End abuse in religious settings

End abuse in religious settings

Page 29 of 55: Religious privilege must not undermine safeguarding and justice.

Religious organisations and communities are frequent targets of abusers.

Religious institutions are often well-placed and strongly motivated to cover up incidents of sexual and physical abuse.

We work to hold these organisations to account and get justice for abuse victims and survivors.

Many religious organisations enjoy a close relationship with the establishment and tend to see themselves as above the law. This can increase the risk of abuse, prevent perpetrators from facing justice, and impede efforts to support and compensate victims and survivors of abuse.

Those intent on abuse are often attracted to religious institutions. Such organisations give access to, and sometimes extreme control over, numerous children and vulnerable adults.

When abuse does occur, religious organisations often act to protect the reputation of the institution above the rights of the victim. They may pressure the victim to stay silent and move the perpetrator to somewhere unaware of their reputation.

Many religious institutions also have influence and connections that enable them to evade justice and scrutiny, often for decades.

All forms of abuse, be they sexual, physical or psychological, can cause serious harm. Victims of abuse in religious settings have suffered physical and mental health problems, including addiction, self-harm and suicide.

Abuse can take place in any religious setting. That's why we work at the national and international level to hold religious organisations to account for safeguarding failings, and to ensure victims and survivors can get justice.

Take action!

1. Share your story

Tell us why you support this campaign, and how you are personally affected by the issue. You can also let us know if you would like assistance with a particular issue.

2. Write to your MP

Ask your MP to support our work to end abuse in religion settings

3. Join the National Secular Society

Become a member of the National Secular Society today! Together, we can separate religion and state for greater freedom and fairness.

Latest updates

NSS names Phil Johnson and Graham Sawyer as Secularists of the Year

NSS names Phil Johnson and Graham Sawyer as Secularists of the Year

Posted: Sat, 24 Mar 2018 16:26

The National Secular Society has named Phil Johnson and Graham Sawyer as its Secularists of the Year for 2018.

Phil and Graham accepted a £5,000 prize from the human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell at an awards ceremony in central London today. Both were honoured for their work campaigning on behalf of survivors of child abuse in the Church of England.

Phil has worked as the chair of Minister And Clergy Sexual Abuse Survivors (MACSAS), a support group for those who have been sexually abused by ministers or clergy. Graham, the vicar of St James' Church of Briercliffe in Burnley, has been a crucial voice for change in the C of E.

The award was handed over the day after the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse concluded three weeks of hearings into the cover-up of abuse in the diocese of Chichester. Phil gave evidence to the inquiry earlier this month.

Peter Tatchell called Phil and Graham "two exceptionally courageous, tenacious and determined men who simply refused to give in to the lies and deceit of the church hierarchy" as he handed over the award.

"If Phil hadn't fought and campaigned and battled for so many years, in all likelihood we would never have had an abuse inquiry at all," he said. He said Graham was "a deeply religious and deeply spiritual man and a true secularist".

"You can be religious but challenge religious power and privilege and believe that the church has to play by the same rules as everyone else."

Accepting the prize, Graham said "he who allows oppression shares the crime", quoting from the 18th century English physician Erasmus Darwin.

"The bishops and archbishops who have allowed the brutal sexual abuse of children and vulnerable adults over many decades continue to share in the crime and this must be exposed.

"They must face the full force of the law for their crimes."

Graham also paid tribute to Phil, Peter Tatchell and the NSS. He said the society "has never been more important" and the award showed that "this is truly a society that believes both in freedom of religion as well as freedom from religion".

"The work of the society in lobbying Members of Parliament for a Britain where everyone is, as far as possible, treated equally, is so important. What sort of example are we setting to our young people when we allow one group in one religion a privileged place in our legislature by placing Church of England bishops in the House of Lords?

"What does this say to a young Muslim, Jew, Buddhist or indeed someone who has no faith? It tells them that they are not treated equally and this is plainly wrong."

