Pope Francis’s Chile and Peru visits overshadowed by child abuse and political turmoil
Pope Francis’ trip to Chile and Peru, originally aimed at highlighting the plight of indigenous peoples and the delicate Amazon ecosystem, is being overshadowed by the Catholic Church’s dismal record on confronting priestly sex abuse in Chile and political turmoil in Peru.
On the eve of the trip, vandals firebombed three churches in the Chilean capital of Santiago and warned in a leaflet that “the next bombs will be in your cassock.”
That was an unprecedented threat against the pope and a violent start to what were already expected to be the first-ever protests against Francis on a foreign trip.
The Vatican agreed to the Chile visit knowing that the local church had lost much of the moral authority it earned during the Pinochet dictatorship, when bishops spoke out against human rights abuses when other institutions were silenced.
But now, the Catholic Church in Chile has been largely marginalised, criticised as out-of-touch with the secular youth and discredited by its botched handling of a notorious paedophile priest.

Chile’s church has yet to recover its credibility following the scandal over the Reverend Fernando Karadima, a charismatic preacher who had a huge following in Santiago and was responsible for training hundreds of priests and five bishops.