Orlando Sentinel

After Pope Francis

- By Nicole Winfield

defended a bishop in Chile in accusation­s of a sex-abuse cover-up, the Vatican has now launched a full investigat­ion into the allegation­s.

VATICAN CITY — After coming under public criticism, Pope Francis decided Tuesday to send the Vatican’s most respected sex crimes expert to Chile to investigat­e a bishop accused by victims of covering up for the country’s most notorious pedophile priest.

The Vatican said Maltese Archbishop Charles Scicluna would travel to Chile “to listen to those who have expressed the desire to provide elements” about the case of Bishop Juan Barros.

The move marks the first known time the Vatican has launched a full-blown investigat­ion into allegation­s of sex abuse cover-up, and it comes after Francis was harshly criticized by the media, survivors of abuse, his fellow Jesuits and some of his top advisers for his unwavering defense of Barros.

The Barros controvers­y dominated Francis’ justended trip to Chile and Peru and exposed his blind spot about clerical abuse. Even the head of his abuse advisory panel, Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, publicly rebuked him for his dismissive treatment of victims and tried to set him straight.

Barros was a protege of the Rev. Fernando Karadima, a politicall­y powerful priest who was sanctioned by the Vatican for sexually abusing minors in 2011. His victims testified to Chilean prosecutor­s that Barros and other priests in the El Bosque community saw Karadima kissing youngsters and were aware of his perversion­s, but did nothing.

After Karadima was sanctioned by a church court, Chile’s bishops were so intent on trying to stem the fallout from the scandal that they persuaded the Vatican to have Barros and two other Karadima-trained bishops resign and take a yearlong sabbatical, according to a 2015 letter obtained by The Associated Press.

But Francis stepped in and put a stop to the plan, arguing there wasn’t any proof against them. He overruled the Chilean bishops’ objections and in January 2015 appointed Barros to head the diocese of Osorno.

The issue haunted Francis’ recent trip, and imploded after he told a Chilean journalist Jan. 18 that the accusation­s against Barros were slander and he demanded “proof” against Barros to believe them. After O’Malley rebuked him, Francis apologized for having demanded proof, but he stood by his belief that the accusation­s against Barros were “calumny.”

“I am convinced he is innocent,” Francis declared during an in-flight news conference while returning home from Peru on Jan. 21.

Francis seemed unaware that Karadima’s victims had placed Barros at the scene and were the original source of the accusation­s against him.

Barros said Tuesday that he welcomed “with faith and joy” the pope’s decision to have Scicluna investigat­e, according to a statement read by the spokesman of the Chilean bishops’ conference. He has denied knowing of any abuse.

Karadima victim Juan Carlos Cruz told Francis that he couldn’t offer the proof the pope demanded.

“As if I could have taken a selfie or a photo while Karadima abused me and others and Juan Barros stood by watching it all,” Cruz tweeted Jan. 19.

 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/AP ?? Bishop Juan Barros is accused of covering up allegation­s of sex abuse by a priest in Chile.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/AP Bishop Juan Barros is accused of covering up allegation­s of sex abuse by a priest in Chile.

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