey’s figures, some 4 million Spaniards, or 11.7 % of the adult population, may have been abused as minors in all, a figure it considered to be “barbaric”, suggesting it was not credible.
The survey conducted by GAD3, a well-known opinion pollster in Spain, had a margin of sampling error for all respondents of plus or minus 1.1 percentage points.
The ombudsman’s investigation represents Spain’s first official probe of the child sex abuse problem that has undermined the Catholic Church around the world. The estimate from the survey is the first time such a high number of possible victims was identified in the country.
A Madrid-based law firm is conducting a parallel inquiry ordered by the bishops’ conference. Its findings are expected to be released later this year.
Earlier this year, the bishops’ conference said it found evidence of 728 sexual abusers within the church since 1945, through the testimony of 927 victims, in its first public report on the issue.
Up until very recently, the Spanish church had been reluctant to carry out investigations or release information on sexual abuse cases. Spain’s state prosecutor earlier this year complained that the bishops were withholding information. The bishops denied this.
Only a handful of countries have had government-initiated or parliamentary inquiries into clergy sex abuse, although some independent groups have carried out their own investigations.
_____
Aritz Parra in Madrid contributed to this report.
veryGood! (39221)
Related
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Prince William gives rare health update about Princess Kate amid her cancer diagnosis
- GOP-led Arizona Senate votes to repeal 1864 abortion ban, sending it to Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs
- Dan Schneider sues 'Quiet on Set' producers for defamation, calls docuseries 'a hit job'
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- NFL draft's 15 biggest instant-impact rookies in 2024: Can anyone catch Caleb Williams?
- Students reunite with families after armed boy fatally shot outside Mount Horeb school: Here's what we know
- Number of Americans applying for jobless claims remains historically low
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- 2024 Kentucky Derby weather: Churchill Downs forecast for Saturday's race
Ranking
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Biden expands 2 national monuments in California significant to tribal nations
- 'A Man in Full' review: Tom Wolfe Netflix series is barely a glass half empty
- Do you own chickens? Here's how to protect your flock from bird flu outbreaks
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- House committee delays vote on bill to allow inmates to participate in parole hearings
- Pentagon leaker Jack Teixeira to face military justice proceeding
- TikToker Nara Smith’s New Cooking Video Is Her Most Controversial Yet
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Alex Pietrangelo's bad penalty proves costly as Stars beat Golden Knights in Game 5
A list of mass killings in the United States this year
6 injured, including children, in drive-by shooting in Fort Worth, Texas, officials say
Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
Kate Hudson on her Glorious album
Vendor that mishandled Pennsylvania virus data to pay $2.7 million in federal whistleblower case
Ex-FBI informant charged with lying about Bidens must remain jailed, appeals court rules