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Un
Demands the Vatican 'Removes' All Known or Suspected
Paedophiles and Hand over Its Archives on Abuse So Culprits
Can Be Held to Accoun
By Jill Reilly Daily Mail February 5, 2014
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2552148/UN-demands-Vatican-removes-known-suspected-paedophiles.html
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The United Nations has
demanded that the Vatican 'immediately remove' all clergy who
are known or suspected child abusers and turn them over to
authorities. Pictured: Kirsten Sandberg, centre, chairperson
of the U.N. human rights committee and committee members Maria
Herczog, right, and Benyam Mezmur, left
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Pope Francis arrives for his
weekly general audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican
today. The watchdog's exceptionally blunt paper - the most
far-reaching critique of the Church hierarchy by the world
body - followed its public grilling of Vatican officials last
month
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A commission created by Pope
Francis in December should investigate all cases of child
sexual abuse 'as well as the conduct of the Catholic hierarchy
in dealing with them,' the report said
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Pope Francis greets the
faithful as he arrives for his weekly general audience. Pope
Francis called the decades-long sexual abuse of minors by
priests 'the shame of the Church'
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The United
Nations has demanded that the Vatican 'immediately remove' all
clergy who are known or suspected child abusers and turn them
over to civil authorities, in an unprecedented and scathing
report.
The U.N. watchdog
for children's rights said the Holy See should also hand over
its archives on sexual abuse of tens of thousands of children so
that culprits, as well as 'those who concealed their crimes',
could be held accountable.
The watchdog's
exceptionally blunt paper - the most far-reaching critique of
the Church hierarchy by the world body - followed its public
grilling of Vatican officials last month.
'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 said.
The U.N.
committee on the Rights of the Child said the Catholic Church
had not yet taken measures to prevent a repeat of cases such as
Ireland's Magdalene laundries scandal, where girls were
arbitrarily placed in conditions of forced labour.
It called for an
internal investigation of the laundries and similar institutions
so that whose who were responsible could be prosecuted and that
'full compensation be paid to the victims and their families'.
A commission
created by Pope Francis in December should investigate all cases
of child sexual abuse 'as well as the conduct of the Catholic
hierarchy in dealing with them,' the report said.
Abusers had been
moved from parish to parish or other countries 'in an attempt to
cover-up such crimes,' it added.
'Due to a code of
silence imposed on all members of the clergy under penalty of
excommunication, cases of child sexual abuse have hardly ever
been reported to the law enforcement authorities in the
countries where such crimes occurred,' the U.N. body said.
At a public
session last month, the committee pushed Vatican delegates to
reveal the scope of the decades-long sexual abuse of minors by
Roman Catholic priests that Pope Francis called 'the shame of
the Church'.
The Holy See's
delegation, answering questions from an international rights
panel for the first time since the scandals broke more than two
decades ago, denied allegations of a Vatican cover-up and said
it had set clear guidelines to protect children from predator
priests.
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