Cardinal
defends sex abuse policy
The Local March 30, 2014 http://www.thelocal.it/20140330/italy-cardinal-defends-controversial-sex-abuse-policy
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Italian cardinal Angelo
Bagnasco arrives for a meeting on the eve of the start of a
conclave on March 11, 2013 at the Vatican. |
A leading Italian cleric has defended the
decision to adopt a Vatican-approved policy which exempts
bishops from having to report cases of suspected child sex
abuse to the police.
"The Vatican requires national laws to be respected, and we
know that there is no such duty (to report abuse) under Italian
law," Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, head of the Italian
Bishops' Conference, told reporters on the sidelines of a
meeting in Genoa. The conference published
guidelines on Friday which stipulated that clergy are under no
obligation to inform the authorities about suspected abuse but
have a "moral duty" to act to protect the vulnerable
and "contribute to the common good".
The guidelines sparked fury among victim support groups, with
the US-based Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP)
deploring the "stunning, depressing and irresponsible
contradiction between what Vatican officials say about abuse,
and do about abuse."
The Church has repeatedly been accused by victims of covering up
abuse by priests and simply moving predator clerics from one
diocese to another rather than reporting them, thereby putting
other children at risk. Bishops in possession of
information on possible abuse cases have been required by the
Vatican to report to the authorities since 2010, but only in
those countries where they are required to do so under national
law. Bagnasco said the decision to adopt the
Vatican's policy had been taken in part to protect victims
who may not want to press charges. "What is
important is to respect the will of the victims and their
relatives, who may not want to report the abuse, for personal
reasons," Bagnasco said. "We need to be
careful that we in the clergy do not undermine the right to
privacy, discretion and confidentiality, and the right of the
victims to not be 'exposed' in the public square",
he said. The Vatican was denounced by the UN
Committee on the Rights of the Child in February for failing to
stamp out predatory priests, and urged to hand over suspected
abusers for prosecution. Pope Francis has
defended the Church, saying it has done more than "any
other institution" in tackling paedophilia, and last
weekend he appointed a woman who had been molested by a priest
as a child as part of a new commission on fighting clerical
sexual abuse.
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