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U.n.
Committee Presses Vatican on Child Abuse, Some Church Teaching
By Cindy Wooden Catholic Free Press February
5, 2014
http://www.catholicfreepress.org/vatican/2014/02/05/u-n-committee-presses-vatican-on-child-abuse-some-church-teaching/
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Archbishop Silvano Tomasi
(CNS photo/Paul Haring)
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VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The U.N. Committee on the Rights of
the Child continued to insist that the Vatican compile and
publish detailed statistics on clerical sexual abuse of minors
and that the pope, as head of the church, can and should order
Catholic dioceses and religious orders around the world to
implement all the policies of the U.N. Convention of the Rights
of the Child.
The committee, which spent an entire day Jan. 16
questioning two Vatican representatives, also urged the Catholic
Church to revise the Code of Canon Law to make it mandatory that
bishops and religious superiors report suspected cases of sexual
abuse to civil authorities, even in countries where civil law
does not require such reporting.
The Vatican always has insisted that church law requires
bishops and religious superiors to obey local laws on reporting
suspected crimes; however, it also has said that where reporting
is not mandatory and the victim does not want to go to the
police, the victim’s wishes must be respected.
The “concluding observations” of the committee, which
monitors compliance with the Convention on the Rights of the
Child, ratified by the Holy See in 1990, were published Feb. 5.
A statement published by the Vatican press office the
same day said, “The Holy See reiterates its commitment to
defending and protecting the rights of the child, in line with
the principles promoted by the Convention on the Rights of the
Child and according to the moral and religious values offered by
Catholic doctrine.”
The committee urged the Vatican to release all its files
on clerical sexual abuse cases in order to allow public scrutiny
of how cases of alleged abuse were investigated and judged, how
offenders were punished and how victims were treated.
“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 U.N. report said.
Throughout the report, the committee condemned what its
members viewed as a “code of silence” surrounding the cases and
claimed “the Holy See has given precedence to the preservation of
the reputation of the church over children’s rights to have their
best interests taken as a primary consideration.”
Testifying before the committee in January, Auxiliary
Bishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, the former investigator of
alleged abuse cases in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, said the Vatican knows “there are things that need to be
done differently,” particularly to address concerns about whether
a local bishop or religious superior has covered up cases of
alleged abuse.
“Only the truth will help us move on,” he told the
committee.
Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, the Vatican representative to
U.N. agencies in Geneva, also testified and told the committee
that new rules and guidelines adopted under Pope Benedict XVI and
Pope Francis, “when properly applied, will help eliminate the
occurrence of child sexual abuse by clergy and other church
personnel.”
The committee’s “concluding observations” said the
church’s procedures for dealing with suspected cases of abuse are
so hostile to children and their parents that some have reported
being “re-victimized by the church authorities.”
The committee’s report also objected to confidentiality
being “imposed as a condition of financial compensation,”
although Bishop Scicluna had told committee members that in the
vast majority of cases, the compensation is awarded by a court,
which sets the terms.
Archbishop Tomasi told Vatican Radio Feb. 5 that his
first reaction to the report was “surprise because the negative
aspect of the document they produced makes it seem that it was
prepared before” he and Bishop Scicluna testified in January. “In
fact, the document doesn’t seem to have been updated to take into
account what has been done in the past few years” by the Vatican
and by individual bishops’ conferences.
“The church has responded and reacted and will continue
to do so” to protect children and end the scandal of clerical
sexual abuse, the archbishop said. “We must insist on a policy of
transparency and zero tolerance for abuse because even one case
of the abuse of a child is a case too many.”
In other areas concerning the rights of children as set
forth in the U.N. convention, the committee:
– Praised a pledge to consider “withdrawing the
discriminatory expression ‘illegitimate children’ which can still
be found in canon law.”
– Insisted the church and its teaching on sexuality
“contribute to the social stigmatization of and violence against
lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender adolescents and children
raised by same sex couples.”
– Said the rights of children to know their biological
parents have, in some cases, been violated by Catholic adoption
agencies and in cases where the biological father is a priest.
The policy of some Catholic convents and hospitals to let mothers
know they can anonymously leave unwanted babies and any other
practice that gives parents anonymity should be only a last
resort, it said.
– Expressed concern about adolescents “separated from
their families and isolated from the outside world” when they
enter minor seminaries run by some religious orders.
– Asked the church “to review its position on abortion,
which places obvious risks on the life and health of pregnant
girls” and to amend church law to identity “circumstances under
which access to abortion services can be permitted.”
Archbishop Tomasi commented that the preamble of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child “speaks of the defense of
the life and of the protection of children before and after their
birth,” yet “the recommendations that are made to the Holy See
include changing its position on abortion,” which “seems to be a
real contradiction.”
– Suggested the church needs to “overcome all the
barriers and taboos surrounding adolescent sexuality that hinder
their access to sexual and reproductive information, including on
family planning and contraceptives.”
The Vatican press office said the Holy See would give
the U.N. committee’s report, which is not binding, a “thorough
study and examination.”
“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 statement said.
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