Vatican
officials are expected to face tough questions from the UN on the
sexual abuse of thousands of children by Catholic clergy.
Members of the Holy See – the city state's diplomatic entity – will be grilled by a UN committee in Geneva.
The
Vatican refused an earlier request for information, saying the cases
were the responsibility of the judiciary of countries where abuse took
place.
The Pope has said dealing with abuse is vital for the Church's credibility.
The
Catholic Church has faced a raft of allegations of child sex abuse by
priests around the world and criticism over inadequate responses by
bishops.
Last month, Pope Francis announced that a Vatican
committee would be set up to fight sexual abuse of children in the
Church and offer help to victims.
He has also strengthened Vatican
laws on child abuse, broadening the definition of crimes against minors
to include sexual abuse of children.
Germany – A priest, named only as Andreas L, admitted in 2012 to 280 counts of sexual abuse involving three boys over a decade
United
States – Revelations about abuses in the 1990s by two Boston priests,
Paul Shanley and John Geoghan, caused public outrage
Belgium – The
bishop of Bruges, Roger Vangheluwe, resigned in April 2010 after
admitting that he had sexually abused a boy for years
Italy – The Catholic Church in Italy admitted in 2010 that about 100 cases of paedophile priests had been reported over 10 years
Ireland
– A report in 2009 found that sexual and psychological abuse was
"endemic" in Catholic-run industrial schools and orphanages for most of
the 20th century
The Holy See is a signatory to the UN Convention
on the Rights of the Child, a legally-binding instrument which commits
it to protecting and nurturing the most vulnerable in society.
The Holy See ratified the convention in 1990.
Its
first and only progress report was submitted in 2012 after intense
criticism following 2010 revelations of child sex abuse cases in Europe
and beyond.
The Committee on the Rights of the Child is expected
to ask wide-ranging questions, forcing the Holy See to defend itself in
public for the first time.
It faces allegations that it enabled
the sexual abuse of thousands of children by protecting paedophile
priests at the expense of victims.
Last July, the UN Committee
requested detailed information about the particulars of all sexual abuse
cases notified to the Vatican since 1995.
The questions included
whether priests, nuns and monks guilty of sexual crime were allowed to
remain in contact with children, what legal action had been taken
against them, and whether complainants were silenced.
In its
response, the Holy See insisted that it was "separate and distinct" from
the Roman Catholic Church, and that it was not its practice to disclose
information about the religious discipline of clergy unless requested
by the authorities in the country where they were serving.
It
stressed that it had changed the criteria for choosing priests and
revised Church law to ensure clergy were properly disciplined.
No comments:
Post a Comment