Pope Orders Mandatory Report of Sex Abuse by Clergy
In an Apostolic
letter, which is set to become Church law, he makes clear that any sexual
advance involving the use of power will now be considered abusive.
The clarification is
being seen as a message to the Church hierarchy that no-one will be exempt from
scrutiny.
The Pope promised in
February to take concrete action to tackle abuse.
The new Apostolic letter makes clear that clerics should also follow state law and
meet their obligations to report any abuse to "the competent civil
authorities".
The new guidelines
were welcomed by some Vatican commentators, who argued that they broke new
ground in attempts to end Church sexual abuse.
The Pope's decree is
meant to change the way the Church investigates cases of abuse.
For
the first time, clerics and other Church officials will be obliged to disclose
any allegations they may have heard. Previously, this had been left to each
individual's discretion.
Reports
are expected to be made within 90 days to offices within Church dioceses. The
decree also defines the covering-up of abuse as a specific category.
The
Church's senior leaders - its bishops - are specifically included in this. That
is because in many documented cases bishops covered up crimes of priests who
reported to them. The decree does not change the penalties for crimes
committed.
"The crimes of
sexual abuse offend Our Lord, cause physical, psychological and spiritual
damage to the victims and harm the community of the faithful," the Pope
writes in the letter.
The
guidelines further cover "actions or omissions intended to interfere with
or avoid civil investigations or canonical [Church] investigations, whether
administrative or penal, against a cleric or a religious" for sexual
abuse.
He is under serious
pressure to provide leadership and generate workable solutions to what is the
most pressing crisis facing the modern Church - one which some say has left its
moral authority in tatters.
When he was elected
in 2013, he called for "decisive action" on abuse but critics say he
has not done enough to hold to account bishops who allegedly engaged in cover
ups.
Thousands
of people are thought to have been abused by priests over many decades, and the
Church has been accused of covering up crimes around the world.
Survivors
say new safeguarding protocols are needed to protect minors.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe
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