VATICAN CITY
Aljazeera
Pope Francis is assembling a panel of experts to advise him on combatting sex abuse in the clergy, it was announced Thursday.
The move would help protect children from pedophiles and better screen would-be priests, according to the Vatican. But it was dismissed as a “public relations stunt” by a leading victim advocacy group, who added that it would do little to shield young people from predatory priests.
Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the archbishop of Boston, announced the creation of the commission Thursday at the conclusion of a meeting between Francis and his eight cardinal advisers in Vatican City who are helping him govern the church and reform the Vatican bureaucracy. Boston was the epicenter of the 2002 clerical sexual abuse scandal in the U.S.
O’Malley told reporters that the commission, made up of international lay and religious experts on sex abuse, would study current programs to protect children, better screen priests, train church personnel and suggest new initiatives to implement inside the Vatican and around the world.
“The Holy Father has decided to constitute a committee for the protection of children,” O’Malley said at a press conference, adding that the make-up of the new body would be announced “in the near future.”
However, it remains unclear if the experts will take up one of the core issues behind the Roman Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal: how to make bishops who shelter abusive priests accountable.
Just more of the same?
Barbara Blaine, the president and founder of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said despite the announcement, the move seemed “to be one more time that church officials are basically giving a lot of fluff, but not any substantive action.”
“We believe that actions speak louder than words. What the Vatican is doing continues the same tried responses from previous popes,” Blaine told Al Jazeera.
Blaine said setting up a commission and potentially new policies was “meaningless,” rather, she said, church officials should turn over information and evidence about sex abuse scandals to police if they “really wanted to make a difference.”
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