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| Last month Pope Francis accepted the resignation of five Chilean bishops amid accusations of abuse and related cover-ups |
Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of Philip Wilson, an Australian archbishop convicted in May of concealing abuse by a notorious paedophile priest in the 1970s, the Vatican said Monday.
Earlier
this month Wilson, 67, was sentenced to a year in detention after becoming one
of the highest-ranking church officials to be convicted on the charge.
"The
Holy Father Francis accepted the resignation of the pastoral government of the
Archdiocese of Adelaide (Australia), presented by S.E. Mons. Philip Edward
Wilson," the Vatican said in a statement.
His
resignation comes less than a fortnight after Australian Prime Minister Malcolm
Turnbull asked the pope to sack Wilson, who was found guilty in an Australian
court of failing to report allegations against paedophile priest Jim Fletcher.
He had long
denied the charges and initially resisted calls to resign pending an appeal
against his conviction.
Wilson's
legal team made four attempts to have the case thrown out, arguing that he
suffered from Alzheimer's and so should avoid trial.
But a
magistrate in Australia found Wilson guilty of concealing a serious indictable
offence of another person, concluding that his primary motive was to protect
the church.
He said
when sentencing him that Wilson showed "no remorse or contrition".
The court
has adjourned the matter until August 14 to assess whether Wilson can serve his
sentence under home detention.

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