Vatican
ducks questions from UN on the worldwide child abuse in Catholic institutions
Ref. http://www.secularism.org.uk/news
The Vatican has failed
to answer detailed questions by the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child on
cases of child sexual abuse committed by members of the clergy, brothers or
nuns or brought to the attention of the Holy See. These formal questions were
raised as part of the review of the reports the UN Committee require states
that have ratified the Convention of the Rights of the Child to provide every
five years.
In a formal response to the UN Committee's 'list of issues' or questions, the Holy See
based its failure to answer them on the legal technicality that it is
"related but separate and distinct from the Catholic Church". It
added: "it is not the practice of the Holy See to disclose information on
the religious discipline of members of the clergy or religious according to
canon law, unless there is a related matter concerning international judicial
cooperation with a State and the request by the State is made, generally,
through specific procedures".
The UN Committee
prefaced its questions by pointing to "the recognition by the Holy See of
sexual violence against children committed by members of the clergy, brothers
and nuns in numerous countries around the world, and given the scale of the
abuses".
Keith Porteous Wood of
the (UK) National Secular Society, which, together with victims groups, has
submitted evidence about such abuse to the Committee earlier this year,
commented: "Under the direct control of the Pope, the Church operates a
firm 'command and control structure' over the worldwide Church, particularly
over the handling of clerical rape and sexual violence offences. It requires
that it is sent all records of the tens of thousands of these criminal
offences, and secretes them centrally.
"The huge scale of
rape and sexual violence in Catholic institutions worldwide over the last 50
years is a matter of public record, and more is still regularly being reported.
The Holy See's and the Church's culpability lies in the fact that, that scale
of abuse would have been hugely reduced had those in the Church been required
to invariably report credible allegations and suspicions to civil authorities.
Instead, there is evidence that in many cases abusers were moved by the Church
to other locations where they frequently resumed their sexual violence that has
ruined so many lives.
"The Holy See's
brazen failure, on arcane legal technicalities, to provide the information
sought by the Committee is a new low point in the Church's lamentable record
over child abuse.
"Many will be
disappointed and surprised by this slap in the face to both the tens if not
hundreds of thousands of suffering victims and to a United Nations body.
"The Holy See,
under the Pope, uses its considerable diplomatic might to promote the doctrines
and the self-interest of the Catholic Church and clearly commands and controls
child abuse policy in the Church worldwide, including through its own (canon)
"law". It is both shameless and unacceptable for it to undermine the
UN's efforts, made in the interest of protecting past and future victims, by
refusing to provide the information that the UN seeks.
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