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Un Says
Vatican Policies Allowed Priests to Rape
By Nicole Winfield CTV February 5, 2014
http://www.ctvnews.ca/world/un-says-vatican-policies-allowed-priests-to-rape-1.1671144
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Kirsten Sandberg,
chairperson of the UN human rights committee on the rights of
the child, talks during a press conference at the United
Nations headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, Wednesday, Feb.
5, 2014. (AP / Anja Niedringhaus)
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[with video]
Last Updated Wednesday, February 5, 2014 6:20PM EST
VATICAN CITY -- Pope Francis came under new pressure
Wednesday to punish bishops who covered up for pedophile priests
when a UN human rights panel accused the Vatican of
systematically protecting its reputation instead of looking out
for the safety of children.
In a scathing report that thrilled victims and stunned
the Vatican, the United Nations committee said the Holy See
maintained a "code of silence" that enabled priests to sexually
abuse tens of thousands of children worldwide over decades with
impunity.
Among other things, the panel called on the Vatican to
immediately remove all priests known or suspected to be child
molesters, open its archives on abusers and the bishops who
covered up for them, and turn the abuse cases over to law
enforcement authorities for investigation and prosecution.
The committee largely brushed aside the Vatican's claims
that it has already instituted new safeguards, and it accused the
Roman Catholic Church of still harbouring criminals.
"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 panel said.
The stinging language surprised the Vatican and put it
in damage-control mode, with officials strongly defending the
church and accusing the committee of allowing itself to be swayed
by pro-gay ideologues. The Vatican, which defended itself at a UN
committee hearing last month, said the panel ignored the measures
the Holy See has already taken to protect children.
"I'm tempted to say that the text was probably written
ahead of time," said the Vatican's UN ambassador, Archbishop
Silvano Tomasi.
Nevertheless, the report puts pressure on Francis to
take decisive action after a year in which he has largely let the
abuse portfolio fall by the wayside as he tackled other pressing
issues, such as reforming the Vatican bureaucracy.
The Vatican announced in December that the new pope
would create a commission to study how to prevent abuse and help
victims, but no firm details about its makeup or scope have been
released since.
And critically, the Vatican has yet to sanction any
bishop for having covered up for an abusive priest, even though
more than a decade has passed since the scandal exploded in the
U.S. and countless law enforcement investigations around the
world made it clear the role bishops played.
Vatican officials have suggested that under Francis,
this might soon change.
The report was issued by the UN Committee on the Rights
of the Child, an 18-member panel that includes academics,
sociologists and child development specialists from around the
globe.
Its job is to monitor compliance with the UN Convention
on the Rights of the Child, a treaty the Vatican ratified in
1990. The treaty calls for signatories to protect children from
harm. Only three countries have failed to ratify it: the U.S.,
Somalia and South Sudan.
Last month, the Vatican was subjected to a blistering
daylong grilling by the UN committee, which then produced its
final observations on Wednesday.
"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," the report concluded.
At a news conference in Geneva, committee chairwoman
Kirsten Sandberg ticked off some of the core findings: that
bishops moved pedophile priests from parish to parish rather than
reporting them to police, that known abusers are still in contact
with children, and that the Vatican has never required bishops to
report abusers to police.
"This report gives hope to the hundreds of thousands of
deeply wounded and still suffering clergy sex abuse victims
across the world," said Barbara Blaine, president of the main
U.S. victims group, SNAP.
"Now it's up to secular officials to follow the UN's
lead and step in to safeguard the vulnerable because Catholic
officials are either incapable or unwilling to do so."
Critically, the committee rejected the Vatican's
longstanding argument that it doesn't control bishops or their
abusive priests.
The panel essentially held the Vatican responsible for
every priest, parish and Catholic school in the world, calling on
it to pay compensation to all victims of sexual abuse worldwide,
and also to those who laboured in Ireland's notorious Magdalene
Laundries, the church-run workhouses where young women were
subject to slave labour and often had their out-of-wedlock babies
taken from them.
While the Vatican itself didn't raise an objection to
that aspect of the report, other church advocates did.
"I think that the UN report describes a monolithic
church that does not exist in fact," said Nicholas Cafardi, a
U.S. canon lawyer and former chairman of the U.S. bishops' lay
review board that monitored clerical abuse. "The pope in Rome
cannot control and is certainly not responsible for what happens
throughout the Catholic world."
The committee disagreed.
Benyam Mezmur, a committee member and Ethiopian academic
on children's legal rights, cited among other things a letter
from a Vatican cardinal advising Irish bishops to refrain from
any policy requiring they report pedophiles to police.
"They keep saying they don't have the authority, but in
the meantime we have had instances of the Holy See trying to
influence bishops," he said in an interview. "You cannot have it
both ways. Either you have influence or you don't."
The committee's recommendations are non-binding and
there is no enforcement mechanism. But it asked the Vatican to
comply and report back by 2017.
The recommendations extended far beyond child sexual
abuse in ways that conflict with church teachings.
For example, the committee urged the Vatican to amend
canon law to allow abortions on children in some circumstances,
such as to protect the life of the young mother. It asked the
Holy See to ensure that sex education, including access to
information about contraception, is mandatory in Catholic
schools. And it called on the Vatican to condemn discrimination
against homosexual children or youngsters raised by gay couples.
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