Antelope Valley Press

Vatican moves to stop LGBT rights spat

- By COLLEEN BARRY

MILAN — The Vatican’s Secretary of State attempted to tamp down controvers­y Thursday over a Vatican diplomatic communicat­ion to Italy, saying the Holy See was not trying to block passage of a law that would extend additional protection­s from discrimina­tion to the LGBT community.

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s No. 2, told Vatican News that he personally approved the diplomatic communicat­ion, which was intended to express concerns over the proposed Italian legislatio­n. The Vatican is against any “attitude or gesture of intoleranc­e or hatred toward people motivated by sexual orientatio­ns,’’ he added.

The chief concern, Parolin said, is that “vagaries” in the text of the proposed law could expose anyone expressing an opinion about “any possible distinctio­n between man and woman” to prosecutio­n.

The letter, which has been published by Italian media, claims specifical­ly that the law would violate a landmark treaty establishi­ng diplomatic ties between Italy and the Vatican by putting at risk the right of Roman Catholics to freely express themselves. It cited as an example a clause that would require Catholic schools, along with their public counterpar­ts, to run activities on a designated day against homophobia and transphobi­a.

The law would add women, people who are homosexual, transsexua­l or with disabiliti­es, to those protected by a law banning discrimina­tion and punishing hate crimes. The lower house of parliament passed the legislatio­n in November, but it has been stalled in the Senate by rightwing concerns that it would limit freedom of expression.

Right-wing leader Matteo Salvini, for example, has complained that anyone saying that a family is formed with a man and a woman would be exposed to possible prosecutio­n.

Backers of the law have dismissed such concerns, saying that the threshold for prosecutio­n is inciting hatred or violence against the protected classes.

Premier Mario Draghi on Wednesday rebuffed the Vatican’s attempt at influencin­g the legislativ­e process, telling parliament: “Italy is a secular state.”

But the controvers­y has ignited outrage over Vatican meddling, with many calling for the cancellati­on of the so-called Lateran Treaty, originally establishe­d under fascism and revised in the 1980s, establishi­ng diplomatic ties between the Vatican and predominan­tly Roman Catholic Italy.

LGBT activists have vowed to transform Gay Pride events in Rome and Milan on Saturday into protests against what they say is the Vatican’s unpreceden­ted interferen­ce in the Italian legislativ­e process.

In decades past, the Vatican objected to Italian laws legalizing abortion and divorce and backed unsuccessf­ul referendum­s after the fact to try to repeal them.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin attempted to tamp down controvers­y Thursday over a Vatican diplomatic communicat­ion to Italy, saying that the Holy See’s intention was not to block passage of a law that would extend additional protection­s from discrimina­tion to the LGBT community.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin attempted to tamp down controvers­y Thursday over a Vatican diplomatic communicat­ion to Italy, saying that the Holy See’s intention was not to block passage of a law that would extend additional protection­s from discrimina­tion to the LGBT community.

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