35 Catholic Church members investigated over sex abuse in Bolivia
Case has sparked outrage in Bolivia, with many calling for justice for the victims and greater accountability from the Catholic Church.
At least 35 members of the Catholic Church are being investigated by Bolivian prosecutors after more than a dozen victims accused them of sexual abuse.
The development comes as the country is reeling from confessions of abuse that were found in the personal diary of a Spanish priest who died in Bolivia in 2009 after decades of service there.
Prosecutors opened an investigation following a report by the Spanish daily El Pais in April about the late Spanish priest Alfonso Pedrajas, whose diary indicated that he had abused more than 80 minors in Bolivia, where he had lived since the early 1970s.
Pedrajas also noted in his journal that senior clergy was aware of his crimes but kept quiet.
The Bolivian attorney general's office has confirmed that they are investigating 35 people in relation to the case, but did not provide any specific details about the victims.
Daniela Caceres, the department head at the Bolivian attorney general´s office, said that they have 17 identified victims and are taking precautions to protect their identities.
The official also said that the diary provided by the Society of Jesus in Bolivia was incomplete, with some pages skipped and some passages crossed out and erased. Bolivian authorities will try to obtain the complete document or request the cooperation of Spanish prosecutors.
The Catholic Church has also set up four commissions to receive and process complaints.
Bolivian President Luis Arce has discussed with the Vatican the need to improve controls to prevent priests with a history of sex offenses from entering the country.
In a letter released in mid-June by the Bolivian president, Pope Francis expressed his "shame and dismay" at the sexual abuse committed by the clerics and vowed to shed light on what happened.
The case has sparked outrage in Bolivia, with many calling for justice for the victims and greater accountability from the Catholic Church.
-
Mexico oil spill dispute grows as environmental groups accuse government of hiding true source
-
Tornado warning issued as severe storms cause damage and power outages across Northeast Ohio
-
Oracle layoffs: thousands reportedly lose jobs amid push for AI-driven efficiency
-
Cicada COVID variant reaches Ontario with cases confirmed as experts urge calm over new strain
-
Kristi Noem hit by husband Bryon's cross-dressing photos after Corey Lewandowski 'affair'
-
Charlie Kirk killing: Bullet match confusion explained
-
Piers Morgan don't understand Scott Mills scandal
-
Why NASA Artemis II mission matters for Trump’s ‘America First’ vision