Archbishop Andre-Joseph Leonard said the Church would listento the victims |
The new head of Belgium's Catholic Church has pledged to focus on the victims of alleged sexual abuse in a first attempt to rebuild public trust.
Archbishop Andre-Joseph Leonard said that although the Church would not be able to offer immediate solutions, it would set up a victims' support centre.
An independent body to investigate alleged abuse found it had occurred in every diocese over decades.
This commission said some victims were infants when the abuse started.
"We have to listen to their questions, to re-establish their dignity and help to heal the suffering they have endured," he said.
"We want to learn the lessons of the errors of the past. The reflections and conclusions contained in the report [on sexual abuse in the church] will be taken on board," he added.
He said the Church wanted to create a centre for "recognition, reconciliation and healing", but that given the scale of the challenge, it would not be ready before the end of the year.
He added the Church wanted to co-operate more closely with police investigating allegations of abuse, but he gave no details of how it would do so.
He also warned those responsible that they will face the sanctions of canon law, including lifelong exclusion from the Church.
One victims' group said the setting up of a centre controlled by the Church was not enough.
"There cannot be an investigation commission on crimes committed within an institution controlled by this institution itself," said a spokeswoman for the Collectif Droits de l'Homme dans l'Eglise.
This attempt to find a solution to the sexual abuse scandal that has rocked the Roman Catholic Church in Belgium provides more questions than answers, says the BBC's Jonty Bloom in Brussels.
If the Church hopes to draw a line under this affair today, it is likely to be disappointed, our correspondent adds.
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