The Vatican will be questioned by UN Committee-Rights of Child-Jan. 16-Geneva

by AndersonsInfo 7 Replies latest watchtower child-abuse

  • AndersonsInfo
    AndersonsInfo
    S urvivors N etwork of those A bused by P riests

    This Thursday, for the first time ever, the Vatican will be questioned about its record on child sexual violence by an international body. The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child in Geneva is holding the meeting in two sessions on Jan 16, each three hours long. SNAP and our attorneys from CCR will be there. Later in the evening (Geneva time) CCR and SNAP are hosting a reportback via Livestream directly after the review to report about it to survivors, advocates and supporters. Two separate events and you can view them both on the internet.

    Watch the UN review via livestream here! The review will take place on Thursday, January 16, 2014 from 10am-1pm CET, (4am-7am EST) where the Vatican will be reviewed on their compliance with the Convention on Rights of the Child and then from 3pm-6pm CET (9am-12 noon EST) the Vatican will be reviewed on their compliance with the Optional Protocols on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography.

    **This will be broadcast in the English language. This is broadcast by the UN.

    Then two hours later at 8 pm CET (2 pm EST) we will have the “reportback” by CCR and SNAP. Tune in here .

    You can follow the conversation on Twitter and ask questions before or during the livestream by tweeting to the hashtag #HolySeeConfessor by emailing questions to [email protected] .

    SNAP and CCR submitted reports to the Committee on the Rights of the Child detailing how the Holy See has violated the core principles of the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

    If you have questions please email or call the SNAP office at: 312 455 1499 or [email protected] .

    Don’t miss the chance to participate in this historic event!

  • cofty
    cofty

    Thanks. Lets hope the committee don't tread too lightly.

  • 4thgen
    4thgen

    Wow! Thanks, Barb!

  • mind blown
    mind blown

    Yes, this is big news actually! Thanx for posting......:)

  • Oubliette
    Oubliette

    When do they have the WTBTS scheduled for their interview?

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Europe/2014/0116/Vatican-taken-to-task-by-UN-on-child-abuse.-Will-the-church-change

    Vatican taken to task by UN on child abuse.

    Will the church change?

    Victims' rights advocates say that they hope today's unprecedented grilling in Geneva of Vatican officials could be a turning point for the church's handling of abuse.

    By Nick Squires, Correspondent / January 16, 2014

    Vatican Ambassador to the UN Monsignor Silvano Tomasi (l.) speaks with former Vatican Chief Prosecutor of Clerical Sexual Abuse Charles Scicluna prior to the start of a questioning over clerical sexual abuse of children at the headquarters of the office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Geneva today.

    Martial Trezzini/Keystone/AP Rome Vatican officials came in for an unprecedented grilling today by a United Nations committee over the Catholic Church's cover-up of decades of sexual abuse of children by clergy. In Pictures:

    The Vatican But despite familiar defenses from the Holy See concerning its role in child-abuse scandals, victims and their advocates are hopeful that the shame of being questioned in public could propel significant change within the church.

    The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child in Geneva posed charged, blunt questions to senior Vatican officials today, the first time that they had been called to defend their record on the rape of thousands of children by clergy in front of an international body.

    The Catholic Church ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1990 but failed to provide the required progress reports for more than a decade, with victims’ groups accusing the church hierarchy of fostering a culture of secrecy to hide abuse of children by priests, monks, and nuns in countries around the world, from Italy and Ireland to the US and Australia.

    "Why is there no mandatory reporting to a country's judicial authorities when crimes occur?" asked Hiranthi Wijemanne, a member of the committee. "Taking actions against perpetrators is part of justice."

    Another member, Sara Oviedo, was equally forthright. "The Holy See has not established any mechanism to investigate those accused of perpetrating sexual abuse, nor to prosecute them.”

    Committee members also asked the Vatican delegation what plans it had to collect data on clerical sex abuse, what oversight was in place for Catholic institutions such as schools and orphanages, and how it trained priests to work with minors.

    'The Holy See gets it' Addressing the hearing, Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, the Vatican's representative in Geneva, showed a degree of remorse, saying that "such crimes can never be justified."

