Government apologizes to victims of Franco's reformatories for 'immoral' girls

Spain's government has officially recognized 53 women as victims of repression in the reformatories run by the Patronato de Protección de la Mujer, established during Franco's dictatorship, for the first time. At an event in Madrid, senior officials apologized and handed out reparation declarations. The Patronato operated from 1941 to 1985.

On Friday, at Madrid's Auditorio Nacional de Música, Spain's government held its first official public recognition event for victims of the Patronato de Protección de la Mujer centers. Presided over by Carmen Polo, this institution operated from 1941 to 1985, confining teenagers deemed 'fallen or at risk of falling,' subjecting them to isolation, forced labor, and harsh conditions in facilities run by religious orders such as the Adoratrices and Oblatas del Santísimo Redentor. The peak number of inmates was in 1961, with 3,360 adolescents held without trial or due process, according to victim accounts and historian Carmen Guillén, author of Redimir y adoctrinar (Crítica).

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Signing ceremony of Spanish Church abuse compensation deal mediated by Vatican, featuring government, Episcopal Conference, and Ombudsman representatives.
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Vatican mediates crisis to seal Spanish Church abuse compensation deal

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After weeks of tensions, the Spanish Government, Episcopal Conference, and Ombudsman signed a protocol on Monday to improve compensation for clergy sexual abuse victims. Negotiations nearly collapsed last Saturday, but Vatican mediation by Pietro Parolin enabled the deal. The mixed system allows previously compensated victims to claim more, with the Ombudsman's final say.

As the Government and Church negotiate indemnities for nearly 3,000 victims, groups like Betania enable restoration processes beyond financial compensation. Antonio Sánchez, Silvia Martínez, and Fernando Carrascal share their childhood abuse stories and recent meetings with Church representatives. These accounts underscore the lasting impact on their lives.

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Spain's government, the Episcopal Conference, and Confer will sign a protocol on Monday to compensate victims of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church when judicial recourse is unavailable. The agreement, overseen by the Defender of the People, will be signed at 11:00 a.m. at its headquarters by Félix Bolaños, Luis Argüello, Jesús Díaz Sariego, and Ángel Gabilondo. This mechanism complements the Church's Priva plan, with costs borne by the Church.

Valencian government vice president Susana Camarero apologized on Thursday for a statement made in the Corts Valencianes during a debate on the hiring of the partner of Valencia Provincial Council's president. She called it a slip-up, referring instead to corruption cases like that of former minister José Luis Ábalos.

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Interior minister Núria Parlon and Mossos director Josep Lluís Trapero admitted on Wednesday before parliament the operational error in sending two undercover agents into a teachers assembly. They offered apologies and announced an internal investigation along with regulatory changes.

Justice Minister Fernando Rabat told the Senate Human Rights Commission on Tuesday that there are about 28 pending pardon requests, eight filed since March 11, 2026. Senator Fabiola Campillai questioned the criteria for these pardons, announced by President José Antonio Kast for uniformed officers convicted in the 2019 social unrest. Subsecretary Pablo Mira also confirmed the continuity of the National Search Plan.

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Forensic reports have confirmed that a woman from Tortosa died in March from injuries caused by her partner, who is in preventive prison. The justice system is investigating the case as gender violence, the second in Catalonia this year. The Department of Equality and Feminisms of the Generalitat has expressed condolences.

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