Pope
Francis to meet abuse victims for first time
The Nation (Pakistan) July 6, 2014 http://www.nation.com.pk/international/06-Jul-2014/pope-francis-to-meet-abuse-victims-for-first-time
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VATICAN CITY : Pope Francis will meet victims of paedophile
priests for the first time on Monday, as a Vatican commission
moves to address the problem of clerical sex abuse in developing
countries. Six victims from Britain, Germany and Ireland
will talk with the head of the Roman Catholic Church at his
private residence near Saint Peter’s Basilica in a gesture
aimed at expressing his closeness to the tens of thousands of
people abused by priests globally. The private meeting - the
first with abuse victims since Francis was elected in February
last year - is hotly awaited by victim support groups who have
criticised the Argentinian for not acting earlier.
Francis has been slow to speak out on an issue which has hugely
damaged the Catholic Church for over a decade, but in May he
branded the sexual abuse of children by priests a crime
comparable to a ‘satanic Mass’ and promised
‘zero tolerance’. Monday’s encounter,
which will follow a mass in the pope’s private chapel,
will come a day after a meeting of the commission set up by
Francis to advise him on the sexual abuse crisis and draw up
protocols for the pope to consider. Composed of experts from
eight countries, the body includes campaigner Marie Collins -
who was assaulted as a 13-year-old by a hospital chaplain in her
native Ireland - as well as British and French psychiatrists, a
German psychologist and an Italian cannon law professor.
Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the archbishop of Boston - where
the clerical sex abuse scandal erupted in the United States in
2002 - is also a member. The meeting is expected to open up the
commission to experts from the Southern Hemisphere and the
developing world, where paedophilia is largely a taboo subject
and cases of abuse are much less likely to be reported.
In May, the UN Committee Against Torture said the Church had
major failings in dealing with abuse cases, voicing concerns
about a cover-up culture and calling for alleged paedophiles to
be suspended immediately pending investigation. The pope gave
his strongest response yet, saying ‘sexual abuse is such
an ugly crime, it is like a satanic mass’, and calling for
‘zero tolerance’ for anyone in the Church who abused
children, including bishops. Last year Francis
strengthened Vatican laws on child abuse, broadening the
definition on crimes against minors to include paedophilia -
though the legislation only covers clergy and lay people who
work in or for the Vatican, not the universal Catholic Church. A
historic first trial against a former ambassador to the Vatican
is expected to take place after Polish archbishop Jozef
Wesolowski - former papal envoy to the Dominican Republic - was
convicted of sex abuse by a Church tribunal last month and
defrocked. Vatican officials this year revealed that
3,420 abuse cases had been handled over the past decade by the
Church’s Canon Law prosecutors, with 848 priests defrocked
and a further 2,572 ordered to ‘live a life of prayer or
penance’, for example in a monastery. But the
Vatican’s continued insistence on keeping its inquiries
into suspect priests secret has angered victims and campaigners.
And while the centuries-old institution officially encourages
dioceses to collaborate with civil authorities, any such
collaboration is done on a voluntary basis. Much to the fury of
those molested by local priests as children, the pope has said
the Church has tackled the issue with the utmost
‘transparency and responsibility’, as well as
pointing out that sexual abuse is rife in society and by no
means limited to church pews or confessionals.
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