Las Vegas Review-Journal

Clergy sex abuse summit sought

Victim advocacy group calls move by pope too late

- By Nicole Winfield The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis summoned the presidents of the world’s bishops’ conference­s Wednesday to a summit on preventing clergy sex abuse and protecting children, responding to the greatest crisis of his papacy with the realizatio­n that Vatican inaction on the growing global scandal now threatens his legacy.

Francis’ key cardinal advisers announced plans for the summit early next year the day before the pope meets with U.S. church leaders embroiled in their own credibilit­y crisis from the latest accusation­s in the Catholic Church’s decades-long sex abuse scandal.

The meeting, scheduled for Feb. 21-24, would assemble more than 100 churchmen to represent every bishops’ conference. Its convening signals awareness at the highest levels of the Catholic Church that clergy sex abuse is a global problem, not restricted to some parts of the world or a few Western countries.

Victims’ advocates immediatel­y dismissed the event as belated damage control, an action publicized hastily as allegation­s regarding Francis’ record of handling abuse cases — and accumulate­d outrage among rank-and-file Catholic faithful over covered-up crimes — jeopardize his papacy.

“There’s absolutely no reason to think any good will come of such a meeting,” given the church’s decades of failure to reform, David Clohessy, former director of the victims’ advocacy group SNAP, said.

The summit was announced as Francis still works to recover from his botched handling of the sex abuse scandal in the Chilean church, sparked earlier this year when he repeatedly discredite­d victims of a notorious Chilean predator priest.

Francis eventually admitted to “grave errors in judgment” and took steps to make amends, including securing offers of resignatio­n from every active member of Chile’s bishops’ conference.

Even as actions to address Chile were underway, Francis’ papacy was jolted last month by accusation­s from a retired Vatican ambassador that Francis himself rehabilita­ted a top American cardinal accused of molesting and harassing adult seminarian­s.

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