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  Bishops Condemn BBC Abuse Claim

BBC News [United Kingdom]
October 1, 2006

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/5397346.stm

The Catholic Church has accused a BBC documentary of a "deeply prejudiced attack" on the Pope over claims of a systematic cover-up of child sex abuse.

Panorama examined a document which allegedly encourages secrecy in dealing with cases of priests abusing children.

It says this was enforced by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger before he became Pope.

Archbishop Nichols said the BBC should be ashamed

The Most Reverend Vincent Nichols, Archbishop of Birmingham, said the claim was "entirely misleading" but the BBC said it stood by the programme.

'Misuse of the confessional'

The document called Crimen Sollicitationis was written in 1962 and apparently instructed bishops how to handle claims of child sex abuse.

Programme makers asked Father Tom Doyle, a former church lawyer who was sacked from the Vatican for criticising its handling of child abuse, to interpret the document.

It is false because it misrepresents two Vatican documents and uses them quite misleadingly

The Most Reverend Vincent Nichols

Read the confidential document
Vincent Nichols statement

He said it was an explicit written policy to cover up cases of child abuse, which stressed the Vatican's control and made no mention of the victims.

The Catholic Church said the document was not directly concerned with child sex abuse, but with the misuse of the confessional.

Archbishop Nichols, speaking on behalf of the Catholic bishops of England and Wales, said of the programme: "It is false because it misrepresents two Vatican documents and uses them quite misleadingly in order to connect the horrors of child abuse to the person of the Pope."

He added that the editing, which used old footage and undated interviews, was misleading, and said the BBC should be ashamed of the standard of its journalism.

Of its viewers, he said: "They will know that aspects of the programme amount to a deeply prejudiced attack on a revered world religious leader."

Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor has written to the BBC's director general, Mark Thompson, to complain.

A BBC spokeswoman said the BBC has a well-defined complaints system and would reply to the letter once they receive it.

She added: "The protection of children is clearly an issue of the strongest public interest."

 
 

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