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The accepted norm in the Irish Church was that its priesthood was celibate and chaste, and homosexuality was both a sin and a crime. [8] The Church forbade its members (the "faithful") to use artificial contraception, campaigned strongly against laws allowing abortion and divorce, and publicly disapproved of unmarried cohabiting couples and illegitimacy.
The diocese has also hosted conferences on the importance of preventing abuse. [ 5 ] In 2012 the Diocese of Limerick released a (NBSCCCI) safeguarding report that found the diocese in compliance with forty-four out of forty-eight criteria, and partially in compliance with the other four.
The sexual abuse cases in Dublin archdiocese are major chapters in the series of Catholic Church sexual abuse cases in Ireland. The Irish government commissioned a statutory enquiry in 2006 that published the Murphy Report in November 2009.
The former Bishop of Derry, Dr. Séamus Hegarty served as Bishop of the Diocese of Raphoe from 1982 to 1994 during the period when some of this abuse occurred but in an RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta interview in 2002, Hegarty said he never knew of Greene's crimes when he was bishop, [7] and his successor as Bishop of Raphoe, Dr. Philip Boyce ...
In April 2008, Justine McCarthy, a journalist with the Sunday Tribune, broke the story of the impending scandal in the diocese of Cloyne.There followed a number of hastily arranged meetings between Magee, Monsignor Denis O'Callaghan, (the Vicar General of Cloyne), and Dean Eamon Gould with representatives of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church (or Safeguarding ...
A report from the New York Times says Conor McGregor was accused of sexually assaulting a woman at a Dublin hotel in December.
The McCoy Report into the Galway diocese began in 1999. The results were published in December 2007. It found that eleven brothers and seven other non clerical staff members were alleged to have abused 21 intellectually disabled children in residential care during the period 1965–1998.
Location of Munster in Ireland. The 2021 Munster abuse case, contemporaneously reported in the media as the Munster abuse trial, refers to a criminal trial that took place in Ireland between 2021 and 2022, pertaining to five adults who were found guilty of a plethora of offenses committed against five of the children of two of the accused, between 18 August 2014 and 28 April 2016, in several ...