Thursday, May 16, 2013

300 New Child Sex Abuse Complaints Against Belgian Catholic Church

Remember how the Vatican and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops would have people - especially the fools in the pews - believe that the Church has cleaned up its sex abuse problem?  And that ALL of the complaints involve very old cases of abuse?  News out of Belgium shows that little has changed and that the Vatican has done little to break the droit du seigneur mindset of many in the Catholic priesthood when it comes to having sex with children and minors.  Expatica.com has details of the news out of Belgium:
The Belgian Roman Catholic Church said Wednesday it had received more than 300 complaints of sexual abuse of minors in 2012. 

Three quarters of the 307 dossiers opened were in northern Flanders, the staunchly Catholic Dutch-speaking and larger half of Belgium.

The great majority of complainants were mature adults, having waited before coming forward after the Church fell into scandal over recent years and with compensation now an issue. Forty-six of the cases raised last year have gone forward for mediation, officials behind the abuse census said.

After similar scandals in the United States, Ireland and Germany, Belgium was rocked in April 2010 with revelations that the then bishop of Bruges, Roger Vangheluwe, had abused a nephew for 13 years.

Vangheluwe's subsequent decision to quit opened a floodgate of allegations, with one report revealing almost 500 cases of abuse in Catholic institutions since the 1950s, including 13 known suicides by victims.

In September 2011 some 70 alleged victims filed joint legal action against the Belgian Church and the Holy See, the first such class action suit in Belgium and the first such suit involving the Vatican in Europe.
Yes, the majority of case involved old abuse - but not all of them.  And other than high clerics like Vangheluwe who engaged in abuse himself, no bishops and cardinals have been fired for the cover ups and protection of sexual predators which were sadly the norm world wide. 


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