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Catholics
Outraged over U.n. Report on Sex Abuse
By Meredith Somers Washington Times February
5, 2014
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/feb/5/catholics-outraged-over-un-report-on-sex-abuse/
Conservative Catholic groups expressed outrage
Wednesday over a U.N.
panel’s scathing report on the Vatican’s
sex abuse scandal, saying the oversight group overstepped its
authority by calling for the Catholic
Church to change some of its fundamental laws on homosexuality,
birth control and abortion.
The Holy See referred to some parts of the report as
“an attempt to interfere” with church teachings, and other
Catholic advocates called the document offensive and an attack
on the church.
“It shows a certain ignorance of how the church
works,” said Ashley
McGuire of The Catholic
Association. “They don’t just change canon law. The church’s
teachings, many of them are thousands of years old and are
grounded in deep moral principle. To just fire a shot off the
bow and not look at the actual reality of the last 10 years
seems totally unfair and undermines the credibility of the
report.”
Issued Wednesday by the U.N.
Committee on the Rights of the Child, the report is a response
to the Holy See’s January update on how it is handling issues
related to decades of child sex abuse by priests in the U.S. and
around the world, and what it is doing to help the thousands of
victims.
The report advised the Catholic
Church to remove all known and suspected child abusers from
their posts and report them to authorities, establish rules and
procedures for reporting suspected cases of abuse, and change
canon law so that abuse is considered a crime and not merely an
immoral act.
“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 stated. “The Committee
expresses serious concern that in dealing with child victims of
different forms of abuse, the Holy See has systematically placed
preservation of the reputation of the Church
and the alleged offender over the protection of child victims.”
It also urged the church
to consider changing its canon laws to recognize same-sex
families and permit abortion in certain circumstances, and to
reconsider its stance on premarital sex and contraceptives.
The Vatican
in 1990 ratified the U.N.
Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the report serves as
a critique of the Holy See’s implementation of the treaty.
Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, permanent observer of the
Holy See to the United
Nations in Geneva, acknowledged during a Vatican
Radio interview that the church
has to continue its efforts to protect children, but said the committee
must realize that the Catholic
Church could not simply “give up certain teachings that in the
tradition of the Catholic
Church sustain the common good of society and therefore cannot
be renounced.”
For supporters of child sex abuse victims, negative
reaction to the report represented another attempt by the Catholic
Church to avoid scrutiny for how it handled — or failed to
handle — the abuse scandal.
“It’s disingenuous for Catholic officials to trot out
the ‘religious freedom’ canard when confronted with
uncontroverted evidence of massive wrongdoing,” said Barbara
Dorris, outreach director of the Survivors Network of those
Abused by Priests. “The vast bulk of the United
Nations panel’s findings have nothing to do with birth control,
homosexuality, abortion or doctrine.”
In December, Pope Francis began establishing a panel
of advisers to help handle sex abuse cases.
“If the pope is serious about turning the page on this
scandal, he should immediately dismiss any bishop who oversaw a
diocese in which a priest who abused children was shielded from
the civil authorities,” said Jon O’Brien, president of Catholics
for Choice. “There can be no place in our church for bishops or
priests who put children at risk. From now on, there must be
zero tolerance for bishops who shield child abusers.”
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