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| The decision by Pope Francis was the latest move to improve transparency in the handling of cases of clerical child abuse (AFP Photo/Tiziana FABI) |
Vatican City (AFP) - Priests can no longer cite papal secrecy in abuse cases, the Vatican said Tuesday, the latest move by Pope Francis to combat silence surrounding paedophilia in the Roman Catholic church.
The Church
has been rocked by thousands of reports of sexual abuse around the world by
priests, and accusations of cover-ups by senior clergy.
Francis'
latest instructions regarding Vatican law on sexual abuse say that the
pontifical secret no longer applies "to accusations, trials and
decisions" involving such cases.
Pontifical
secrecy is a rule of confidentiality designed to protect sensitive information
related to Church governance, such as diplomatic correspondence, personnel
issues and alleged crimes.
Critics say
the secrecy laws have prevented priests and victims from reporting abuse, as
well as hindered national justice systems prosecuting cases.
The Vatican
also announced on Tuesday that it was raising the age at which sexual images of
a person were deemed child pornography from 14 to 18.
In May, the
pope passed a landmark measure to oblige those who know about sex abuse to
report it to their superiors, a move expected to bring even more cases to
light.
In
Tuesday's statement, issued on the Argentine pontiff's 83rd birthday, Francis
spelt out the new obligations.
"The
person who files the report, the person who alleges to have been harmed and the
witnesses shall not be bound by any obligation of silence with regard to
matters involving the case," he wrote.
An
'all-out battle'
Archbishop
of Malta Charles Scicluna, the Vatican's chief sex crime investigator, called
Francis' move an "epochal decision that removes obstacles and
impediments."
He told the
official Vatican News website that "the question of transparency now is
being implemented at the highest level."
The pope
has vowed an "all-out battle" against sex abuse within the Church,
but some victims' groups have said concrete measures have been slow in coming.
Marie
Collins, a child sexual abuse survivor who in 2017 resigned from a Vatican
committee she said was failing to adequately tackle paedophilia, welcomed the
pope's latest move.
"Excellent
news," Collins wrote on Twitter, saying the committee had recommended the
step. "At last a real and positive change."
Despite the
lifting of papal secrecy, Francis qualified that discretion in sexual abuse
cases was still required.
Information
pertaining to such cases should be treated, "in such a way as to ensure
its security, integrity and discretion... for the sake of protecting the good
name, image and privacy of all persons involved," the pope wrote.
But that
should not obstruct the law, the obligation to report abuses and the carrying
out of requests by law enforcement, the instructions said.

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