Pope Francis issues new legislation for protection of minors” & related articles and audio

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The Vatican on Friday released three new documents from Pope Francis concerning the protection of minors and vulnerable persons in the Vatican City State.

Vatican City News     Vatican website

29 March 2019

By Christopher Wells

“The protection of minors and vulnerable persons is an integral part of the Gospel message,” Pope Francis insists in the very first line of his Apostolic Letter. The Pope says that it is the duty of all “to generously welcome children and vulnerable persons, and to create a safe environment for them, giving priority to their interests”.

Motu proprio

Accompanied by new legislation for the Vatican City State, and new guidelines from the Vicariate for Vatican City, the Holy Father’s Letter aims at “further strengthening the institutional and normative framework for preventing and combatting abuse against children and vulnerable persons” in the Roman Curia and in Vatican City.

In particular, the documents published on Friday focus primarily on the protection of minors and vulnerable adults, and the prevention of crimes against them; while also providing new regulations concerning the duty of reporting abuse, caring for victims and their families, removing offenders from their positions, and prosecuting those guilty of abuse. In his Letter, the Pope also acknowledges the rights of the accused to a fair and impartial trial, including the presumption of innocence, rule of law, and proportionality in sentencing.

Further, Pope Francis provides new norms for training of Vatican officials and employees about “the risks of exploitation, sexual abuse, and maltreatment of children and vulnerable persons, as well as the means to identify and prevent such offences”.

New Law for Vatican City

Specific details of the new laws promulgated for Vatican City State include a definition of vulnerable persons as anyone in “a state of infirmity, of physical or mental deficiency, or of deprivation of personal liberty” which limits their comprehension, or their ability to resist an offence. Vulnerable persons are considered equivalent to minors for purposes of the new laws and guidelines.

The legislation also sets out a statute of limitations of twenty years, which for crimes against a minor begins when they reach the age of 18.

New “General Protective Measures” provide for purported victims to be informed of their rights, and of the adoption or cessation of measures taken against the liberty of the accused. Care for the confidentiality of victims and their families is a concern throughout the new documents; which also call for measures to protect them from retaliation or intimidation.

An “Accompanying Service” is also established, which will offer a “service of listening” as well as providing medical, psychological, and social services for victims. The service will also help victims understand and vindicate their rights, and assist them in going to the authorities.

Vicariate issues new Guidelines

The Guidelines adopted for the Vicariate of Vatican City are practical means to implement the new laws, and ensure “best practices” with regard to the care and protection of children and vulnerable adults. They insist that all laws and canons in this area must be “scrupulously respected”.

They also call for the Vicar General, who has responsibility for pastoral care within Vatican City, to appoint a Referente, or Contact Person for the Protection of Minors, whose duties include preventing all forms of abuse; training Vatican officials and workers; and welcoming those who make claims of exploitation, sexual abuse, or maltreatment.

The Vicariate also provides definitive guidance for Vatican employees, with norms that require, for instance, that those working with minors should always be visible to others; must report any dangerous behavior; keeping parents informed; and using caution in dealing with minors.

New regulations also flatly forbid any corporal punishment; offending a child or engaging in inappropriate or sexually suggestive conduct; asking children to keep a secret; or filming or photographing a child without written consent from their parents.

The new Law for Vatican City State will go into force on June 1 of this year; while the new Guidelines for the Vicariate, which are being implemented ad experimentum for three years, take effect immediately.

29 March 2019, 11:56

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Declaration of the interim director of the Holy See Press Office, Alessandro Gisotti, 29.03.2019

Click image to enlarge

 

 

 

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Archbishop Scicluna: Concrete steps for protection of minors” & related articles

Archbishop Charles Scicluna speaks to Vatican News about the release of three documents concerning the protection of minors and vulnerable persons.

