UN
anti-torture watchdog spotlights Vatican's record
By Jonathan Fowler Yahoo! News May 5, 2014
http://news.yahoo.com/un-anti-torture-watchdog-spotlights-vaticans-record-104113733.html
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Archbishop Silvano M.
Tomasi, right, Apostolic Nuncio, Permanent Observer of the
Holy See (Vatican) to the Office of the United Nations in
Geneva, speaks with Monsignor Christophe El-Kassis, left,
prior the UN torture committee hearing on the Vatican, at the
headquarters of the office of the High Commissioner for Human
Rights (OHCHR) in the Palais Wilson, in Geneva, Switzerland,
Monday, May 5, 2014 |
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The Vatican's Ambassador to
the United Nations Monsignor Silvano Tomasi (L) delivers a
statement during a hearing before the United Nations (UN)
Committee Against Torture on May 5, 2014, in Geneva |
Geneva (AFP) - A UN anti-torture watchdog on Monday began
a two-day grilling of the Vatican over its efforts to stamp out
child sex abuse by priests.
The hearing is the
Vatican's first since 2002, when it signed up to an
international convention banning torture as well as cruel,
inhuman and degrading treatment.
Victim support groups
insist that the rape and molestation of children by the clergy
and lay personnel falls under the terms of the convention.
They are hoping that
the Vatican will face similarly-scathing criticism as it did in
January when it came before a UN children's rights watchdog.
That panel condemned
the Vatican for failing to do enough to stamp out abuse and for
allowing systematic cover-ups around the glove, despite pledges
to adopt a zero-tolerance approach.
The Roman Catholic
Church has been shaken by a decade-long cascade of scandals
involving child abuse by priests and Catholic lay officials,
from Ireland to the United States and Australia.
Hundreds of predatory
priests have been defrocked, but critics say Vatican action has
been too slow and failed to stem the scourge of paedophile
clergy.
Addressing the opening
of the UN committee session on Monday, the Holy See's UN
envoy Monsignor Silvano Tomasi said the Vatican lent the battle
against torture "a crucial moral voice in its support
through its teaching".
"It should be
stressed, particularly in light of much confusion, that the Holy
See has no jurisdiction over every member of the Catholic
Church," he told the panel.
"The Holy See
wishes to reiterate that the persons who live in a particular
country are under the jurisdiction of the legitimate authorities
of that country and are thus subject to the domestic law and the
consequences contained therein. State authorities are obligated
to protect, and when necessary, prosecute persons under their
jurisdiction," he said.
- 'No safe
haven' -
Campaigners repeatedly
have condemned the Vatican and individual dioceses for allowing
the transfer of abusers to new parishes within countries, and
even across borders, in an alleged attempt to cover up their
crimes and keep them from the clutches of justice.
"The purpose of
the convention is to ensure that parties take measures to
prevent the commission of violations," committee member
Felice Gaer told the Vatican delegation.
"The convention
aims to ensure there is no safe haven for perpetrators of
torture, or cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment," she
said.
Fellow committee
member George Tugushi said: "We all know that the Catholic
Church is against violence.
"Yet we can see
that child abuse cases have not been addressed for
decades."
The anti-torture
committee session opened two days after a Vatican panel
announced that it would develop "best practices" to
curb abuse and protect minors.
"We see ensuring
accountability in the Church as especially important, including
developing means for effective and transparent protocols and
processes," said the Vatican panel, which includes
prominent Boston Archbishop Sean Patrick O'Malley and Irish
abuse victim and campaigner Marie Collins.
The panel
"adopted the principle that the best interests of a child
or vulnerable adult are primary when any decision is made,"
a panel statement said.
The Vatican has been
more proactive in recent years in investigating allegations of
abuse and listening to victims, and has promised zero tolerance
for abusers.
But it faces a backlog
of thousands of cases and has been criticised for failing to do
enough to punish predatory priests or the senior clergymen who
covered up for them.
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