Pope condemns sex abuse by priests: What we know about number of victims, scope of settlements

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Image | AFP_18G6I9

Caption: Pope Francis delivers a speech to the faithful on Sunday at the Vatican. He has written a letter to the world's 1.2 billion Catholics to condemn sex abuse by priests and asking for help in 'uprooting this culture of death.' (Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty Images)

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TODAY:

  • Pope Francis has written to all of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics to condemn sex abuse by priests.
  • Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro gave his citizens the day off today to prepare for what many expect will be economic chaos tomorrow, after a massive devaluation and restructuring of the nation's currency.
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'Uprooting' Catholic Church's sex abuse crisis

It is an unprecedented letter in the face of an unprecedented scandal.
Pope Francis has written to all of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics to condemn sex abuse by priests and ask for the faithful's help in "uprooting this culture of death."
The letter was spurred by last week's public release of a grand jury investigation that detailed 70 years of abuses against more than 1,000 children in Pennsylvania, and the Church's complicity in covering up the crimes.
"We showed no care for the little ones; we abandoned them," the Pope writes in the global apology(external link).

Image | (FILE) VATICAN USA PENNSYLVANIA CATHOLIC PRIESTS CHILD SEX ABUSE

Caption: Pope Francis, seen praying in the crypt of the Basilica of Saint Nicholas in July, has written a letter to the world's Catholics condemning sex abuse by priests saying, 'no effort must be spared to create a culture able to prevent such situations from happening.' (EPA-EFE)

"Looking back to the past, no effort to beg pardon and to seek to repair the harm done will ever be sufficient. Looking ahead to the future, no effort must be spared to create a culture able to prevent such situations from happening, but also to prevent the possibility of their being covered up and perpetuated."
The letter reads like a new commitment to transparency as the Church confronts its deepening sex abuse crisis.
Which would be a significant change from the way Rome and its dioceses have dealt with the hundreds of scandals that have come to light over the past two decades.
No one outside of the Church is even sure of the scope of the problem.
In the United States, it is often reported that Catholic orders and dioceses have paid out more than $3 billion U.S. in settlements(external link) since the early 2000s. But the true total is likely well in excess of $4 billion.
A 2015 investigation by the National Catholic Reporter(external link) reviewed more than 7,800 newspaper articles stretching back to 1950 and tallied $3,994,797,060.10 in payouts. Or, put another way, about $20 million for each of America's 197 dioceses.

Image | Clergy Abuse Sign Vandalized

Caption: Paint covers the name of Cardinal Wuerl on a sign at Cardinal Wuerl North Catholic High School on Monday in Cranberry Township, Penn. The Roman Catholic Cardinal has come under fire after revelations in a Pennsylvania grand jury report about his actions while bishop of Pittsburgh. (Keith Srakocic/Associated Press)

In the three years since, the pace of settlements has hardly slowed, with new accusers coming forward almost every week.
In May, Church authorities in Minnesota agreed to a $210 million settlement(external link) with 450 victims in St. Paul and Minneapolis.
In July, priests in Montana read a letter from the pulpit begging congregants to dig deep and contribute(external link) to the cost of a $20 million settlement with 86 people who were sexually abused.
Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, the former archbishop of Washington, D.C., resigned late last month amid allegations of sexual abuse(external link).

Image | 88470003

Caption: Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, seen in this 2015 file photo, resigned as archbishop emeritus of Washington in late July. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

