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Church of England accused of covering up sexual assault of 130 underage victims

The spiritual leader of the Anglicans, Justin Welby, is in turmoil: the Church of England is accused of having covered up a scandal which left more than 130 victims, mainly underage boys, physically and sexually assaulted by a lawyer linked to the religious institution.

Several Anglican religious leaders have been calling for several days for Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury, to resign in the wake of a damning report on the handling of this affair by the Church of England of which he is the head.

130 victims in the United Kingdom, Zimbabwe and South Africa

If he immediately apologized, it is a hard blow for this 68-year-old man, with a face well known to the British for having officiated at several major royal events in recent years, including the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II or the coronation of King Charles III.

Between the 1970s and the mid-2010s, John Smyth, a lawyer who chaired a charity running holiday camps with the Church of England, was accused of molesting 130 boys and young men in the United Kingdom and then in Africa, notably in Zimbabwe and South Africa, where he had settled.

“A campaign of concealment”

If the top of the Church was officially informed of these facts in 2013, religious leaders had been aware of them since the beginning of the 1980s but kept them quiet as part of a “concealment campaign”, concluded a investigation commissioned by the Church, in a report published last Thursday.

John Smyth “is arguably the most prolific serial abuser associated with the Church of England”, states this report, which details the “brutal and horrific” physical, sexual and psychological suffering he inflicted on his victims.

For example, he would bring young boys to his home in the south of England where he would beat them with a cane, sometimes until they bled, citing theological justifications.

The archbishop “could and should have” reported the violence

The report also concluded that the Archbishop of Canterbury “could and should have” reported the lawyer's abuse to the police from 2013, when he became primate of the Church of England.

John Smyth died in 2018 in South Africa at the age of 75 without being tried. The affair only finally came to light after the broadcast of a documentary by Channel 4 in 2017.

Justin Welby assured after the publication of the report that he had “no idea or suspicion” before 2013 but that he admitted having “personally failed to ensure” that after that date “this horrible tragedy would be the subject of vigorous investigation.

Despite his apology, three members of the General Synod, the elected body responsible for deciding matters of Church of England doctrine, launched a petition this weekend calling for his resignation. As of Monday, it had collected more than 4,000 signatures.

Many calls for resignation

They denounce the “special responsibility” of the Archbishop of Canterbury and believe that his position “is no longer tenable”.

The Archbishop of Newcastle Helen-Ann Hartley also called for his resignation on Monday, deeming his position “untenable” and adding that the Church “risks completely losing its credibility”.

According to this report, part of a wider investigation into various institutions in the country, 390 people linked to the Church of England have been convicted of sexual offenses from the 1940s to 2018.

The Church of England is the mother church of the Anglican communion, which has around forty churches in 165 countries and 85 million faithful.

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