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Portuguese president denies link to child abuse scandal
By Paul Mitchell
20 January 2004
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Portuguese President Jorge Sampaio has appeared on television
to criticise a newspaper that linked him to a paedophile scandal
that has dominated the news in Portugal for the last year.
Sampaio denounced the irresponsibility of certain
newspapers for reporting the ill-considered leaks
originating from magistrates investigating the sexual abuse scandal
at the Casa Pia childrens homes. Casa Pia is one of Portugals
oldest and most respected public institutions and runs 10 homes
caring for 4,500 children.
Sampaio continued, Its a crime that should be punished
when the time is right. The head of state cannot legitimately
let these offences pass.... They have the most serious consequences
for the respect and consideration due the president of the republic.
News reports appearing in the Jornal de Noticias claimed
Sampaio and Portugals European Commissioner Antonio Vitorino
were mentioned in anonymous letters sent to the magistrates investigating
the Casa Pia scandal. A few days earlier, Portugals Attorney
General José Souto Moura formally charged 10 people, including
well-known politicians and celebrities, with organising a paedophile
network, sexual abuse and rape of children at Casa Pia. No date
for a trial has yet been decided.
The most high-profile person amongst those charged is Paulo
Pedroso, the MP and labour and training minister from 1999 to
2001 with responsibility for Casa Pia who is regarded as a future
leader of the Socialist Party. The Socialist Party says the scandal
is a plot and Pedroso says he is the victim of a smear campaign
and, along with the others accused, denies the charges.
Souto Moura also charged Jorge Ritto, a former Portuguese ambassador;
Herman José, a comedian and talk show host; the popular
TV games show host Carloz Cruz, known as Mr Television;
Joao Diniz, a high society doctor; and Manuel Abrantes, a former
assistant director of Casa Pia.
The charges against these members of Portugals elite
come after a year of investigations, 15,000 pages of evidence
and the questioning of 600 witnesses. The case only saw the light
of day after persistent campaigning by the abused children and
their families led to reports appearing in the newspapers in November
2002.
In October 2003, Carlos Silvino, a former driver at Casa Pia,
was charged with 35 counts of sexually abusing four children over
a three-year period and last month charged with a further 662
counts of sexual abuse. Silvino is alleged to have organised the
paedophile ring for over two decades, with many incidents apparently
occurring at Rittos villa near Lisbon.
The Casa Pia scandal has been described as Portugals
biggest political crisis since the overthrow of the military dictatorship
in 1974. Not only have top politicians and celebrities been implicated
in the paedophile ring, but the authorities apparently knew about
it and covered it up for years. Reports first emerged in the 1980s,
but police dropped their investigations and officials destroyed
documents. The former secretary of state for families, Teresa
Costa Macedo, said she received death threats after she notified
the police.
The Diario de Noticias warned that if a paedophile mafia
network ... really exists, it is Portuguese democracy which is
danger and the author Antonio Mega Ferreira mourned, I
cant recall, during the past 25 years of democracy, ever
having felt we were going through such a disturbing, frail, demoralising,
upsetting time as we are going through now.
Sampaio himself has called the Casa Pia scandal a national
disgrace and urged the Portuguese people to keep their faith
in the justice system, as has Prime Minister Jose Manuel Durao
Barroso, saying, The Portuguese people want justice to be
done. So do I.... As prime minister, I have complete confidence
in the Portuguese legal system.
Rui Fernandes, who sits on the national secretariat of the
Portuguese Communist Party, insisted that the idea of a
crisis of the legal system is excessive.
He accused Durao Barrosos government of finding it beneficial
to develop this idea of crisis in order to justify deep reforms
of the justice system, including restrictions on the
independence of the judges or placing the Criminal Investigation
Department under the direct control of the government.
There is no doubt that the government has used the scandal
to attack the opposition and justify the widespread use of phone
tapping (there are nearly 300 pages of transcripts of tapped calls
made by Socialist Party leaders, including its leader Ferro Rodrigues),
long periods of detention without charge and other repressive
measures. A whole debate on limits on the freedom of the
press has also been opened up, with Durao Barroso saying
that as long as journalists are held to respect the law
the freedom of the press is crowned and untouchable.
However, the public anger over the scandal and the behaviour
of Portugals ruling class expresses discontent with the
political elite and with social conditions for which all the official
parties, including the Communist Party, must take responsibility.
Portugal is one of the poorest countries in Europe, with the lowest
wage rates and high employment, and is threatened further by the
lower costs offered by the eastward expansion of the European
Union into the former Eastern bloc countries. The use of phone
taps, detention and other repressive measures will be vital to
defeat any political rebellion against the government.
See Also:
Arrest of Portugals
elite in paedophile scandal
[18 June 2003]
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