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Un
Report Condemns Vatican over the Systemic Sex Abuse of Tens of
Thousands of Children
Raw Story February 5, 2014
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/02/05/un-report-condemns-vatican-over-the-systemic-sex-abuse-of-tens-of-thousands-of-children/
The Vatican was denounced in a devastating UN report
Wednesday for failing to stamp out child abuse and the church was
urged to remove all clergy suspected of raping or molesting
children.
The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child said “tens
of thousands of children worldwide” had been abused systemically
for years within the Catholic church.
It urged the Holy See to “immediately remove all known
and suspected child sexual abusers from assignment and refer the
matter to the relevant law enforcement authorities for
investigation and prosecution purposes”.
In a hard-hitting report, the committee said the Roman
Catholic Church was falling far short of its stated committment
to stem abuse by priests and lay employees, including in schools.
“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,” it added.
It blasted the practice of transferring abusers to
different parishes within countries, and even across borders, in
an attempt to cover up their crimes and remove them from the
clutches of justice.
“Offenders’ mobility, which has allowed many priests to
remain in contact with children and to continue to abuse them,
still places children in many countries at high risk of sexual
abuse, as dozens of child sexual offenders are reported to be
still in contact with children,” it said.
The report followed a landmark hearing last month during
which members of the committee — made up of 18 independent human
rights experts from around the globe — grilled senior Churchmen
and repeatedly questioned the Vatican’s resolve.
Like other signatories of the 1989 UN Convention on the
Rights of the Child, the Vatican agrees to be scrutinised by the
panel.
It appeared before the committee in 1995, but that was
prior to the abuse issue bursting into the spotlight.
Since 2001, Church abuse cases from around the globe
have been dealt with internally by the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith — the Vatican’s justice department.
‘Code of silence’
The committee complained that it had failed to receive
data on all cases of child sexual abuse handled by the
congregation or the resulting punishments.
It criticised the Church for dealing with the abuse
behind closed doors, allowing “the vast majority of abusers and
almost all those who concealed child sexual abuse to escape
judicial proceedings in states where abuses were committed”.
It also denounced the “code of silence” imposed on
clergy under threat of excommunication, saying that it meant that
cases of abuse where hardly ever reported to national law
enforcement authorities.
Church whistleblowers had been “ostracised, demoted and
fired”, while priests who remained silent were even
congratulated, and victims who were compensated bound by
confidentiality clauses.
Benedict XVI, pontiff from 2005 to 2013, was the first
pope to apologise to abuse victims and call for zero tolerance,
though critics said rhetoric outstripped real action.
His successor Pope Francis has said Catholics should
feel “shame” for abuse and in December created a commission to
investigate sex crimes, enforce prevention and care for victims.
The UN committee welcomed that, but said it did not go
far enough and that it was time for the Holy See to create an
independent human rights mechanism to address abuse.
Referring to Ireland’s “Magdalene Laundries” —
Church-run institutions for unmarried girls who got pregnant,
finally closed in 1996 — the committee said the Vatican had
failed to provide justice despite “slavery like” conditions,
degrading treatment, violence and sexual abuse.
It also said Church archives should be opened in order
to hold accountable abusers and all those who concealed their
crimes and knowingly placed offenders in contact with children.
The UN committee’s recommendations are non-binding. The
Vatican is expected to make a statement in response later
Wednesday.
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