    Archbishop Charles Scicluna, a prelate from Malta who for a decade was the most senior Vatican official in charge of dealing with sexual abuse cases, acknowledged that the church had made mistakes in the past.

    "The Holy See gets it, let's not say too late....

    There are certainly things that need to be done differently," he said. "It is not the policy of the Holy See to encourage cover-ups. Only the truth will help us move on to a situation where we can start being an example of best practice."

    But Archbishop Tomasi reiterated an argument that the Vatican has long used – that the Holy See cannot be held responsible for the actions of clergy members in countries around the world and that its remit extends only to those living and working within the Vatican City State – the tiny sovereign territory surrounded by Rome, where fewer than 40 children reside.

    Priests were "not functionaries of the Vatican but citizens of their countries and fall under the jurisdiction of their own countries," he said. That argument was condemned as dishonest by campaigners for victims of sexual abuse, who said it was clear that the Vatican is the hub of the worldwide Catholic Church and issues directives and orders to dioceses around the globe. “It is just so disingenuous for Church officials to claim that national governments are responsible for prosecuting clergy when those same Church officials have obstructed justice, helped predator priests move jurisdictions, destroyed evidence, and paid off victims and witnesses to remain silent,” says Barbara Blaine, a victim of abuse herself and the president of the US-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP).

    'Vindicated' Despite the Vatican official's familiar arguments in Geneva, some campaigners saw a glimmer of hope in the public inquiry.

    “It feels like a new chapter of justice and transparency has been opened,” says Megan Peterson, a member of SNAP and a victim of abuse as a child in Minnesota. “It’s a historic day for me.” Miguel Hurtado, also from SNAP, said that in the past he and fellow campaigners had been called “Catholic haters who want to destroy the Church” by senior clergy.

    “We feel vindicated by the UN committee and we hope the Vatican will change its approach.” The UN committee, which is composed of independent experts, will issue a report on Feb. 5.

    Its recommendations are not binding and the committee has no ability to sanction the Vatican, but it could still spur the Vatican into action, activists said. “Whether the Vatican makes hard changes remains to be seen,” says Pam Spees, a human rights attorney for the Center for Constitutional Rights, which provided a key report to the committee.

    “Nonetheless, today’s hearing is a milestone in calling for an end to the days of impunity." “People are waiting and watching and there is now a standard by which they will judge the Vatican,"

    Ms. Spees adds. "I think we are seeing a shift and monitoring by international bodies can only be a good thing.” Key papal test The degree to which the Vatican tackles the issue of sexually abusive clergy is being seen as a key test of the papacy of Pope Francis, who was elected last March after the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI.

    Pope Francis has announced almost weekly initiatives to reform the Holy See’s governance and clean up its finances, but has said little about the shame of predatory priests. Last month he announced the setting up of a committee to address the issue, but victims’ groups described the initiative as “toothless,” “meaningless,” and “like offering a Band Aid to a cancer patient.”

    On Thursday, as the UN session was underway in Switzerland, he told worshipers at morning Mass in the Vatican that abuse scandals had "cost us a lot of money, but [paying damages] is only right."

    Bishops, priests, and lay people were responsible for this "shame of the Church," he said. "Do we feel shame? There are so many scandals that I do not want to name them individually but everyone knows about them," the Argentinean pope said.
  • adamah
    adamah

    Pope Francis has announced almost weekly initiatives to reform the Holy See’s governance and clean up its finances, but has said little about the shame of predatory priests. Last month he announced the setting up of a committee to address the issue, but victims’ groups described the initiative as “toothless,” “meaningless,” and “like offering a Band Aid to a cancer patient.”

    On Thursday, as the UN session was underway in Switzerland, he told worshipers at morning Mass in the Vatican that abuse scandals had "cost us a lot of money, but [paying damages] is only right."

    What were Jesus' words about how to respond when being sued?

    Matthew 5:40:

    And if any man will sue thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also.

    Per Jesus, the RCC should throw in a lil' extra to make up for putting the victims through the trauma; after all, it's what Jesus told his followers to do....

  • 4thgen
    4thgen

    Go get um!

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