U.S EQUIPMENT, EXPERTS ARRIVE AT KENYA EBOLA FACILITY DESPITE COURT ORDER, PROTESTS. (PHOTO).

Image
 U.S equipment, experts arrive at Kenya Ebola facility despite court order, protests Around 20 flights carrying medical equipment and specialist staff have landed at a base in Kenya where the U.S. ​government is continuing to build an Ebola quarantine facility despite protests and Kenyan court orders blocking it, according to flight data and officials. At least two ‌people have been killed in protests in the central Kenyan town of Nanyuki, home to the Kenyan air force base where the U.S. military is building a 50-bed unit for Americans who might be exposed to the virus, which has infected hundreds in Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda. A Kenyan court first ordered work on the Ebola facility to be suspended on May ​28, yet U.S. military flights into Nanyuki continued in the days that followed, according to data from flight-tracking service Flightradar24. The planes have brought in technical ​equipment as well as dozens of physicians, engineers, lab experts and construction work...

SPAIN AND CATHOLIC CHURCH SIGN LANDMARK DEAL TO COMPENSATE CLERICAL SEXUAL ABUSE VICTIMS. (PHOTO).



Spain and Catholic Church Sign Landmark Deal to Compensate Clerical Sexual Abuse Victims

 The Spanish government and the Catholic Church on Monday signed an agreement to provide reparations to victims of sexual abuse by clergy in cases that can no longer be pursued through the courts due to statutes of limitations or the death of the alleged abusers.


The deal, first reached in January, comes ahead of Pope Leo XIV’s planned visit to Spain from June 6 to 12, the first papal trip to the country since 2011.


Justice Minister Felix Bolaños described the signing as “a day of justice” for the thousands of victims who suffered abuse within the Catholic Church and were left without support, often doubted and forgotten.


“Today we are settling a debt and doing justice to the victims. We are moving from decades of silence and oblivion to fair reparation paid by the Church,” Bolaños said after the ceremony in Madrid.


Under the agreement, compensation will be determined on a case-by-case basis rather than through fixed guidelines. A panel involving representatives from the government, the Church, and Spain’s ombudsman will review claims, with the state holding final authority. The Catholic Church will be responsible for funding all awarded reparations.


Bolaños hailed the model as “pioneering worldwide,” noting that it combines state oversight with the Church’s obligation to provide redress.


Luis Arguello, president of the Spanish Episcopal Conference (CEE), called the agreement “a gesture” by the Church.


“Even though we are dealing with cases that are legally time-barred or where the accused have died, the Church wants to acknowledge its responsibility as part of the same body,” he said.


The pact follows years of growing scrutiny over clerical sexual abuse in Spain. A 2023 report by the country’s ombudsman estimated that more than 200,000 minors had suffered sexual abuse by Roman Catholic clergy since 1940. The figure could rise to around 400,000 when including abuse by laypersons in religious institutions.


The Church’s own records document 1,057 registered cases, of which 358 were deemed “proven” or “credible.”


In traditionally Catholic but increasingly secular Spain, allegations of clerical abuse gained significant public attention only in recent years, largely driven by media investigations. Church-led compensation efforts worldwide have historically been inconsistent, with programmes and payouts varying widely by country.

Comments