The Asian Age

Pope replaces Oz prelate who opposes sex abuse norm

-

Vatican City, June 29: Pope Francis has accepted the resignatio­n of Melbourne’s archbishop, who said he’d prefer jail to telling civil authoritie­s about any sex abuse of children that might be revealed to him in the confession­al.

The Vatican said on Friday that the pontiff has appointed Monsignor Peter Comensoli, 54, to head the archdioces­e, replacing Archbishop Denis Hart.

At 77, Hart is two years older than the age at which all bishops must offer the pope their resignatio­n.

Last year in an interview, Hart objected to a recommenda­tion from Australia’s Royal Commission on child sexual abuse that priests be required to report cases of abuse heard in the confession­al to authoritie­s.

Then head of Australia’s bishops’ conference, Hart defended the special nature of confession as part of religious freedom.

The Australian church has been stung by sexual abuse scandals involving prominent clergy.

Next week, a magistrate is due to sentence Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson. The magistrate in May found Wilson guilty of failing to report to police the repeated abuse of two altar boys by a pedophile priest during the 1970s. Wilson is the most senior Catholic cleric in the world to be convicted of covering up child sex abuse.

Australian Cardinal George Pell, who served at the Vatican as one of the pope’s top aides, faces trial in his home state of Victoria on sex abuse charges. Pell has denied wrongdoing. Details of the allegation­s haven’t been made public.

Francis has insisted top clerics be held responsibl­e for failing to crack down on pedophile clergy.

Melbourne archdioces­e’s new leader is a native of New South Wales who has been based in the Broken Bay diocese since 2014. Previously, Comensoli served as an auxiliary bishop in Sydney.

 ??  ?? Pope Francis and Archbishop Denis Hart
Pope Francis and Archbishop Denis Hart
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India