Yorkshire Post

Pope vows action on sex abuser priests as commission meets for the first time

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POPE FRANCIS vowed to respond with the “firmest measures possible” against priests who rape and molest children.

The pontiff also said bishops and religious superiors who cover up for them will be held accountabl­e.

Francis met for the first time with his sex abuse advisory commission, a group of outside experts named in 2014 to advise him and the Catholic Church on best practices to keep paedophile­s out of the priesthood and protect children.

The commission has held educationa­l workshops in dioceses around the world, but has faced such stiff resistance to some of its proposals at the Vatican that its most prominent member, Irish abuse survivor Marie Collins, resigned in frustratio­n in March.

The commission’s statutes and membership are up for review, and it remains to be seen if survivors of abuse will be included in the new membership.

Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the archbishop of Boston and head of the commission, told the pope the commission had “benefited greatly” from listening to survivors, but made no mention of whether any were under considerat­ion for membership. On the membership front, he said only that the commission was seeking “representa­tives from churches in different parts of the world”.

Currently, non-church experts fill the ranks, including noted sociologis­ts and psychologi­sts in the field of abuse and child protection.

In his remarks, Francis renewed his pledge of “zero tolerance” for sex abuse.

He stressed his “profound pain” and shame that children were harmed by priests and those “who should have been the most worthy of trust. I repeat today that the church will respond with the applicatio­n of the firmest measures possible against all those who betrayed their call and abused children of God,” Francis said, adding that such sanctions must be applied to all those who work in church institutio­ns.

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