New allegations of sexual child abuse by
Catholic clergy surfaced in Berlin on Sunday - as it emerged that
thousands of Germans had left the church in the wake of this year's
abuse scandal.
A caller to an abuse hotline set up by the
Catholic church alleged that a Berlin priest had abused minors in the
1990s, the church said.
The diocese of Berlin had launched investigations and placed the priest on temporary leave, the diocese added.
Meanwhile it emerged that tens of thousands of Germans had left the
church this year, according to a survey by German Press Agency dpa, in
the wake of serious allegations of clerical abuse, many dating back to
the 1960s.
The string of revelations started in January at the Canisius College, another Berlin church institution.
In Augsburg, where Bishop Walter Mixa admitted earlier this year that
he had hit children in his care, more than 11,000 left the Catholic
church, the survey showed. The previous year's figure had been below
7,000.
Daily Frankfurter Rundschau reported that more than
17,000 had left the Diocese of Stuttgart, an increase of more than 50
per cent on the previous year.
Other Catholic dioceses
reported similar rises in numbers of people leaving the faith. In many
instances, believers switched to the Protestant church, according to
daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung.
In Germany, membership of
Christian and Jewish religious denominations is formally documented and
used as a basis for charging so-called church taxes to fund religious
institutions.
Other religious groups have waived this option to tax
members.
SIC: M&C/INT'L