November 13, 2024

Daniel Andrews ‘couldn’t think of anything more distressing’ for victims than a state funeral for George Pell

Daniel Andrews #DanielAndrews

Daniel Andrews says a state funeral will not be offered for Cardinal George Pell by the government out of respect for victims of institutional child sexual abuse.

Pell, Australia’s most senior Catholic and a former archbishop of Melbourne, died on Wednesday morning (AEDT) from heart complications arising from hip replacement surgery in Rome. He was 81.

On Thursday the Victorian premier offered his condolences to the family, friends and colleagues of Pell, acknowledging it would be a “sad time” for them.

But he said victims of child institutional child sexual abuse remained “foremost” in his thoughts.

“We see you, we believe you, we support you and you’re at the centre of not only our thoughts, not only our words, but our actions,” Andrews said.

“We should never ever forget that predator brothers and priests were systematically moved around knowingly. It was part of a strategy from one working-class parish to the next.

“We should never ever forget that, and we will never ever forget Victims survivors of institutional child sexual abuse at the hands of the Catholic church.”

Andrews said there had been no request made for a state funeral service, which is funded by the Victorian government, nor would one be offered to Pell.

“I don’t believe that there’s been a request made and these things are normally offered rather than ask for and there will be no offer made.

“There will be no memorial service or state funeral because I think that would be a deeply, deeply distressing thing for every victim-survivor of Catholic church child sexual abuse. That is my view. I will not do that.

“I couldn’t think of anything that would be more distressing for victim-survivors than that.”

The premier refused to be drawn on Pell’s legacy, nor the comments of the federal opposition leader, Peter Dutton, who said the cardinal had been a victim of “political persecution”.

Dutton lay blame for Pell’s overturned child sexual abuse conviction at the hands of the Andrews government.

In 2018, Pell was convicted of molesting two choir boys in the sacristy at St Patrick’s Cathedral while he was archbishop of Melbourne in 1996.

Pell always maintained his innocence and his convictions were quashed in a unanimous decision in the high court in 2020. He served 13 months in jail before being released.

“On his passing, the fact he spent a year in prison for a conviction that the high court of Australia unanimously quashed should provide some cause for reflection for the Victorian Labor government and its institutions that led this modern-day political persecution,” Dutton said in a statement on Wednesday afternoon.

Andrews said he would not “dignify” Dutton’s “commentary” with a response.

Pell was criticised by the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse for his failure to hold clergy to account for their crimes or stop their offending.

The commission found Pell knew about child abuse, particularly within the Victorian diocese of Ballarat, as early as the 1973.

A royal commission hearing in 2015 was told up to 14 priests in Ballarat had sexually abused children, and there have been at least 130 claims and substantiated complaints since 1980. Survivor groups estimate more than 50 suicides in the town are linked to historic sexual abuse by priests.

The commission was also critical of his Melbourne Response, a scheme which initially capped compensation for victims of sexual abuse at the hands of clergy to $50,000. It was abolished in 2021.

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