MORE ON THE POPE AND CHILD SEX ABUSE
DAILY MAIL, UK 2006 The Pope played a leading role in a systematic cover-up of child sex abuse by Roman Catholic priests, according to a shocking documentary to be screened by the BBC tonight.
In 2001, while he was a cardinal, he issued a secret
The document recommended that rather than reporting sexual abuse to the relevant legal authorities, bishops should encourage the victim, witnesses and perpetrator not to talk about it. And, to keep victims quiet, it threatened that if they repeat the allegations they would be excommunicated.
The Panorama special, Sex Crimes And The Vatican, investigates the details of this little-known document for the first time. The program also accuses the Catholic Church of knowingly harboring pedophile clergymen. It reveals that priests accused of child abuse are generally not struck off or arrested but simply moved to another parish, often to reoffend. It gives examples of hush funds being used to silence the victims.
Before being elected as Pope Benedict XVI in April last year, the pontiff was Cardinal Thomas Ratzinger who had, for 24 years, been the head of the powerful Congregation of the Doctrine of The Faith, the department of the Roman Catholic Church charged with promoting Catholic teachings on morals and matters of faith. An arch-Conservative, he was regarded as the 'enforcer' of Pope John Paul II in cracking down on liberal challenges to traditional Catholic teachings.
Five years ago he sent out an updated version of the notorious 1962 Vatican document Crimen Sollicitationis - Latin for The Crime of Solicitation - which laid down the
Cardinal Ratzinger reinforced the strict cover-up policy by introducing a new principle: that the
Patrick Wall, a former Vatican-approved enforcer of the Crimen Sollicitationis in
And Father Tom Doyle, a Vatican lawyer until he was sacked for criticizing the church's handling of child abuse claims, says: "What you have here is an explicit written policy to cover up cases of child sexual abuse by the clergy and to punish those who would call attention to these crimes by the churchmen.
"When abusive priests are discovered, the response has been not to investigate and prosecute but to move them from one place to another. So there's total disregard for the victims and for the fact that you are going to have a whole new crop of victims in the next place. This is happening all over the world."


2 Comments:
Last week Ratzinger tried to blame the child molestation on the general corruption of all of society. He seems to be willing to say anything that meets his needs for disavowing responsibility.
So he thinks it's the kids fault for watching too much TV? This pretty much proves that the most evil men in the world are the leaders. We have Bush, we have Ratzinger, we have the old men of the Chinese dictatorship, etc., etc.
We've got to find a way out of the basic paradox of power: the only people who can be trusted with it are those who don't want it; any who seek it are too dangerous to be allowed near it.
Fool of Eris
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