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A pioneering probe into clerical abuse in northern Italy’s Bolzano-Bressanone Diocese has uncovered 67 cases involving 59 victims over a nearly 60-year period, according to a study released on Jan. 20.
The 635-page report examined cases from 1964 to 2023 in the northern Italian region of Alto Adige-Südtirol and identified 41 clergy members as alleged per-petrators. However, researchers could definitively confirm alle-gations against only 29 of the accused, while claims against the remaining 12 clergy could not be verified with sufficient certainty.
In what researchers called a “surprising” finding, more than 51% of the victims were female, while only 18% were definitively identified as male. This pattern marks a significant departure from similar studies in Germany, where male victims predomina-ted, reported CNA Deutsch, CNA’s German-language news partner.
The study, conducted by Munich-based law firm Westpfahl Spilker Wastl, noted that the diocese’s handling of abuse cases has improved since 2010. Resear-chers particularly praised former Bishop Karl Golser (2008–2011) for establishing the diocese’s list-ening centre – described as “an absolute novelty in Italy” – though they noted that before 2010, diocesan leadership had “mostly reacted inadequately or inappro-priately.”
The report acknowledged sincere efforts by current leader-ship – Bishop Ivo Muser since 2011 and Vicar General Eugen Runggaldier since 2018 – to improve the diocese’s approach to abuse cases and support for victims.
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