• afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      It does but given the population of Sweden and how small the percent of Catholics it only sounds low at first glance. There are only about 180k Catholics in the whole country.

      Still you are probably still right and a whole lot more is going to be found. Wish you weren’t right.

  • PeleSpirit@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I think this shows another thing the church is doing, trying to say that all of them were wayward gay priests that are the problem. It’s not, it’s a priest, bishop, cardinal problem.

    “What has been discovered is only the tip of the iceberg,” the university said in a statement on Tuesday. The 1,002 cases of abuse that emerged from the study of the secret archives of church institutions are, however, more numerous than those reported by the Church so far.

    Bishopric of Basel admits mistakes in sex abuse case

    The incidents detected concerned 510 offenders and 921 victims, who in 74% of cases were minors. With few exceptions, the crimes were committed by men; 54% of the victims were male.

    • athos77@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      Bishopric of Basel admits mistakes in sex abuse case

      I’m curious if they followed the US roadmap. When the US Catholic Church realized they had a sex abuse problem back in the 80’s, they took immediate action … and bought sex abuser insurance for every diocese and archdiocese in the entire country, destroyed a bunch of documentation on the abuse, moved other files to Washington DC where they could be covered by diplomatic immunity, and continued to move abusive priests to fresh churches with no warning to the congregation, and moving worse offenders overseas, out of reach of the Justice Department. All the while, they also restructured local and regional churches to ensure that each was it’s own individual entity, and that as many of the assets as possible were completely untouchable.

      If they get sued, they deny everything, fight every request for discovery, attack the victims’ characters, and say it must have been an isolated incident. If forced to pay out, they rely on those extremely low-premium high-payout insurance policies they bought; if the payout goes beyond what’s covered by insurance, the church pleads poverty because all the assets are ‘owned’ by some other entity, and if pressed they’ll declare local bankruptcy.

      Not that I’m bitter or anything …