|
Vatican
Official Slams 'Negative Approach' of Un Report
Catholic News Agency February 5, 2014
http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/vatican-official-slams-negative-approach-of-un-report/
|
St. Peter's Square. Credit:
Camille King (CC BY-SA 2.0).
|
Vatican City, Feb 5, 2014 / 11:14 am (CNA/EWTN
News).- In wake of the U.N. Child Protection Committee
criticizing Vatican policies and calling for the Church to change
its doctrine, a leading archbishop countered that the committee's
analysis fails to be objective.
“The concluding recommendations…point out a rather
negative approach to what the Holy See has been doing and has
already achieved in the area of the protection of children,”
Archbishop Silvano Tomasi told Vatican Radio on Feb. 5.
Archbishop Tomasi, Permanent Observer of the Holy See to
the United Nations in Geneva, made his comments in response to
Wednesday's U.N.-authored Rights of Children report claiming that
the Vatican “systematically” adopted policies allowing priests to
rape and molest children. The document was issued following a
Jan. 16 committee hearing in Geneva on global children's rights.
Charging the Church to open its files on previous cases
of abuse and criticizing their stance on homosexuality,
contraception and abortion, the report suggested the Church
change its canon law to ensure that what it called children's
rights, including access to health care, are guaranteed.
Archbishop Tomasi responded that the analysis first “in
some ways is not up to date” because it does not take “into
account some of the clear and precise explanations that were
given to the committee in the encounter that the delegation of
the Holy See had with the committee three or four weeks ago.”
The archbishop also pointed out an apparent “difficulty”
in the committee understanding “the position of the Holy See,”
which cannot compromise teachings which are “part of their deep
convictions and also an expression of freedom of religion.”
The committee's call for the Church to shift her stance
on abortion would be a “contradiction” of the work that they do,
which is to ensure that “that children be protected before and
after birth.”
Drawing attention to the rigorous efforts to protect
minors that the Church has made – particularly in the formation
of priests and in the decisions of various episcopal conferences
– Archbishop Tomasi said it “is very difficult, I think, to find
other institutions or even other states that have done so much
specifically for the protection of children.”
In their report to the U.N. commission, Archbishop
Tomasi explained how the Holy See emphasized that “priests are
not employees of the Pope but they are responsible citizens of
the countries,” and as such are “accountable to the judicial
system of those countries.”
Highlighting how the Church has made great efforts to
“give an objective picture of the remedies undertaken” to protect
minors, as well as those yet to come with the new Vatican
commission, the archbishop stressed that there is actually “a
small percentage of Church personnel that have committed abuse.”
But due to the tone of the U.N.'s report earlier today,
he observed that perhaps “not all the observations in the facts
have been adequately taken into account in the conclusions.”
“We need time to reflect carefully on the conclusions
and recommendations of the committee,” the archbishop explained,
“and to prepare an adequate response, so that the objective may
really be pursued.”
Noting that the Holy See is a “state party to the
Convention of the Child,” Archbishop Tomasi affirmed that they
intend to “faithfully” carry out the elements of the commission
that they are able to for the sake of “the protection of
children.”
“This is the way toward the future,” he said, “and I
don’t think that there will be fundamental changes in this task
ahead.”
The U.N.'s conclusions announced earlier this morning
came at the end of their 65th session, in which reports were of
Germany, the Holy See, Congo, Portugal, Russian Federation and
Yemen were examined.
|