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U.n.
Panel Assails Vatican over Sexual Abuse by Priests
By Laurie Goodstein, Nick Cumming-Bruce and Jim Yardley
New York Times February 5, 2014
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/06/world/europe/un-panel-assails-vatican-over-sex-abuse-by-priests.html?_r=1
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Kirsten Sandberg, the
chairwoman of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of
the Child, in Geneva on Wednesday. Anja
Niedringhaus/Associated Press
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In a hard-hitting report applauded by victims as a
landmark in the Roman Catholic Church’s clerical sexual-abuse
scandal, a United Nations committee on Wednesday called on the
Vatican to remove all child abusers from its ranks, report them
to law enforcement and open the church’s archives so that bishops
and other officials who concealed crimes could be held
accountable.
The report, issued by the United Nations Committee on
the Rights of the Child, is likely to put pressure on Pope
Francis to make concrete changes in the way the church handles
abuse cases and put some muscle into the commission on abuse that he
announced in December, whose members and mission have not yet
been specified.
The Vatican responded on Wednesday that it had already
made many of the changes called for in the report, and that the
report’s conclusions were out of date.
The report, however, was sharply critical of the
church’s current practices, not just those of the past. “The
committee is gravely concerned that the Holy See has not
acknowledged the extent of the crimes committed, has not taken
the necessary measures to address cases of child sexual abuse and
to protect children, and has adopted policies and practices which
have led to the continuation of the abuse by and the impunity of
the perpetrators,” the report concluded.
The criticism came from a panel that examined the
Vatican’s compliance with the Convention on the Rights of the Child,
an international agreement signed by 140 sovereign entities,
including the Vatican. The panel held a hearing on the issue last month,
the first time the Vatican faced public examination by an
international body of its record on sexual abuse, and heard
testimony from Bishop Charles J. Scicluna, the Vatican’s chief
prosecutor of sexual abuse cases until 2012, who told the panel
that “the Holy See gets it.”
The report addressed issues far beyond child sexual
abuse, taking the Vatican to task for its opposition to
contraception, homosexuality and abortion in cases of child rape
and incest. The committee even suggested that the church amend
its canon laws to permit abortions for pregnant girls whose lives
and health are at risk.
But the Vatican press office said in a statement that it
regretted to see the United Nations committee “attempt to
interfere” with Catholic teaching and the church’s “exercise of
religious freedom.”
Sister Mary Ann Walsh, a spokeswoman for the United
States Conference of Catholic Bishops, said in a blog post that the report was
“weakened” by the panel’s decision to include objections to
Catholic teaching on “culture war” issues.
On the many pressing problems related to child welfare,
the report recommended specific steps it said the Vatican should
take: stop obstructing efforts by victims’ advocates in some
countries to extend statutes of limitations, which now allow most
abusers to escape prosecution; stop insisting that victims sign
confidentiality agreements swearing them to silence as a
condition for receiving compensation; help birth parents locate
children who were taken from them for adoption out of Catholic
institutions like the Magdalene Laundries in Ireland; and
identify, count and financially support children fathered by
Catholic priests without imposing confidentiality agreements on
the mothers.
Kirsten Sandberg, the chairwoman of the United Nations
panel, said Wednesday at a news conference in Geneva that tens of
thousands of children around the world had suffered abuse by
priests. “We think it is a horrible thing that is being kept
silent both by the Holy See itself and in the different local
parishes,” she said.
The panel rejected the church’s key contention that the
Vatican has no jurisdiction over its bishops and priests around
the world, and is responsible for putting in effect the
Convention on the Rights of the Child only within the tiny
territory of Vatican City. By ratifying the convention, the panel
said, the Vatican took responsibility for making sure it was
respected by individuals and institutions under the Holy See’s
authority around the world.
The panel’s report on the Vatican’s treatment of
children, its first in 14 years, called on the church to report
back on its progress in 2017. Although the panel’s
recommendations are not binding, Ms. Sandberg said it expected
Francis and the Holy See to act on them.
Barbara Dorris of the Survivors Network of Those Abused
by Priests, or SNAP,
who was abused by a priest as a child, said the report was “long
overdue.”
“It is wonderful that the U.N. has spoken so clearly
about what the Vatican has done — and what it has failed to do,”
said Ms. Dorris, who is based in St. Louis. “To us, it is a call
for the civil authorities to step in. Church officials have
proved they cannot police themselves.”
But Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, the pope’s permanent
observer to the United Nations in Geneva, characterized the
United Nations report in a radio interview as “a rather negative
approach” to steps the Vatican had already taken, and said the
report “in some ways is not up-to-date.” He said a Vatican
delegation had told the committee about “concrete measures” that
were being taken, including the new papal commission.
Francis, who became pope last March, has begun a broad
overhaul of the Vatican bureaucracy and has established
commissions to deal with several delicate issues, including the
one announced in December to address clerical sexual abuse. One
Vatican official said that commission’s president would be named
“within weeks.”
Since 2001, sexual-abuse cases sent to the Vatican have
been handled there by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith. In an address last week, Francis told members of that
group that he was studying a possible link to his new commission,
signaling that the commission might become involved in
adjudicating abuse cases.
Francis has been widely praised for his humble style and
moderating tone on issues like homosexuality, but he has been
less outspoken on the abuse issue. He has described clerical
sexual abuse as the “shame of the church,” but has otherwise
rarely spoken about it and has not met in public with abuse
victims, unlike his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI.
At his general audience on Wednesday, Francis greeted Philomena Lee, the subject of the
Oscar-nominated movie “Philomena.” The film portrays her decades
of searching for the son taken from her as an unwed mother living
in a Catholic institution run by nuns in Ireland. Ms. Lee is on a
campaign to get the Irish government to force open adoption
records to help reunite birth mothers with their children, and
she was seeking the pope’s blessing.
Correction: February 5, 2014
An earlier version of this article misstated the surname
of a lawyer at the Center for Constitutional Rights who commented
on the United Nations panel’s report. She is Katherine Gallagher,
not Katherine Kramer.
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