Catholic diocese establishes redress scheme for clerical abuse victims

ireland
Catholic Diocese Establishes Redress Scheme For Clerical Abuse Victims
Photo: PA Images
Share this article

By David Young, PA

A Catholic diocese in the North is to launch a redress scheme for victims of child abuse committed by clerics under its authority.

Announcing the move, the Diocese of Dromore said it apologised unreservedly for the hurt and damage caused to victims and survivors by any priest or church representative in the area.

Advertisement

“The Diocese of Dromore finds such behaviour towards children and vulnerable people abhorrent, inexcusable and indefensible,” it said in a statement.

The diocese includes parts of counties Antrim, Down and Armagh.

Those eligible for the scheme will include victims of notorious paedophile priest Malachy Finnegan who is alleged to have committed a litany of sex crimes on children in the diocese across four decades before his death in 2002.

Advertisement
Northern Ireland centenary
Archbishop Eamon Martin has met with victims of clerical abuse in the Dromore diocese. Photo: Brian Lawless/PA

The diocese said Catholic Primate Archbishop Eamon Martin had met with a number of survivors of abuse committed in the diocese and he wanted to facilitate a redress scheme and other supports “without undue further delay”.

It said the process would be victim centred and aimed to provide recognition as well as “reasonable compensation” without the need for lengthy investigation and litigation.

The diocese said it understood that redress could take varying forms.

Advertisement

“As well as enabling the provision of financial redress, the scheme includes the possibility of a personal apology on behalf of the diocese and other ways of providing pastoral support,” it stated.

“The diocese will also support the provision of counselling via the Towards Healing service.

“The diocese is willing to commit whatever resources it has available for the purpose of redress to this scheme, even if that should exhaust those resources.”

Independent panel

The scheme will respond to applications from those alleging sexual abuse, including sexual grooming, which may or may not have been accompanied by physical and or emotional abuse.

Advertisement

The crimes must have occurred when the applicant was below the age of 18.

Applications will be assessed by an independent panel, the appointment to which will be managed by a third party organisation.

Decisions on applications will be based on the balance of probabilities.

The diocese said the process would fall outside the civil litigation process and would instead be comparable to a mediation.

Advertisement

It said it would be informal in nature but is intended to be binding on the parties, should a resolution be agreed.

NI abortion law challenged
Patrick Corrigan of Amnesty International has called for a public inquiry into clerical sex abuse in Northern Ireland. Photo: PA

Amnesty International said the announcement by the Diocese of Dromore highlighted the need for a public inquiry into clerical sex abuse in Northern Ireland.

Amnesty’s Northern Ireland programme director Patrick Corrigan said: “Clerical abuse was not limited to one priest, one parish, one diocese or even one denomination in Northern Ireland.

“Redress is just one component of the justice to which victims are entitled and cannot be a substitute for an independent investigation.

“That is why Amnesty is again calling for the Executive to establish a public inquiry into the scale and circumstances of clerical child abuse in Northern Ireland, not restricted to one diocese or one Church.

Ireland
Up to 7,000 survivors of institutional, clerical,...
Read More

“We know the problem goes much wider.

“The Father Finnegan scandal is just one example of how paedophile clerics were facilitated by church authorities in continuing their vile abuse.

“It is just one example of how church authorities prioritised the protection of reputation over the protection of children and how the state authorities failed to investigate and intervene to end the abuse.”

Read More

Message submitting... Thank you for waiting.

Want us to email you top stories each lunch time?

Download our Apps
© BreakingNews.ie 2024, developed by Square1 and powered by PublisherPlus.com