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Vatican Rejects Irish Criticism Over Sex Abuse

Vatican Ireland Child Sex Abuse

NICOLE WINFIELD   09/ 3/11 04:33 PM ET   AP

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican on Saturday vigorously rejected accusations it had sabotaged efforts by Irish bishops to report priests who sexually abused children to police and charged that the Irish prime minister had made an "unfounded" attack against the Holy See.

The Vatican issued a 24-page response to the Irish government after Prime Minister Enda Kenny and the Irish parliament publicly denounced the Vatican following the publication in July of a government-mandated investigation into priestly sex abuse in the diocese of Cloyne in southern Ireland. The report found that the Vatican had undermined attempts by Irish bishops to protect children by warning that their policy requiring abuse to be reported to police might violate church law.

The Cloyne report, and Kenny's unprecedented dressing down of the Holy See that followed, prompted cheers from Irish Catholics who have grown increasingly disgusted by the colossal scale of priestly sexual abuse and cover-up in Ireland and the Vatican's consistent claim that it bore no blame.

The diplomatic standoff was particularly acute given that Ireland has long been staunchly Roman Catholic, Kenny himself is a practicing Catholic, and the church has long enjoyed a privileged place in society. The abuse scandal has taken its toll, however, and Kenny's speech was a remarkable indication of just how deep the wounds are.

It also came as the Vatican is fighting on multiple legal fronts in the U.S. to defend itself against lawsuits alleging it is liable for abusive priests. Just last month, the Holy See was forced to turn over internal personnel files of an abusive priest to lawyers representing a victim in Oregon.

The Vatican was patently stunned by Kenny's July 20 speech and recalled its ambassador. In the seven weeks since, it drafted a detailed response, hoping to set the record straight and assure Ireland's abuse-weary faithful that it is serious about cracking down on predator priests.

Irish leaders, however, were not convinced. Foreign Minister Eamon Gilmore said he remained certain that the Vatican had exacerbated the abuse crisis and criticized the Holy See for offering an overly "legalistic" justification of its actions in dealing with priests who rape and molest children.

The Cloyne document was the fourth report since 2005 to document abuse in the Irish church. But it was the first to squarely find the Vatican culpable in promoting the culture of secrecy and cover-up that kept abusers in ministry and able to prey on more children.

The Cloyne report based much of its accusations against the Holy See on a 1997 letter from the Vatican's ambassador to Ireland to the country's bishops expressing "serious reservations" about their policy requiring bishops to report abusers to police.

A committee of Irish bishops had adopted the policy in 1996 under mounting public pressure as the first cover-ups came to light, a year after a former altar boy became the first abuse victim in Ireland to go public with a lawsuit against the church.

The Cloyne report charged that the Vatican's 1997 letter "effectively gave individual Irish bishops the freedom to ignore the procedures which they had agreed and gave comfort and support to those who ... dissented from the stated official church policy."

The Vatican concurred that, taken out of context, the 1997 letter could give rise to "understandable criticism." But it said the letter had been misinterpreted, that the Cloyne report's conclusions were "inaccurate" and that Kenny's denunciation was "unfounded."

The Vatican noted that at the time, in the mid-1990s, there was no law in Ireland requiring professionals to report suspected abuse to police and that the issue was a matter of intense political debate. In fact, Ireland has never had a law explicitly making the failure to report suspected child abuse a crime, but is planning to draft one now in the wake of the Cloyne report.

"Given that the Irish government of the day decided not to legislate on the matter, it is difficult to see how (the Vatican's) letter to the Irish bishops, which was issued subsequently, could possibly be construed as having somehow subverted Irish law or undermined the Irish state in its efforts to deal with the problem in question," the Vatican said.

The response said the Vatican's concerns about mandatory reporting weren't designed to thwart police investigations, but were aimed at ensuring that church law was meticulously followed to prevent abusive priests from being able to overturn any church sanctions on appeal.

The Vatican has detailed internal policies for investigating priestly sex abuse, with sanctions that include being dismissed from the clerical state. Such norms, however, were rarely if ever followed. And critically, it wasn't until last year that the Vatican ever explicitly told bishops to cooperate with civil authorities in reporting abusive priests.

After reading the report, Gilmore said squarely: "I remain of the view that the 1997 letter from the then-nuncio provided a pretext for some to avoid full cooperation with Irish civil authorities."

The Cloyne report also admonished the Vatican for diminishing the bishops' abuse policy as a mere "study document" in the 1997 letter, implying that it wasn't an official policy that needed to be followed and giving cover to those bishops who chose not to implement it.

The policy had been presented at the time as mandatory for all of Ireland's bishops: they staged a news conference to announce it, the country's highest ranking prelate wrote a forward to the policy, and individual bishops pledged to implement it.

The Vatican, however, said the Cloyne investigation was incorrect in saying it had rejected the policy. The Vatican said the policy was never presented to the Vatican for approval. As such, it said, it wasn't legally binding since the only way bishops' conferences can make binding country-wide policy is to submit it for official approval by the Holy See.

