You're reading: Family of BBC’s Savile offers sympathy to abuse victims

 The family of the BBC presenter
at the centre of a sex abuse scandal that has rocked the
broadcaster offered its "deepest sympathy" to the late Jimmy
Savile's victims on Saturday, saying it felt "despair and
sadness".

 The statement came as the Roman Catholic Church in England
said it had written to the Vatican to ask whether it was
possible to strip Savile of a papal knighthood due to
allegations he had sexually abused young girls.
              Police said earlier this week that some 300 victims had come
forward and that they were preparing to make arrests in a
scandal that has already damaged the internationally-renowned
broadcaster’s reputation.
              Savile’s nephew Roger Foster said in a statement that the
family had been unaware of Savile’s “darker side”, and was
struggling to reconcile the image of the man they loved with
allegations that were becoming overwhelming.
              “How could the person we thought we knew and loved do such a
thing?” said the statement. “We recognise that even our own
despair and sadness does not compare to that felt by the
victims.”
              Savile, a cigar-chomping former DJ who was one of the BBC’s
top presenters, died last year aged 84.
              The scandal has destroyed the reputation of a man who had
been widely admired and honoured for his charity work and has
raised troubling questions about the BBC’s management and its
workplace culture in the past.
              Police have said Savile was “undoubtedly” one of Britain’s
most prolific sex offenders, while the head of the BBC’s
governing body has called the allegations a “tsunami of filth”.
              “Our thoughts and our prayers are with those who have
suffered from every kind of abuse over so many years and we
offer our deepest sympathy in what must have been a terrible
time for all of them,” the family statement to the Yorkshire
Evening Post newspaper read.
              Foster said he had watched “in horror” as British TV channel
ITV first aired an expose “with allegations of a darker side to
him that we knew nothing about”.
              “This wasn’t the man we knew and loved,” Foster said, saying
“the allegations are very serious and we began to have doubts as
to our own feeling towards our uncle.”
              Faced with growing public outrage at the allegations, Foster
said the family had decided to remove the headstone on Savile’s
grave and destroy it to avoid it becoming a target for vandals.
              PAPAL KNIGHT
              BBC Director General George Entwistle, who has been sharply
criticised by politicians for his handling of the case, has said
the broadcaster has been damaged by the case.
              The scandal has reached beyond Britain, generating huge
attention in the United States, where Entwistle’s predecessor at
the BBC, Mark Thompson, is poised to take over as chief
executive of the New York Times.
              It has also now reached the Vatican after the head of the
Roman Catholic Church in England, Archbishop of Westminster
Vincent Nichols, wrote a letter.
              “The archbishop has written to the competent office of the
Holy See with a request to investigate if anything can be done
about Savile’s papal knighthood,” the archbishop’s spokesman
said, adding that the letter was sent last week.
              “While we have to await the outcome of the police
investigation, the allegations are deeply shocking,” he said.
              The papal knighthood is one of the highest honours bestowed
by the pope and is reserved for lay people and the military. It
was instituted in 1831 by Pope Gregory XVI.
              British media reports said Savile had been made a knight by
the late Pope John Paul II in 1990 for his charity work.
              The Catholic Church has been rocked by child abuse scandals
in Europe and the United States in recent years, forcing it to
pay hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation worldwide.
The scandals have damaged its status as a moral arbiter.
              It was unclear if the honour could be withdrawn
posthumously.
              The spokesman for the English church, speaking on condition
of anonymity in line with policy, said that “while it’s clear
that the honour dies with the person,” Nichols had acted “in
recognition of the deep distress of those who have suffered
abuse and the disquiet at Mr Savile’s name remaining on the
papal list”.