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Police examine sex abuse report | |
(9 minutes later) | |
Police in the Irish Republic are examining if criminal charges can be brought over a damning report on child sex abuse at Catholic institutions. | |
Minister for Justice Dermot Ahern said he was working with the attorney general to see if prosecutions could be brought. | |
The gardai have also appointed a senior policeman to examine the report in a criminal justice context. | |
Cardinal Sean Brady is to discuss the report's findings with the Pope. | |
The leader of the Catholic Church in Ireland also said that the compensation deal agreed by the Irish government with the orders should be revisited. | The leader of the Catholic Church in Ireland also said that the compensation deal agreed by the Irish government with the orders should be revisited. |
It was initially thought the Commission to Inquire Into Child Abuse's findings would not be used for criminal prosecutions - in part because the Christian Brothers successfully sued the commission in 2004 to keep the identities of all of its members, dead or alive, unnamed in the report. | |
No real names, whether of victims or perpetrators, appear in the final document. | |
Many victims reacted with anger that the commission's findings would not result in their abusers being jailed. | |
More than 2,000 people told the commission they had suffered physical and sexual abuse as children in the institutions. | |
It found that sexual abuse was "endemic" in boys' institutions, and church leaders knew what was going on. | It found that sexual abuse was "endemic" in boys' institutions, and church leaders knew what was going on. |
The Irish deputy prime minister, Mary Coughlan, described the abuse of children in Catholic-run institutions as one of the "darkest chapters" in Irish history. | The Irish deputy prime minister, Mary Coughlan, described the abuse of children in Catholic-run institutions as one of the "darkest chapters" in Irish history. |
The report, nine years in the making and covering a period of six decades, also found government inspectors failed to stop beatings, rapes and humiliation. | The report, nine years in the making and covering a period of six decades, also found government inspectors failed to stop beatings, rapes and humiliation. |