In fact, the Vatican response cites two letters from the Irish bishops' conference saying the policy wasn't an official conference publication but rather a report from an advisory committee containing recommended guidelines that were offered to individual bishops "that could – and indeed should – be followed."

"Since the Irish bishops did not choose to seek recognition for the Framework Document, the Holy See cannot be criticized for failing to grant what was never requested in the first place," the Vatican said.

Gilmore blasted such a technical, "legalistic" argument.

"The sexual abuse of children is such a heinous and reprehensible crime that issues about the precise status of documents should not be allowed to obscure the obligation of people in positions of responsibility to deal promptly with such abuse and report it," he said.

"The sense of betrayal which was felt by Irish people about this matter, and which was clearly expressed by (Kenny), came about not only because of the nature of child abuse itself but also because of the unique position which the Catholic Church enjoyed in this country, manifested in many ways, over many decades."

The Vatican stood by its terminology calling it a "study document" – but for the first time publicly acknowledged its very existence, urged bishops to cooperate with civil authorities and told them to "ensure the full and impartial application" of all the Irish church's child protection norms.

Kenny had also accused the Vatican of frustrating the inquiry into the Cloyne diocese, and that in doing so said the Cloyne report "excavates the dysfunction, the disconnection, the elitism that dominate the culture of the Vatican to this day."

The Vatican noted that the Cloyne report makes no such accusation and said there was no evidence to support Kenny's claim. When asked, Kenny's office said he wasn't referring to any specific incident, the Vatican response said.

Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin, the church's leading voice calling for honesty about abuse, said Kenny's unsubstantiated claim "merits explanation."

Martin, who has clashed both with the Vatican and his fellow bishops in demanding greater accountability, also charged that those same bishops who used the 1997 letter as an excuse to ignore the Irish policy continue to ignore Vatican-mandated laws on dealing with abusers.

"These people may be few, but the damage they caused was huge," Martin said Saturday in urging Ireland and the Vatican to move beyond the polemics of the last few weeks and work together to protect children.

"There may well have been a cabal in Cloyne," he told The Associated Press. "They may have friends elsewhere in the Irish church. And they may have friends in the Vatican, yes."

The 1997 letter from the Vatican's ambassador based its findings on a review of the Irish policy by the Vatican's Congregation for the Clergy. At the time, the congregation was headed by Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, who as a matter of policy routinely defended the church's practice of not reporting abuse to police in favor of guarding the rights of accused priests.

Surprisingly, the Vatican response Saturday cites a 1998 speech Castrillon Hoyos delivered to Irish bishops on dealing with sexual abuse in which he stressed that the church and its priests "should not in any way put an obstacle in the legitimate path of civil justice." The Vatican said his speech showed that civil law and church law can operate in parallel.

The response doesn't, however, cite the rest of Castrillon Hoyos' speech, in which he resoundingly criticized the Irish mandatory reporting policy, said it should be revised and that such reporting requirements risked that "the image of the bishop can be turned into more of a policeman than a true father."

He acknowledged that such crimes need to be dealt with quickly, but warned against "obsessive" pursuit of accused priests by bishops because of the damage it can do to the priests, whose souls, he said, were "at the center of the affair."

"If he is guilty, we must, before anything else, be involved with his conversion," Castrillon Hoyos said. "If as often happens, he is a victim of calumny, we must help him to prove his innocence and carry this cross."

The speech is a remarkable demonstration of what many victims' advocates consider the Vatican's misplaced concern for the rights of priests over the welfare of children.

Maeve Lewis, director of the Irish victims support group One in Four, said the Vatican's response to Kenny was merely "an exercise in self-justification, an attempt to justify the unjustifiable."

She and Andrew Madden, the Irish altar boy whose 1995 lawsuit helped open the floodgates for hundreds of abuse lawsuits, both cheered Kenny for putting into words what many Irish felt about the Vatican's culpability.

"The fact that Ireland doesn't yet have mandatory reporting on its statute books doesn't in any way excuse the church's policy of cover-up, of reassigning pedophiles repeatedly to other parishes, and of lying about it when caught," Madden said.

___

Online:

Vatican's response is at http://bit.ly/ocmYve

Cloyne Report is at http://bit.ly/pyi8oF

Irish bishops' 1996 "Framework Document" is at http://bit.ly/rqdcnD

___

Shawn Pogatchnik contributed to this report from Dublin.

