USA TODAY International Edition

German cardinal: Abuse documents ignored or destroyed

- Doug Stanglin Contributi­ng: John Bacon; The Associated Press

A top German cardinal said Saturday that documents on past sex abuse cases in the church had been destroyed or ignored and urged changes to the Vatican’s legal code of secrecy in such issues to restore trust.

Calling for the publicatio­n of statistics on the problem, German Cardinal Reinhard Marx addressed Pope Francis’ four-day sex abuse prevention summit at the Vatican.

He said the church must redefine confidentiality and secrecy in the way it deals with such cases or risk charges of cover-up.

“Files that could have documented the terrible deeds and named those responsibl­e were destroyed, or not even created,” he told the group, according to Vatican News. “Instead of the perpetrato­rs, the victims were regulated and silence imposed on them.”

The cardinal blamed “abuse of power in the area of administra­tion” as a major factor in the sexual abuse of children and young people. “In this regard, administra­tion has not contribute­d to fulfilling the mission of the church, but on the contrary, has obscured, discredite­d and made it impossible.”

In an effort to keep the burgeoning scandal buried, he said, church files about abusers had been destroyed, victims silenced and church procedures ignored, canceled or counterman­ded.

Pope Francis called the four-day summit that brought together almost 200 high-ranking church officials, including leaders of bishop conference­s from more than 100 nations.

The summit has focused on making bishops aware of their responsibi­lities regarding sexual abuse, as well as accountabi­lity and transparen­cy, the Vatican said.

The pope, in his opening remarks Thursday, cited the “scourge” of sexual abuse and said it was the responsibi­lity of church leaders to “confront this evil afflicting the Church and humanity.”

Marx called for changes to the Vatican’s legal code of secrecy to not only bring transparen­cy but to highlight the cases and determine who made decision on how they were handled, when and why.

The summit has also provided an opportunit­y for a public airing of the extent of the problem in the church. A prominent Nigerian nun on Saturday blasted the culture of silence that has long kept clergy sexual abuse hidden in the Catholic Church, telling a Vatican summit that transparen­cy and an admission of mistakes were needed to restore trust.

The summit began with an African woman who was not identified recounting how her priest raped her and forced her to have three abortions over a dozen years after he started violating her at age 15.

It included a warning from Colombian Cardinal Rubén Salazar Gómez that they could all face prison if they let such crimes go unpunished.

Francis defrocked former U.S. Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, 88, after Vatican officials found him guilty of sex crimes against minors and adults. McCarrick is the most senior Catholic official to be defrocked for such crimes.

Experts said McCarrick’s case sends an important signal that even cardinals and powerful archbishop­s will be held accountabl­e.

More than 30 years after the scandal first erupted in Ireland and Australia and 20 years after it hit the U.S., bishops and Catholic officials in many parts of Europe, Latin America, Africa and Asia still either deny that clergy sex abuse exists in their regions or downplay the problem.

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