Sexual abuse Basel diocese received 120 reports of mostly statute-barred assaults

SDA

28.6.2024 - 09:50

Felix Gmür, Bishop of Basel, based in Solothurn, has received 76 recommendations from the independent reporting office. An application for satisfaction was made in ten cases. (archive picture)
Felix Gmür, Bishop of Basel, based in Solothurn, has received 76 recommendations from the independent reporting office. An application for satisfaction was made in ten cases. (archive picture)
Keystone

The diocese of Basel has provided information on the status of the investigation into reports of sexual assault. Since last September, 120 reports have been received. Most of them concern people who have already died or are time-barred, as the diocese announced on Friday.

Keystone-SDA

In September 2023, the Roman Catholic Church published a pilot study on the topic of sexual assault. Since then, the independent reporting office of the diocese of Basel has inspected 105 files of personnel, victims, parishes and religious orders.

Of the 120 reports, the reporting office has closed 76 by making recommendations to Bishop Felix Gmür. 44 report dossiers are still being processed, as the diocese writes.

95 percent of these reports concern accused persons who are already deceased, time-barred sexual assaults from the period between 1930 and 2010 - i.e. before Bishop Gmür took office - as well as reports in which "neither the accused person, the alleged victim nor what happened is known or can be ascertained".

In ten cases, the independent law firm commissioned by the diocese has submitted applications for compensation. Eight cases are still being processed. The law firm has also been entrusted with three preliminary investigations under canon law, two of which are still ongoing.

The study conducted by the University of Zurich in September 2023 showed that Roman Catholic priests and members of religious orders in Switzerland had committed over 1,000 cases of sexual abuse since 1950 - with a high number of unreported cases. A second study has been in progress since the beginning of the year. The results are due to be presented in 2027.