Berlin (AFP) - Germany's Catholic Church said Wednesday it was "dismayed and ashamed" by decades of child sex abuse by priests, after a report was leaked showing that thousands of minors were assaulted.
The study,
commissioned by the German Bishops' Conference, was due to be presented
officially on September 25, but several local media published key conclusions,
including the damning finding that more than 3,600 children were sexually
assaulted by priests in Germany over nearly seven decades.
Authors of
the study also warned that the true scale of the abuse may be greater as some
documents were "destroyed or manipulated".
"We
know the extent of the sexual abuse that has been demonstrated by the study. We
are dismayed and ashamed by it," said Bishop Stephan Ackermann on behalf
of the conference.
The aim of
the study is to shed light on "this dark side of our Church, for the sake
of those affected, but also for us ourselves to see the errors and to do
everything to prevent them from being repeated."
"I
stress that the study is a measure that we owe not only to the Church but first
and foremost, to those affected."
The report
deals another blow to the Church after clerical child abuse has been uncovered
worldwide.
According
to the study, 1,670 clergymen in Germany committed some form of sexual attack
against 3,677 minors between 1946 and 2014, Spiegel Online reported. Most of
the victims were boys.
More than
half were 13 years old or younger at the time of the abuse, the study concluded
after examining 38,000 documents from 27 German dioceses.
Impunity
The
research also uncovered impunity, with official documents manipulated or simply
shredded.
Predator
priests were often transferred to another location, but information on their
criminal history were not provided to the new site.
Only one in
three (566 out of 1,670 accused) were subject to disciplinary hearings by the
Church, and most got away with minimal punishment, said Die Zeit weekly, also
citing the report.
Of these,
154 cases ended with no penalty, while 103 closed with a warning.
Only 38
percent of the accused were prosecuted by civil courts -- on complaints lodged
by victims themselves or their families.
Ackermann
meanwhile voiced frustration that the report was leaked to the media before the
Church itself had looked at it.
The Church
had planned to offer counselling helplines around the official publication date
of the report for people who are affected by it, he said.
Over the
last decade, several German Catholic institutions have revealed cases of child
sexual abuse, including an elite Jesuit school in Berlin which admitted to
systematic sexual abuse of pupils by two priests in the 1970s and 1980s.
Last year,
a world-famous Catholic choir school in Germany, the Regensburger Domspatzen
school, revealed that more than 500 boys there suffered sexual or physical
abuse in what victims have likened to "prison, hell or a concentration camp".
Pope
Francis has also found himself embroiled in the worldwide sex abuse scandal
after conservative US Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano last month claimed the
pontiff had personally ignored abuse allegations against prominent US cardinal
Theodore McCarrick for five years.
Francis has
so far refused to respond to the allegations.

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