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VATICAN CITY — The Vatican on Saturday vigorously rejected accusations it had sabotaged efforts by Irish bishops to report priests who sexually abused children to police and charged that the Iri...
VATICAN CITY — The Vatican on Saturday vigorously rejected accusations it had sabotaged efforts by Irish bishops to report priests who sexually abused children to police and charged that the Iri...
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01:35 AM on 09/08/2011
The Vatican is such a dishonest organization God should blow it up.
11:06 AM on 09/05/2011
It will be nice to admit it and take care of it instead of deny the facts..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jwilson1
10:40 AM on 09/05/2011
As an X catholic who beat up a priest at 14 years old for him making advances and was kicked out of catholic school for it. Thank god for my mom who told them to F^&% off and that the Priest was drunk and she removed us all from Catholic school...really had fun going to public school rather being tortured by the Christian brothers.
The Catholic church has put Priests and Brothers above child abuse so not they are crying because the Pope won't crack down on the pedophiles. The church is a joke and is not representing GOD who ever she is.
KennebunkportIndependent
Back in my day, we had NINE planets.
11:55 AM on 09/05/2011
Good for you!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chanook106
08:54 AM on 09/08/2011
I attended catholic school too as a young lad but was never molested. I often wonder if any of my friends were though. You beat up a priest for coming on to you? You have a very interesting past.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rayosun
a life-long liberal Democrat and devout Christian
09:50 AM on 09/05/2011
So long as the vast majority of Catholics remain powerless cogs in their church, they can't be held responsible for what the few who DO HAVE POWER in their church do.
BUT, this isn't the "dark ages". Why should adults want to remain in an institution that requires that they be forever treated like children, whose ONLY function will always be to "pay and pray"?
See my http://JesusWouldBeFurious.Org/ site.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
UncleJimbo
BLANK!
09:43 AM on 09/05/2011
Why does anyone take anything this "man" says seriously?...... He's got Waldheim's_ D!sease!....It's like Alzheimer's_D!sease except the Only thing you Forget is that you were a N@ZI_!!! .......
09:29 AM on 09/05/2011
The Holy See? In reality, just a mud puddle.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rayosun
a life-long liberal Democrat and devout Christian
04:47 PM on 09/09/2011
“The Holy See" has nothing to do with oceans.
See what it REALLY MEANS at my
http://JesusWouldBeFurious.Org/Vaticanpalace.html .
It's actually a very telling expression!!!.

By the way. My last post here eraned my my 666th friend! WHO could THAT be????
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Social Construct
Go left, young man.
05:54 AM on 09/05/2011
The bible would read very different if Jesus had lawyers.
05:19 AM on 09/05/2011
Pope's official reaction to child molesting priests: "don't use a comdom, it's a sin".
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fattrucker
01:40 AM on 09/05/2011
how many people can there be left in this world who are awestruck at the sight of a white man in a funny hat babbling in latin?
09:22 AM on 09/05/2011
Many millions, my friend!
KennebunkportIndependent
Back in my day, we had NINE planets.
11:57 AM on 09/05/2011
So easily fooled.  So easily tricked.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lhanderson86
07:29 PM on 09/05/2011
He gives them absolution. Which, by the way, is exactly why the priests molest boys in the first place. They can say they are sorry and they are absolved of their sins and they get into heaven anyway, no matter what they did.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
see-ellen2001
01:24 AM on 09/05/2011
Law..so what! If you talk the talk, walk the walk! A..abuse hapened. B...you did nothing constructive to protect the innocents. Case closed.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Johnd139
11:41 PM on 09/04/2011
It will take centuries fo this fade. By the way, the second collection today is for the construction
Fund
KennebunkportIndependent
Back in my day, we had NINE planets.
11:58 AM on 09/05/2011
...and for Fr O'Malley's camping trip with the boys.....
11:37 PM on 09/04/2011
Why do I not believe the Vatican ?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:58 PM on 09/04/2011
The vatican has the credibility of a roach.
KennebunkportIndependent
Back in my day, we had NINE planets.
11:58 AM on 09/05/2011
The creepy kind, or the smoky kind?  or both?
10:33 PM on 09/04/2011
Again, the liberal press, here spins a story, completely out of proportion, in their continuous attack on the Church. The men in the church who did wrong, are wrong because of the teachings of the Church. Should we destroy the Church so as to go back to pagan Rome where over 50 % were slaves and there was no law against anything done to a child under 12?
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Cannonball Taffy O Jones
Khaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan!
11:05 PM on 09/04/2011
For most of its existence the Roman Catholic Church has condoned and profited from slavery and right up to this day the Church puts its ‘reputation’ and the liberty of its priests a long way before taking a principled stand against the sexual exploitation of children by its agents.
05:36 AM on 09/05/2011
Wow! We actually agree on something. Cool.
07:19 PM on 09/06/2011
Thanks for the reply. The Truth is always attacked. You ought to at least read the Church's side of this discussion, rather than just follow HP.
11:39 PM on 09/04/2011
That's it, blame it on "liberals". Never mind the putrid smell coming from an institution that should be extinguished.
07:14 PM on 09/06/2011
Thanks for your reply. There is no evidence, just attacks.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IndependentBadger
10:12 PM on 09/04/2011
If it took popes a few centuries to admit that the earth goes around the sun, I'm guessing they're gonna wait a few million years before acknowledging that the men putting their penises into children's orifices probably deserve less money and support than the children do. Yeah, I know, I'm excommunicated. Who am I to question the sexual wisdom of an 85 year old virgin in a two foot tall hat?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mr Anonymous
Mumpsimus, I am not entertained!
02:27 AM on 09/05/2011
Hey you never know. God got down with Mary when she was supposedly in her early teens.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IndependentBadger
09:07 AM on 09/06/2011
lol
KennebunkportIndependent
Back in my day, we had NINE planets.
12:03 PM on 09/05/2011
In point of fact, the Vatican thinks this will blow over.