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Two women implicated in Catholic school sex abuse scandal

Allegations of sexual abuse at Catholic schools in Germany continued to spread on Thursday, with former students stepping forward to implicate two female authority figures.

Two women implicated in Catholic school sex abuse scandal
Lawyer Raue talks to the press on Thursday. Photo: DPA

“It has reached a dimension that was unimaginable before,” said Ursula Raue, the lawyer hired by the Cansisius secondary school in Berlin, where the scandal erupted in late January.

According to Raue, about 115 victims have come forward across the country, including some whom were not even enrolled at Jesuit schools.

“I am under the impression that there will still be more,” Raue said at a press conference.

The lawyer said she had also heard about victims who have taken their lives, while some men had spoken of their abuse for the first time, having never even told their wives.

So far between 40 and 50 former students at the Canisius school have alleged they were sexually abused in the 1970s and 80s after current headmaster Klaus Mertes sent a letter to some 600 former students who he believed may have been victims of at least two priests on staff at the elite school.

Since then reports of sexual abuse in other Catholic schools and organisations have spread throughout Germany, including the St. Blasien Jesuit school in the Black Forest and the Aloisius secondary school in Bonn.

Reports implicate at least 12 teachers or priests involved in the abuse, Raue said.

Earlier in the week media reports said victim compensation could reach into the millions of euros.

Meanwhile prosecutors have said that the alleged abuse probably happened too long ago for criminal charges to be an option. Canisius school headmaster Mertes also acknowledged that the church may compensate victims.

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FLOODS

German prosecutors drop investigation into ‘unforeseeable’ flood disaster

More than two and a half years after the deadly flood disaster in the Ahr Valley, western Germany, prosecutors have dropped an investigation into alleged negligence by the local district administrator.

German prosecutors drop investigation into 'unforeseeable' flood disaster

The public prosecutor’s office in Koblenz has closed the investigation into the deadly flood disaster in the Ahr valley that occurred in the summer of 2021.

A sufficient suspicion against the former Ahr district administrator Jürgen Pföhler (CDU) and an employee from the crisis team has not arisen, announced the head of the public prosecutor’s office in Koblenz, Mario Mannweiler, on Thursday.

Following the flood disaster in the Ahr region in Rhineland-Palatinate – in which 136 people died in Germany and thousands of homes were destroyed – there were accusations that the district of Ahrweiler, with Pföhler at the helm, had acted too late in sending flood warnings.

An investigation on suspicion of negligent homicide in 135 cases began in August of 2021. Pföhler had always denied the allegations.

READ ALSO: UPDATE – German prosecutors consider manslaughter probe into deadly floods

The public prosecutor’s office came to the conclusion that it was an extraordinary natural disaster: “The 2021 flood far exceeded anything people had experienced before and was subjectively unimaginable for residents, those affected, emergency services and those responsible for operations alike,” the authority said.

Civil protections in the district of Ahrweiler, including its disaster warning system, were found to be insufficient.

READ ALSO: Germany knew its disaster warning system wasn’t good enough – why wasn’t it improved?

But from the point of view of the public prosecutor’s office, these “quite considerable deficiencies”, which were identified by an expert, did not constitute criminal liability.

Why did the case take so long?

The investigations had dragged on partly because they were marked by considerable challenges, said the head of the Rhineland-Palatinate State Criminal Police Office, Mario Germano. “Namely, to conduct investigations in an area marked by the natural disaster and partially destroyed. Some of the people we had to interrogate were severely traumatised.”

More than 300 witnesses were heard including firefighters, city workers and those affected by the flood. More than 20 terabytes of digital data had been secured and evaluated, and more than 300 gigabytes were deemed relevant to the proceedings.

Pföhler, who stopped working as the district administrator in August 2021 due to illness, stepped down from the role in October 2021 citing an incapacity for duty. 

The conclusion of the investigation had been postponed several times, in part because the public prosecutor’s office wanted to wait for the outcome of the investigative committee in the Rhineland-Palatinate state parliament.

READ ALSO: Volunteer army rebuilds Germany’s flood-stricken towns

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