BishopAccountability.org

Qc Calls for Former Pope's Indictment

Law Fuel
March 20, 2013

http://www.lawfuel.co.nz/news/700/qc-calls-for-former-popes-indictment


[with video]

Geoffrey Robertson QC, the high profile Australian barrister is leading calls for the Vatican to lose its status as a state and to have the former Pope Benedict XVI to be indicted for his alleged cover up of child sex abuse by the Catholic Church.

The calls came at the screening of a documentary in which Robertson appeared when he gave evidence before the UN Committee on Rights of the Child.

The documentary, Silence in the House of God: Mea Maxima Culpa, (See trailer below) was screened at the same time as the new Pope was being elected.

Lawyer's Weekly:

He argued that the former pope acted negligently in what Robertson estimates to be 100,000 cases of sex abuse by priests since 1981, when Ratzinger became head of the Vatican office known as the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

“You can see the negligence that has characterised Benedict’s reign ... he was burying his head in the sand when the evidence of child molestation came about,” he said.

“The scale of abuse is international and this is a real human rights’ problem and no one is seeing it in that way.”

Robertson also criticised Canon Law for protecting perpetrators by directing that allegations of child molestation be investigated in secrecy, and described as “bogus” the recognition of the Vatican as a state, which gives the pope sovereign immunity from civil suits or criminal prosecution.

Ratzinger’s resignation in February, however, means he is no longer protected by head-of-state immunity in the international criminal court (ICC), and could therefore face the full weight of international law, continued Robertson. A crime against humanity under the ICC statute includes rape and sexual slavery as well as inhumane acts causing harm to mental or physical health, which are committed against civilians on a widespread or systematic scale and condoned by a government or a de facto authority.

When asked for his take on the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse in Australia, Robertson said he hoped the exercise would lead to genuine action to tackle the problem. The Commission is due to hand down an interim report no later than 30 June 2014.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard flagged the establishment of the Royal Commission in November last year after the senior NSW Police detective Peter Fox alleged the Catholic Church covered up abuse by paedophile priests.

Robertson said he was surprised by the number of staunch defenders of the Catholic Church in Australia in the wake of the allegations.




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