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Vatican
Child Abuse Scandal
BBC News February 5, 2014
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-25757218
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This is the first time the
Holy See is defending itself in public over its sex abuse
record
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US priest John Geoghan was
jailed for his crimes, and later killed in prison by another
inmate
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Father Marcial Maciel
enjoyed the support of Pope John Paul II for many years
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Cardinal Bernard resigned in
2002 over the mishandling of sex abuse cases
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The UN has accused the Vatican of "systematically"
adopting policies allowing priests to sexually abuse thousands
of children.
Pope Francis has said that dealing with abuse is vital
for the Church's credibility, but the Church has been criticised
over its inadequate response to some of the allegations.
The sexual abuse of children was rarely discussed in
public before the 1970s, and it was not until the 1980s that the
first cases of molestation by priests came to light, in the
United States and Canada.
In the 1990s, revelations began of widespread abuse in
Ireland.
In the new century, more cases of abuse have been
revealed in more than a dozen countries around the world.
Two major reports into Irish allegations of paedophilia
in 2009 revealed the shocking extent of abuse, cover-ups and
hierarchical failings involving thousands of victims, and
stretching back decades.
In one, four Dublin archbishops were found to have in
effect turned a blind eye to cases of abuse from 1975 to 2004.
A fresh scandal erupted in March 2010 when it emerged
the head of the Irish Catholic Church, Cardinal Sean Brady, was present
at meetings in 1975 where children signed vows of silence over
complaints against a paedophile priest, Fr Brendan Smyth. This
prompted Pope Benedict XVI to apologise to Irish victims.
In the US, the Boston Archdiocese has been worst hit,
with the activities of two of its priests, Paul Shanley and John
Geoghan, causing public outrage. Cardinal Bernard Law resigned
over the scandal in 2002.
In Mexico, the founder of the Legion of Christ order,
Marcial Maciel, long admired by Pope John Paul II, was
disciplined by the Vatican in 2006 over the abuse of boys and
young men over a period of 30 years. The Legion insisted his was
an isolated case, but seven
more priests of the order have been investigated.
The bishop of the Belgian city of Bruges, Roger
Vangheluwe,
resigned in 2010 after admitting that he had sexually abused a
boy for years.
Since his election last year, Pope Francis has appeared
to offer new hope to victims, with a call
for action on sex abuse in the Church. Under his papacy, a
Vatican committee has been set up to fight sexual abuse and help
victims.
Vatican
officials submitted publicly to questioning for the first time
in January 2013, before a UN panel in Geneva, but refused to
supply data on abuse cases.
Pope Francis's predecessor, Benedict XVI, was accused of
suppressing the investigation of paedophile priests, a
charge he denied last year.
When the first scandals emerged in 2001, the Vatican
issued guidelines for senior clergy on how to handle paedophile
priests, which stated that all cases should be referred to Rome.
Until then, all cases had been handled by the Church in the
country concerned.
After a spate of new cases in 2010, the Vatican issued new
rules saying bishops should report suspected cases of abuse to
local police, if required to do so by law.
What does the UN say?
The UN's Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) said
the Vatican should "immediately remove" all clergy who were known
or suspected child abusers.
In a strongly-worded report, it lambasted the Holy See's
"practice of offenders' mobility", referring to the transfer of
child abusers from parish to parish within countries, and
sometimes abroad. It complained that the Holy See had not
acknowledged the extent of crimes committed and had not taken the
measures necessary to address cases of child sexual abuse and to
protect children.
Victims' groups have responded to almost every move by
the Vatican with scepticism.
Reacting to the UN report in February, Barbara Blaine,
the president of Snap
(Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests), said it was
clear that the Vatican had put the reputation of Church officials
above protection of children.
"Despite all the rhetoric from Pope Francis and Vatican
officials, they refuse to take action that will make this stop."
she said.
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