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Negative
Tone of Un Report Takes Vatican by Surprise
By Paddy Agnew Irish Times February 5, 2014
http://www.irishtimes.com/news/world/europe/negative-tone-of-un-report-takes-vatican-by-surprise-1.1680978
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The Vatican’s UN Ambassador
Monsignor Silvano Tomasi and former Vatican chief prosecutor
of clerical sexual abuse Charles Scicluna, in Geneva last
month. Photograph: Martial Trezzini/EPA
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There is little doubt but that the “negative” tone of
yesterday’s UN report took the Holy
See by surprise.
Three weeks ago, when the Vatican
made its deposition in Geneva, it had done so in a climate of
cordial co-operation, where its answers to hard questions seemed
well received.
The Vatican delegation believed it had managed to get
across one of its key points: that the Holy See had finally begun
to get its house in order on the clerical sex abuse issue.
Implicit point
That point was implicit in a remark made in Geneva by
former Vatican prosecutor Bishop Charles
Scicluna, who said the Holy See now “gets it”, suggesting that
in the past it had misunderstood and underestimated the clerical
sex abuse issue.
The man who led that Holy See delegation, the Vatican’s
permanent representative in Geneva, Archbishop Silvano
Tomasi, seemed to reflect this view when he told Vatican Radio
yesterday: “The report . . . points out a rather negative
approach to what the Holy See has been doing and has already
achieved in the area of protection of children. The first
impression is that the report is in some ways not up to date.”
Tomasi touched on one of the key issues raised by
yesterday’s report, that of legal liability, when he said: “The
Holy See presented the concrete measures taken both at the level
of the Vatican city state and of the church at large, taking into
account that priests are not employees of the pope but they are
responsible citizens of the countries where they work and
therefore accountable to the judicial system of those countries.”
The point here is that the report acknowledged that
bishops and major superiors “do not act as representatives or
delegates of the Roman pontiff”.
Yet the same bishops and superiors are bound by an oath
of obedience to the pope. In other words, the Holy See may have
no legal liability for abuser priests, but does it not have a
moral responsibility?
The Holy See will argue that this report represents a
rehash of the sex abuse horror stories of the last 20 years.
Arguably the most damning criticism by the UN committee, however,
is that the deliberate mishandling of the crisis was the
expression of a sick corporate culture.
Perhaps the biggest unanswered question yesterday
concerns Pope
Francis. Lobby groups argue that, if he is “serious about
turning the page on this scandal”, he should take serious action.
It is not clear what that action might entail.
However, some indication may come from key meetings in
the Vatican this month when the so-called G8 “privy council” of
eight adviser cardinals meet Francis, prior to a consistory of
all the cardinals. Those two meetings and a synod on the family
next October may spring some surprises.
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