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Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki stands at the back of the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist after the evening Chrism Mass March 30, 2010 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Getty Images

A priest in southern Mexico has become the first member of the Catholic Church in the country ever to be convicted of sexual abuse. The Rev. Gerardo Silvestre Hernández, a priest in the Archdiocese of Antequera Oaxaca, was sentenced to 16 years and six months in prison last week for crimes committed against two minors between 2009 and 2010, according to the Catholic News Service. The priest was also ordered to pay damages to the victims of around $4000

Hernández, who had been in prison since 2013, was accused of abusing close to 100 minors between the ages of 11 and 13 in the village of Villa Alta, reported Mexican magazine Proceso. In passing his judgment, the presiding judge, Alfredo Lagunas Rivera, confirmed that it was the first time a conviction had been handed down against a member of a religious association in the country. Only in recent years has the subject of sexual abuse in the church been seen as a problem by Mexican Catholics, according to church observers.

The Oaxacan Childhood Forum (FONI) had called for the maximum sentence to be imposed. The coalition of groups has also insisted that Archbishop José Luis Chávez Botello should offer a public apology and pay damages to the victims. Hernández is alleged to have plied his victims with alcohol, shown them pornographic images and films and then sexually assaulted them.

The allegations were initially sent to the Vatican, but there were severe delays from officials in reporting them to civil authorities, according to reports in Mexico. Hernández is alleged to have committed sexual abuse against minors, including rape, in two other parishes before being transferred to the parish of the Sierra, Villa Alta in 2009, reports El Imparical de Oaxaca.

A letter detailing his crimes was first sent to the Vatican in 2010, but they dismissed the case without interviewing the alleged victims.

On Wednesday, an Irish survivor of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, Marie Collins, announced she was resigning from a commission set up by Pope Francis to deal with abuse in the church.

“There are people in the Vatican who do not want to change or understand the need to change,” she told The Telegraph. “I can’t stick with it any more. They are not co-operating with the commission.”