There are new investigations into sexual misconduct at seminaries in Boston, Philadelphia and Nebraska(external link).
And while sex abuse within the Church was surely an international scandal, information is even harder to come by outside of the United States.
In Canada, for example, there is no estimate of how much has been paid out in settlements.
Court proceedings in London, Ont., provided a glimpse earlier this summer, when a document filed in a civil suit between the diocese and its insurer disclosed(external link) that $15 million in mostly secret payments had been made to 50 victims of 12 priests.
In April, a jury awarded a 68-year-old Ontario man $2.5 million, including $500,000 in punitive damages, for abuse he suffered as a student at a Catholic high school in Sudbury more than half a century ago(external link). There have been at least 17 other lawsuits over the behaviour of the same priest.
A 2016 investigation by the Ottawa Citizen(external link) uncovered almost $600,000 in payments to seven sexual abuse victims, and five other active suits that were collectively seeking $7.4 million in damages.
Last fall, CBC counted 56 sexual abuse lawsuits before the courts in New Brunswick, targeting the behaviour of 11 priests. The Moncton archdiocese has already paid out $10.6 million to 109 victims, and the diocese of Bathurst has paid $5.5 million to 90 victims.
In 2009, a diocese in Nova Scotia struck a $13-million settlement with victims of sexual abuse by priests dating back to 1950.
Some of the Church's other numbers are more readily available.
The number of Americans who identify as Catholic(external link) dropped from 81.6 million in 2015 to 74.3 million in 2017.
In Canada, 47 per cent of the country's citizens described themselves as Catholic in 1981, versus 39 per cent in 2011, mirroring an overall decline in religious affiliation(external link).

Venezuela banking on 'magic formula'

Today is a holiday in Venezuela, but there is no cause for celebration.
President Nicolas Maduro gave his citizens the day off(external link) to prepare for what comes tomorrow, further economic chaos.
The country's currency has been massively devalued, with five zeroes lopped off the bolivar overnight. Now renamed the sovereign bolivar — instead of the old, and so-not-apt, strong bolivar — it is pegged to Venezuela's sketchy cryptocurrency, the petro, which is in turn based on the price of a barrel of oil(external link).

Image | VENEZUELA CRISIS

Caption: Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has increased the minimum wage by 35 times and devalued the nation's currency by removing five zeros from it overnight. (EPA-EFE)

According to the president, this is a great idea.
"This is a really impressive, magic formula that we discovered while studying with our own, Venezuelan, Latin American-rooted thinking," Maduro told the nation in a televised address last night(external link).
Few share his confidence.
The country has been in the grips of a severe recession for four years. And oil production — which accounts for 96 per cent of Venezuela's revenue(external link) — has fallen to its lowest level since 1947.

Image | VENEZUELA CRISIS

Caption: Venezuela is minting new currency in an attempt to combat massive inflation. (Miguel Gutierrez/EPA-EFE)

Inflation is already running at more than 100,000 per cent, and the International Monetary Fund predicts it will hit 1 million per cent by the end of 2019.
Not surprisingly, salaries aren't keeping pace. So Maduro has also hiked the minimum wage by more than 3,500 per cent(external link), which will in all likelihood make inflation even worse.
Yesterday, there were long lines at supermarkets throughout the nation as people tried to stock up on food and basic goods before the currency switchover. The ATM system is offline until 6 p.m. this evening, and all banks are closed until tomorrow.

Image | Venezuela Political Crisis

Caption: Nurses hold a sign with a fake Venezuelan's bills representing how low their salaries have been devalued by inflation, during a protests against the government in Caracas on Aug. 16. The IMF has estimated that inflation could reach 1,000,000 per cent this year. (Ariana Cubillos/Associated Press)

No one is sure how, or even if, the new currency will work.
Venezuela's neighbours are bracing for chaos.
Brazil sent troops and police to its border Sunday(external link), following a riot in the town of Pacaraima, where locals armed themselves with stones and sticks and attacked the encampments of Venezuelans refugees, forcing more than 1,000 people back across the frontier.
In Ecuador, where new rules came into force this weekend requiring that Venezuelans show a valid passport to enter the country(external link), furious migrants stormed border crossings. A similar regulation is set to come into force in Peru next week(external link).

Image | AFP_18G8D6

Caption: Residents of the Brazilian border town of Pacaraima burned tires and the belongings of Venezuelan immigrants on the weekend after attacking the migrants' two main makeshift camps. (Isac Dantes/AFP/Getty Images)

Over the past 15 months, more than one million Venezuelans have sought refuge in Colombia. In the first eight months of 2018, a further half million entered Ecuador.
All told, the United Nations calculates that 2.3 million people have fled Maduro's regime since 2014.
"The exodus of Venezuelans from the country is one of Latin America's largest mass-population movements in history," a UN spokesperson declared last week(external link).
And it shows no signs of slowing down.

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