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Vatican
'Regrets' Damning Un Report on Abuse
By Nicole Winfield Mercury News February 5,
2014
http://www.mercurynews.com/faith/ci_25066015/un-denounces-vatican-sex-abuse-abortion
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Pope Francis waves as he
leaves at the end of his weekly general audience in St.
Peter's Square at the Vatican, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2014. A U.N.
human rights committee denounced the Vatican on Wednesday for
systematically adopting policies that allowed priests to rape
and molest tens of thousands of children over decades, and
urged it to open its files on the pedophiles and the bishops
who concealed their crimes. ((AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino))
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VATICAN CITY—The Vatican "systematically" adopted
policies that allowed priests to rape and molest tens of
thousands of children over decades, a U.N. human rights committee
said Wednesday, urging it to open its files on pedophiles and
bishops who concealed their crimes.
In a devastating report hailed by victims, the U.N.
committee severely criticized the Holy See for its attitudes
toward homosexuality, contraception and abortion and said it
should change its own canon law to ensure children's rights and
their access to health care are guaranteed. The Vatican promptly
objected.
The report puts renewed pressure on Pope Francis to move
decisively on the abuse front and make good on pledges to create
a Vatican commission to study sex abuse and recommend best
practices to fight it.
The commission was announced at the spur of the moment
in December, but few details have been released since then.
The committee issued its recommendations after
subjecting the Holy See to a daylong interrogation last month on
its implementation of the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the
Child, the key U.N. treaty on child protection, which the Holy
See ratified in 1990.
Critically, the committee rejected the Vatican's
longstanding argument that it doesn't control bishops or their
abusive priests, saying the Holy See was responsible for
implementing the treaty not just in the Vatican City State but
around the world "as the supreme power of the Catholic Church
through individuals and institutions placed under its authority.
In its report, the committee blasted the "code of
silence" that has long been used to keep victims quiet, saying
the Holy See had "systematically placed preservation of the
reputation of the church and the alleged offender over the
protection of child victims." It called on the Holy See to
provide compensation to victims and hold accountable not just the
abusers but also those who covered up their crimes.
"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.
It called for Francis' nascent abuse commission to
conduct an independent investigation of all cases of priestly
abuse and the way the Catholic hierarchy has responded over time,
and urged the Holy See to establish clear rules for the mandatory
reporting of abuse to police and to support laws that allow
victims to report crimes even after the statute of limitations
has expired.
No Catholic bishop has ever been sanctioned by the
Vatican for sheltering an abusive priest, and only in 2010 did
the Holy See direct bishops to report abusers to police where law
enforcement requires it. Vatican officials have acknowledged that
bishop accountability remains a major problem and have suggested
that under Francis, things might begin to change.
The committee's recommendations are non-binding and
there is no enforcement mechanism. Rather, the U.N. asked the
Vatican to implement the recommendations and report back by 2017.
The Vatican was 14 years late submitting its most recent report.
While most attention has focused on child sex abuse, the
committee's recommendations extended far beyond, into issues
about discrimination against children and their rights to
adequate health care, issues that touch on core church teaching
about life and sexual morals.
The committee, for example, urged the Vatican to amend
its canon law to identify circumstances where access to abortion
can be permitted for children, such as to save the life of a
young mother. It urged the Holy See to ensure that sex education,
including access to information about contraception and
preventing HIV, is mandatory in Catholic schools. It called for
the Holy See to use its moral authority to condemn discrimination
against homosexual children or children raised by same-sex
couples.
The Vatican said it would study the report and in a
statement reiterated its commitment to defending and protecting
children's rights that are enshrined in the treaty. But it took
issue with the committee's recommendations to change core church
teaching on life.
"The Holy See does, however, regret to see in some
points of the concluding observations an attempt to interfere
with Catholic Church teaching on the dignity of human person and
in the exercise of religious freedom," the Vatican said.
Church teaching holds that life begins at conception;
the Vatican therefore opposes abortion and artificial
contraception. The Vatican has a history of diplomatic
confrontation with the United Nations over such issues.
Austen Ivereigh, coordinator of Catholic Voices, a
church advocacy group, said the report was a "shocking display of
ignorance and high-handedness."
He said it failed to acknowledge the progress that has
been made in recent years and that the Catholic Church in many
places is now considered a leader in safeguarding children. And
he noted that the committee seemed unable to grasp the
distinction between the responsibilities and jurisdiction of the
Holy See, and local churches on the ground.
"It takes no account of the particularities of the Holy
See, treating it as if it were the HQ of a multinational
corporation," he said in an email.
But victims groups hailed the report as a wake-up call
to secular law enforcement officials to investigate the abuse and
cover-up and prosecute church officials who are still protecting
predator priests.
"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. victim's group SNAP. "Now it's up to secular officials to
follow the U.N.'s lead and step in to safeguard the vulnerable
because Catholic officials are either incapable or unwilling to
do so."
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