The Borneo Post

Bishops face sack for child abuse ‘negligence’ — Pope

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VATICAN CITY: Catholic bishops guilty of negligence in child abuse cases can now be dismissed from office, Pope Francis said Saturday in a move hiking pressure on the Church’s hierarchy.

The move was announced just two weeks after the pope came under fire for meeting a top French cardinal accused of covering up for a paedophile priest in a scandal that has shaken France’s Catholic Church.

The decision, which will also apply to other senior Church officials, was unveiled in a papal decree which said such cases would now fall under existing canon law allowing for prelates to be sacked for ‘serious reasons.’

“The Church, like a loving mother, loves all her children, but treats and protects with special affection the smallest and most helpless,” the papal decree said.

Pope Francis came to power promising a crackdown on cover- ups and a zero tolerance approach to abuse itself, but victims’ groups have expressed discontent with his record on ridding the Church of the taint of paedophili­a.

Known as an Apostolic letter, the text stresses the need for ‘special diligence’ in caring for minors and vulnerable adults, with those who demonstrat­e negligence in tackling cases of abuse facing the threat of dismissal.

That diligence is required even ‘without grave moral culpabilit­y’ on the part of the bishop involved, Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said in an explanator­y statement.

“For removal from office, in the case of abuse of minors, it is ‘ sufficient for the lack of diligence to be grave’ while in other cases a ‘ very grave’ lack of diligence must be demonstrat­ed,”

The Church, like a loving mother, loves all her children, but treats and protects with special affection the smallest and most helpless.

he added.

A ‘college of legal experts’ – cardinals and bishops – has been set up to assist the pope reach a decision arriving at a definitive decision in a particular case. The new approach will take effect from Sept 5, Lombardi said.

A string of historic paedophili­a cases in North America and Europe has unleashed widespread criticism of the Catholic hierarchy, including allegation­s that in some cases bishops were aware of sexual predators among the priesthood but failed to curb them.

Last month, Francis held a surprise meeting with French Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, the under- fire Archbishop of Lyon who is suspected of covering up for a paedophile priest.

The meeting came just days after the pope was quoted as saying it would be ‘ nonsensica­l and imprudent’ to seek Barbarin’s resignatio­n at this stage. It was not immediatel­y clear whether the papal decree would impact on the Barbarin case.

French examining magistrate­s are currently carrying out two preliminar­y investigat­ions to decide whether to pursue charges against the archbishop for his handling of the allegation­s against Bernard Preynat, a priest in his diocese who has been charged with sex abuse.

Police this week raided the offices of Nicolas de Boccard, a clerical judicial adviser to the Lyon diocese, sources close to the case said Saturday. Barbarin will be questioned by police shortly, the sources told AFP. — AFP

Papal decree

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 ??  ?? Pope Francis and Qatar’s Sheikha Moza Nasser exchange gifts during a private audience at the Vatican. — AFP photo
Pope Francis and Qatar’s Sheikha Moza Nasser exchange gifts during a private audience at the Vatican. — AFP photo

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