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Vatican
Spokesman Gives Detailed Critique of Un Committee Report
Catholic Culture February 7, 2014
http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=20428
In a sharply worded and detailed response to UN
committee’s critical report on the Vatican’s response to sexual
abuse, the Vatican’s chief spokesman has said that the
committee’s recommendations “seem to go beyond its competencies
and to interfere in the very doctrinal and moral positions of
the Catholic Church.”
Father Federico Lombardi, the director of the Vatican
press office, released a lengthy response to the report by the
UN Committee on the Rights of the Child on February 7. In his
3-page statement charged that committee had neglected to pay
attention to information submitted by the Vatican, relying
instead on reports from groups critical of the Church. The
Vatican spokesman strongly suggested that the report had been
drafted in advance, without waiting for the Vatican’s own
report.
Most important, Father Lombardi charged, the UN
committee had overstepped its jurisdiction to attack the
Church’s moral teaching. He said that “the Committee’s comments
in several directions seem to go beyond its powers and to
interfere in the very moral and doctrinal positions of the
Catholic Church, giving indications involving moral evaluations
of contraception, or abortion, or education in families, or the
vision of human sexuality, in light of own ideological vision of
sexuality itself.”
Father Lombardi made an extra effort to reaffirm the
Vatican’s support for the UN, and for the Convention on the
Rights of the Child. He said that the Holy See recognized the
value of “serious and well founded” criticism regarding the
Church’s response to the sex-abuse scandal. However, he said
that the UN committee’s report was a biased presentation.
The Church has suffered from “unjustly harmful” media
scrutiny in the sex-abuse crisis, Father Lombardi said, and the
enormous attention accorded to the UN committee’s report was an
example of that unequal treatment. He pointed out that the same
committee’s reports on other nations have rarely been given
media attention, even when the reports point to grave violations
of children’s rights.
Father Lombardi also complained that the UN
committee’s report shows a “lack of understanding of the
specific nature of the Holy See.” The Vatican, he explained,
does not control the behavior of priests in every country, and
cannot be responsible for law-enforcement efforts outside its
own limited jurisdiction. He observed that this point had been
made repeatedly to members of the UN committee, and “one is
entitled to amazement” that the point had not been absorbed.
Repeating a point that had been made by Archbishop
Silvano Tomasi, the Vatican’s representative at the Holy See,
Father Lombardi said that Vatican officials had provided the UN
committee with a thorough briefing on the Holy See’s responses
to sexual abuse, yet this information was not incorporated in
the committee’s report. These omissions, he said, “suggest that
it was practically already written, or at least already in large
part blocked out before the hearing.”
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