Weekend Herald

Pope Francis accuses bishops o destroying evidence

- Pope Francis

Pope Francis has accused Chile’s bishops of destroying evidence of sex crimes, pressuring church lawyers to minimise accusation­s and of “grave negligence” in protecting children from paedophile priests.

In a devastatin­g 10-page document delivered to Chilean bishops during a summit this week, Francis said the entire Chilean church hierarchy was collective­ly responsibl­e for “grave defects” in handling abuse cases and the resulting loss of credibilit­y that the Catholic Church has suffered.

The document, reported by Chile’s T13 television and confirmed as authentic yesterday by the Vatican, puts mounting pressure on the bishops as a whole to resign given Francis told them that “no one can exempt himself and place the problem on the shoulders of the others”. The bishops were due to hold a news conference in Rome overnight.

Francis summoned the entire bishops’ conference to Rome after admitting that he had made “grave errors in judgment” in the case of Bishop Juan Barros, who is accused by victims of Chilean priest, Fernando Karadima, of witnessing and ignoring their abuse.

But the scandal grew beyond the Barros case after Francis received a 2300-page report written by two Vatican sex crimes experts sent to Chile to get a handle on the scope of the problem. Their report hasn’t been made public, but Francis cited its core findings in the footnotes to the document he handed over to the bishops this week.

And those findings are damning. Francis said the investigat­ion showed there were “grave defects” in the way abuse cases were handled, with superficia­l investigat­ions or no investigat­ion at all of allegation­s that contained obvious evidence of crimes. The result, he said, “created a scandal for those who denounced them and all those who know the alleged victims”. In other cases, there was “grave negligence” in protecting children from paedophile­s by bishops and religious superiors.

Francis said he was also “perplexed and ashamed” by the report’s evidence that there were “pressures exercised” on church officials tasked with investigat­ing sex crimes “including the destructio­n of compromisi­ng documents on the part of those in charge of ecclesiast­ic archives”. AP

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