New York (AFP) - A US bishop accused of trying to cover up sexual abuse by priests quit on Wednesday, as the Catholic church continues to be rocked by a worldwide clergy abuse scandal.
The Vatican
said in a statement that it had accepted the resignation of Bishop Richard
Malone, 73, from the Buffalo diocese in New York state.
Malone has
been accused in US media of hiding the names of accused priests and of allowing
some to remain in the ministry.
He admitted
last year that he had "fallen short" in his handling of allegations
of misconduct, particularly by priests accused of abusing adults.
Buffalo has
been in turmoil since February 2018 when a retired priest admitted to sexually
abusing children, sparking further allegations across the diocese.
The Church
has already paid $17.5 million to victims, according to the Buffalo News, which
says that more than 220 lawsuits have been filed by people claiming to have
been abused by priests.
Most of the
allegations date from before 2002 and some date back more than 70 years.
Malone, in
his post since 2012, announced he was retiring two years early, explaining that
Catholics in Buffalo would be "better served by a new bishop who perhaps
is better able to bring about the reconciliation, healing and renewal that is
so needed."
"I
have acknowledged on many occasions the mistakes I have made in not addressing
more swiftly personnel issues that, in my view, required time to sort out
complex details pertaining to behavior between adults," he said in a
statement Wednesday.
He is
alleged to have kept hidden files about abusive priests to minimize damage to
the church. Malone was also reportedly recorded expressing reluctance to sack
one priest accused of abuse.
In a brief
communique, the Vatican said Pope Francis had accepted the resignation of
Malone and offered no further detail.
Crisis
Activists
welcomed his resignation but criticized the Vatican for not directly firing
him.
"He
actively did try to cover up and minimize cases of abuse in Buffalo and that's
something that can't be allowed or tolerated," Zach Hiner, executive
director of SNAP, a non-profit helping survivors of abuse by clergy, told AFP.
That Pope
Francis accepted his resignation but didn't publicly force him to stand down
sends "a weaker message," Hiner added.
The
Catholic Church has been rocked by thousands of reports of sexual abuse by
priests and accusations of cover-ups by senior clergy, starting in the Boston
archdiocese in the United States in 2002.
An August
2018 grand jury report examining child sex abuse within six dioceses in the
state of Pennsylvania found more than 1,000 child victims, underscoring the
scale of the problem.
One
estimate suggests that there were 100,000 US victims.
Since the
crisis became public in the 2000s, the US church has spent more than $3 billion
in settlements, according to abuse tracking site Bishop Accountability.
Malone's
stepping down follows other resignations, including of auxiliary bishops in New
York and Los Angeles.
The bishop
of Albany, Edward Scharfenberger, will take over in Buffalo until a new bishop
is named.

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