Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby announces resignation over abuse scandal

The Most Reverend Sir Justin Welby gives a service in March this year. Pic: PA
The leader of the world's Anglican communion, Archbishop of
Canterbury Justin Welby, announced Tuesday he was resigning following a damning
report that concluded the Church of England covered up a serial abuse case.
Welby had faced days of growing pressure to quit after the
independent probe found Welby "could and should" have formally
reported decades of abuse by a Church-linked lawyer to authorities in 2013.
A petition demanding his resignation, launched in the wake
of the report's revelations, has garnered nearly 14,000 signatures while
leading clergy, including some bishops, were increasingly urging him to quit.
"It is very clear that I must take personal and
institutional responsibility for the long and re-traumatising period between
2013 and 2024," Welby said in a statement.
"I hope this decision makes clear how seriously the
Church of England understands the need for change and our profound commitment
to creating a safer church.
"As I step down I do so in sorrow with all victims and
survivors of abuse."
The independent Makin Review concluded that John Smyth, a
lawyer who organised evangelical summer camps in the 1970s and 1980s, was
responsible for the "prolific, brutal and horrific" abuse of as many
as 130 boys and young men.
It found the Church of England -- the mother church of
Anglicanism -- covered up the "traumatic physical, sexual, psychological
and spiritual attacks", which occurred in Britain, Zimbabwe and South
Africa over several decades.
Smyth, who lived in Africa from 1984, died aged 75 in South
Africa in 2018 while under investigation by British police. He never faced any
criminal charges.
Appointed the Church of England's highest-ranking cleric in
2013, Welby has apologised for what occurred but previously insisted he would
not resign because he did not know about the wrongdoing before then.
On Tuesday, he said he was told that year that police had
been notified and had "believed wrongly that an appropriate resolution
would follow".
Hours earlier, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer had ratcheted
up the pressure on Welby when he said Smyth's victims had been "failed
very, very badly."
Asked whether Welby should stand down, Starmer, a former
chief prosecutor for England and Wales, said it was "a matter, in the end,
for the Church".
"But I'm not going to shy away from the fact that these
are horrific allegations and that my thoughts are with the victims in relation
to it," he added.
The report into Smyth, led by former social services chief
Keith Makin, concluded those "at the highest level" within the Church
knew from mid-2013 about the extent of his abusive crimes.
The failure to alert police "represented a further
missed opportunity to bring him to justice" it said.
It may also have "resulted in an ongoing and avoidable
safeguarding threat in the period between 2012 and his death in 2018".
The Makin probe also further criticised the Church's
response to a 2017 Channel 4 expose of Smyth's abuses, calling it "poor in
terms of speed, professionalism, intensity and curiosity".
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