A lawyer investigating accusations of abuse in a Benedictine monastery school in Ettal presented a final report to the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising yesterday, including 173 pages of victims' accounts of abuse.
"My investigations quite clearly show that for decades up until around 1990, children and adolescents were brutally abused in the Ettal monastery," Thomas Pfister said in a statement.
"The number of victims' accounts has increased significantly since the intermediary report of March 5," added Pfister, who said last month that hundreds of pupils had been beaten and some sexually abused at the school. An archdiocese spokesman said he could not comment on the specific number of victims before a news conference on Tuesday.
A growing sex abuse scandal has rocked confidence in Germany's Catholic Church.
A survey published yesterday found that a quarter of the country's Catholics were considering quitting the church in the wake of reports of hundreds of cases, some many decades old, of sexual abuse by clerics.
In Pfister's report last month, the lawyer said there had been very extreme cases of mishandling at the school in Ettal in southern Bavaria which would normally have been punished with long prison sentences.
He also said that one monk now dead had committed "serial sexual harassment and sexual abuse on small and older children". Last week, clerics in Germany used Easter sermons to pray for the victims as public sentiment against the Church turned decidedly negative. Thousands quit the Church in the last month.
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