Phil said it was important to "continue the fight" on behalf of victims who were often too weak to take on strong institutions on their own.

"Most of our time and resources at MACSAS are spent providing support and advocacy to victims of sexual abuse and exploitation in a religious context. Making representations to religious institutions and campaigning for change and accountability is a very important part of what we do and this award will help me to continue this work.

He criticised the Church of England as "elitist, sexist and homophobic" and said it did not "see itself as accountable to the law". He called for legal change to require mandatory reporting of sexual abuse to the statutory authorities, so that "those who fail to report or cover up abuse can be held to account".

Stephen Evans, the NSS's chief executive, praised the winners for their "courageous efforts to break the silence that has allowed an epidemic of abuse to take place in the Church of England".

"Graham Sawyer has made strong, reliable and consistent demands for reform from within the C of E. Phil Johnson has given a voice to many voiceless people who have suffered clerical abuse. Both have faced institutional hostility and worked tirelessly to promote meaningful change which will protect children in the future, often at great personal cost.

"We hope their work will cause those in positions of power to reflect on the damage done by excessive deference to religious authority. The Church of England must be held to account for its cover-up of abuse, including through independent oversight of its safeguarding policies. And ultimately it needs to be disestablished so society can hold clerical authorities to the same standards as everyone else."

The NSS has given out the Secularist of the Year award annually since 2005 to recognise a campaigner or group for an outstanding contribution to the secularist movement.

This year's nominees included Amina Lone, of the Social Action and Research Foundation; My Stealthy Freedom, which encourages Iranian women to discard their hijabs in public; counter-extremist campaigner and radio host Maajid Nawaz; Meena Varma, the director of Dalit Solidarity Network UK; and the Western Isles Secular Society, which has organised to oppose Sabbatarian control of life in the Western Isles.

CoE faced 3,300 safeguarding concerns or abuse allegations in 2016

CoE faced 3,300 safeguarding concerns or abuse allegations in 2016

Posted: Thu, 8 Feb 2018 14:21

The Church of England handled more than 3,000 safeguarding concerns or allegations of abuse in 2016, according to papers published for its general synod.

The vast majority of the allegations related to children, young people and vulnerable adults. The figure referred to both cases that were open and those newly reported that year. It is not known how many involved active claims for compensation against the church.

Peter Hancock, the church's lead bishop on safeguarding issues, released some of the details of the concerns and allegations. He said 338 risk assessments were carried out by the church's dioceses in 2016. Nineteen per cent of them were carried out on priests.

There were also 867 'safeguarding assessments' in place, 682 of which were related to known sex offenders. These are made when someone is believed to pose a risk to young or vulnerable people. The subject must agree to be monitored or to restrict their interaction with possible victims of abuse.

The revelations come as the C of E's general synod meets in Westminster. Christian Today has reported that survivors of abuse are "furious" that the presentation of the issue is being "stage-managed by bishops" and will not be "a full debate that would allow more probing issues to be raised".

Next month the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) is due to spend three weeks of public hearings focusing on abuse within the Church of England. As a case study the inquiry will focus on the handling of multiple allegations in Chichester.

It will also consider whether there were "inappropriate attempts by people of prominence to interfere in the criminal justice process" in the case of Peter Ball, the former bishop of Lewes and Gloucester. Ball was jailed in 2015 after admitting a string of historical sex offences against 18 teenagers and young men.

In a damning official report last year Dame Moira Gibb said the Church had failed to respond appropriately to Ball's conduct "over a period of many years". After the report's publication the archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby admitted that the Church had "concealed" evidence of Ball's abuse.

And in a statement last month Welby said this was part of a longer-term pattern: "Our history over the last 70 years has revealed that the Church covered up, ignored or denied the reality of abuse on major occasions."

The National Secular Society is campaigning for a mandatory reporting law, which would require abuse allegations to be reported to the external authorities.

An NSS spokesperson said the figures were "a reminder of the need to hold Church officials to the same standard as others".