A Catholic bishop who was accused of repeatedly raping a nun in southern India over a two-year period has been acquitted today.
The bishop, Franco Mulakkal, who had been on trial since 2020, had consistently pleaded not guilty.
The judge overseeing the trial, G. Gopakumar, said prosecutors had failed to prove their case, according to news reports.
“Praise the Lord,” he said after the verdict in the city of Kottayam in Kerala State.
However, investigating officers in Kerala said the ruling would be appealed to a higher court.
The bishop was charged with raping the nun nine times between 2014 and 2016, during visits he made to Kerala and he was also charged under laws against intimidation, illegal confinement and unnatural intercourse.
The case, believed to be the first in India in which a bishop was charged with raping a nun, highlighted deep divisions within the Catholic Church in the country.
Formal charges were brought against him in April 2019, weeks after Pope Francis acknowledged that the sexual abuse of nuns by priests was a continuing problem within the church.
However, the church was slow to react to the nun’s accusations against the bishop until after five of her fellow nuns protested publicly in support of her.
The nun, who belongs to the Missionaries of Jesus religious order, first brought her accusations to the church authorities in January 2017.
She approached nearly a dozen church officials, including bishops, a cardinal and representatives of the Vatican.
In official police complaints, the nun’s family said the assaults occurred at her convent, the St. Francis Mission Home, in Kerala, which is home to many of India’s 20 million Catholics.
Before Bishop Mulakkal was arrested and briefly detained in September 2018, the church removed him from his administrative duties in the northern Indian city of Jalandhar, where he had been serving.