terça-feira, 26 de novembro de 2019

40 Anos de Prisão para Padres Abusadores de Crianças Surdas na Argentina


Os padres Nicola Corradi (o que está na cadeira de rodas), de 84 anos, foi sentenciado a 42 anos de prisão e o padre Horacio Corbacho (o de verde na extrema esquerda), de 59 anos,  a 45 anos de prisão por abusar sexualmente de crianças surdas. 10 vítimas fazem parte da acusação judicial, mas por volta de 20 fizeram acusações aos padres.

É um caso terrível conhecido por Bergoglio há muito tempo.

Os abusos na Argentina aconteceram no Instituto Antonio Provolo para Crianças Surdas e Mudas  na província de Mendoza. Os crimes ocorreram no período de 2004 a 2016. Corradi também foi acusado de abuso sexual de crianças na Itália e por onde passou na Argentina desde os anos 70.

E o Papa Francisco, quando arcebispo em Buenos Aires, já sabia dos casos, como pontífice, recebeu carta das vítimas e também recebeu em mãos uma lista dos padres acusados, mas nunca se pronunciou.

Temos um outro abusador sexual argentino morando onde mora o próprio Papa no Vaticano, Gustavo Zachetta. A justiça argentina pede a extradição dele ao Papa, que até agora não liberou.

O jornal argentino La Nacion fez uma cronologia deste caso de abuso sexual no Instituto Antonio Provolo, cliquem aqui para ver a cronologia.

As vítimas celebraram o veredito e tiveram palavras contra Francisco:

Vejam parte do relato do The Catholic Herald:

Priests convicted of abusing children at Argentina school for the deaf

...
Father Nicola Corradi, an 83-year-old Italian, sat in a wheelchair Monday, while he was sentenced to 42 years in prison Nov. 25, alongside Father Horacio Corbacho, 59, sentenced to 45 years. A lay employee, gardener Armando Gomez, was sentenced to 18 years in prison.
The abuse took place at the now-closed Antonio Provolo Institute for Deaf and Hearing Impaired children in Argentina’s Mendoza province. The trial concerned more than 20 instances of abuse in all, including charges of rape, sexual touching, and corruption of minors. The students were reportedly forced to watch pornography or perform sex acts among themselves.
The cases involve 10 students, though about 20 have made abuse accusations. The abusers especially targeted children who spent the night in the institute’s shelters, and the victims said they were afraid to report for fear of living in poverty after being expelled or for fear their parents would be punished.
The students were typically from poor families and had communication limitations. The school did not teach sign language but followed a methodology that aimed to teach children to read and speak like those who could hear, the Washington Post reported in February. Students at the school who used sign language would be physically reprimanded.
The crimes took place from 2004 to 2016, when Corradi, Corbacho, and others were arrested and the school shut down.
After the verdict, victims of the men celebrated outside the courtroom.
“I am happy, thank you so much for the battle, because everyone has supported us. … This has changed my life, which is evolving,” Vanina Garay, 26, told the Associated Press.
Corradi is a member of the Company of Mary, an Italian religious community that operates schools for deaf children in several countries. The schools are named for Antonio Provolo, a nineteenth-century Italian priest who founded Corradi’s religious community.
Corradi worked at a sister school in in La Plata, Argentina from 1970 to 1994, and former students have accused him of abuse there as well. Before that, he worked at an Antonio Provolo school in Verona, Italy. He was first accused of abuse in 2009, when 14 Italians reported that they had been abused by priests, religious brothers, and other adults at the Provolo Institute in Verona, over the course of several decades.
They could not face civil prosecution due to statutes of limitations.
After a Vatican investigation, five priests at the Italian institute were sanctioned; but Corradi, then living in Argentina, was not among them. A Vatican investigator believed his sole accuser was a victim of abuse, but because Corradi was accused by so many of abuse and his story showed apparent inconsistencies the investigator doubted the plausibility of his claims, according to the Washington Post.
When the Argentine trial opened on Monday, among those protesting outside of the court was ex-student Ezequiel Villalonga, who is now 18.
“Those of us from the Próvolo in Mendoza said: ‘no more fear. We have the power’,” he said, according to the Associated Press. Like many other abuse victims at the school, he is harshly critical of Pope Francis.
“Francis was very quiet about the abusive priests, but now the sentence is coming,” said Villalonga. “I know that the pope is afraid because the deaf have been brave.
Advocates for the victims have called for the abusers to be dismissed from the clerical state.
...
Pope Francis previously served as Archbishop of Buenos Aires. He headed the Argentine bishops’ conference when the alleged crimes were reported in 2009 and 2010.
In 2014, Corradi was the subject of a letter sent to Pope Francis from Italian victims of sexual abuse who were concerned about the priest’s ongoing ministry, despite the accusations against him. In 2015, the group handed a list of priests accused of abuse to the Pope in person, according to the Washington Post.
The group reportedly did not hear back from Pope Francis, but did hear from a Vatican official, Archbishop Giovanni Becciu, who wrote to the group in 2016 to tell them that he had informed the Italian bishops’ conference of their request for an investigation.
Later that year, Corradi, as well as Corbacho and another employee of the school, were arrested. When Argentine authorities arrested Corradi and Corbacho, the Washington Post reported, local officials said the Church in Argentina was not fully cooperative with the investigation.

3 comentários:

  1. Tenebroso. Simplesmente tenebroso. Não apenas as monstruosidades desses padres débeis e, pode-se dizer, psicopatas sexuais. Mas também a postura de Bergólio. Espero que mais desses sacrílegos da pureza sejam presos.

    Rezarei pelas vítimas

    ResponderExcluir
  2. Um último comentário: ficou sabendo disso aqui, Dr Pedro? Ver o link: https://www.aldomariavalli.it/2019/11/19/c-m-vigano-cosi-la-neo-religione-mondiale-avra-il-suo-tempio-con-lapprovazione-del-papa/?fbclid=IwAR0kEVC-fKMujFTsXvRHQ9-6ABgF8luSA5GKG4S7GqXGGxgkcrRJ7GX4z5k

    Não dá mais pra ver o atual papa como um homem que serve a Santa Igreja. Milhares de sacerdotes que poderiam se erguer estão como que anestesiados diante desse homem, ou pela covardia ou por um tipo de papolatria;

    Salve-no Nossa Senhora.

    ResponderExcluir
    Respostas
    1. Sim, meu amigo. Infelizmente sim. Vigano disse o óbvio que precisa ser dito.

      Salve-nos Maria.

      Abraço,
      Pedro Erik

      Excluir

Certa vez, li uma frase em inglês muito boa para ser colocada quando se abre para comentários. A frase diz: "Say What You Mean, Mean What Say, But Don’t Say it Mean." (Diga o que você realmente quer dizer, com sinceridade, mas não com maldade).