Francis's Rebel Advisors Break Vatican Code of Silence
VATICAN CITY: External experts brought in by Pope Francis
to help tackle the tiny city state's ills are answering the papal call for
openness - and infuriating some Holy See stalwarts in the process.
Over the past few months
members of the pope's commission for child protection - handpicked by Francis
to help root out sex abuse in the Catholic Church - have publicly attacked a
cardinal and a bishop.
The cardinal in question is
the Vatican's finance chief George Pell, who was accused by commissioner Peter
Saunders of being an "almost sociopathic" man who covered up abuse
and tried to buy the silence of at least one victim.
Despite the anger among red
hats in the gilded corridors of Saint Peter's, Saunders -- a British child
abuse victim -- stood his ground and has not apologised.
The anti-paedophilia body has
strong ties to survivor groups who are highly critical of the Vatican, and its
members readily draw attention to the Church's flaws, even if it embarrasses the very man who appointed them.
The second case concerned the
nomination by Francis of a Chilean bishop, Juan de la Crux Barros, who has ties to a notorious abuser priest in his
home country and is suspected of helping cover up his crimes.
Four of the commission members
took their concerns to the body's president, Boston Cardinal Sean O'Malley,
saying he had agreed to pass them on to the pope.
They stressed the need for
bishops who "are committed to and have an understanding of child
protection" - but the Vatican insisted in this case it had done its
background checks on Barros and not found him wanting.
Growing role of independent
experts
The commission for child
protection reminded its members on Tuesday that they do not have the
"jurisdiction to comment on individual cases or investigations."
But it also called on
cardinals and bishops to help crack down on abuse, saying "those in a
position of authority must act quickly, transparently, with the clear intent to
see justice take its course."
The very fact that some
experts feel they can call the Vatican's top brass to order shows the growing
role of independent experts in everything from the state's finances and media
operation to fighting child sex abuse, religious watchers say.
Marco Politi, Vatican expert
and papal biographer, told AFP that in the abuse commission's case, some
members felt forced to speak out because of their frustration at
the Vatican's sluggish approach to change.
"The flurry of
accusations and statements are the sign of an unease over the slowness with
which the commission's work is proceeding," he said.
A year after being set up the
body "has still not drawn up new, more stringent guidelines for bishops,
or created a central body charged with informing the pope about striking cases
which local bishops have preferred not to tackle."
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