Vatican News    Vatican website

29 March 2019

By Lydia O’Kane

Archbishop Scicluna briefing on the work of the meeting on the protection of minors in the Church

Archbishop Charles Scicluna speaks to Vatican News about the release of three documents concerning the protection of minors and vulnerable persons.

Listen to the interview with Archbishop Scicluna

 

Just over a month after the “Protection of Minors in the Church” meeting in the Vatican, Pope Francis on Friday issued a Motu Proprio and two other documents pertaining to the pastoral care of minors within the territory of Vatican City State.

Maltese Archbishop Charles Scicluna was one of the organisers of the February summit and is also an adjunct secretary at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Speaking about the release of the three documents, he explains that they “essentially are laws and two of them are laws issued by the Holy Father as sovereign of Vatican City State.” The third document, he says, consists of “guidelines for the pastoral care of minors within the territory of the Vatican City State.”

Protection of Minors and Vulnerable in Vatican City State

The Archbishop points out that the documents “are not intended to be for the rest of the world, they actually contemplate the concrete situation of Vatican City State; a number of minors, who either live there, work there, or visit, and it’s all about the protection of minors and the duty to report the abuse of minors when it happens within Vatican City State or even between departments of the Vatican that are extra-territorial, outside the Vatican, but always within its jurisdiction.”

Guidelines

Referring to the guidelines for the pastoral care of minors, the Maltese Archbishop says they can serve as a model for Bishops and Bishops’ Conferences and they also deal with taking care of victims of abuse, emphasizing the duty to report and the duty to care also for communities.

The Archbishop says that one of the things he finds impressive is the “emphasis on the rights of the victims and the duty of authorities, whether pastoral or legal, to inform the victims of their rights; to ensure within the criminal system of the Vatican City State and also within the pastoral guidelines, care for victims and also care for the whole community impacted by the egregious crimes of sexual abuse of minors or the vulnerable.”

Archbishop Scicluna notes that the documents follow “best practice in countries such as the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand… Scotland and Ireland.” “I think it is a good day for the Vatican”, he says, “because it’s actually doing what the Holy See has asked other people to do.”

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Inside Vatican City State  Editorial

State-of-the-art standards for the protection of minors

An analysis of the main points in the three texts on the protection of minors promulgated by Pope Francis for Vatican City State and the Roman Curia

Vatican News    Vatican website

29 March 2019

By Andrea Tornielli

Listen to Vatican State of the Art Standards for the Protection of Minors

The motu proprio on the protection of minors and vulnerable persons; the new Vatican City State law which is extended also to the Roman Curia; and the pastoral guidelines – three documents signed by Pope Francis – come just over one month after the February meeting which gathered the presidents of the episcopal conferences from across the world and, in a way, represent its first fruit.

They are very specific laws, norms and indications destined, first of all, for those to whom they are addressed:  in fact, they concern only Vatican City State, where a large number of priests and religious work, but where there are very few children. Although they have been conceived and written for a unique reality, in which the highest religious authority is also the sovereign and legislator, these three documents contain exemplary indications that take into account the most advanced international parameters.

In the ‘motu proprio’, the only one of the three texts for which the papal signature was indispensable, Pope Francis highlights a significant principle, expressing a number of wishes, including “that everyone should be aware of their duty to report abuses to competent authorities and to cooperate with them in the activities of prevention and response”.

The fact that the Pope also decided to personally sign Law CCXCVII and the Guidelines – texts that in themselves could have been promulgated respectively by the Commission for Vatican City State and by its Vicar – indicates the value inherent in these norms.

The first of the three documents is the new law in which the first article contains a precise and broad definition of “vulnerable adults” who are equated to minors: “Any person in a state of infirmity, of physical or mental deficiency, or of deprivation of personal liberty which in fact, even occasionally, limits their ability to intend or to will or in any case to resist the offense is vulnerable”.

Many significant innovations in the text

The first concerns the fact that from now on, all crimes related to child abuse, not only those of a sexual nature, but also, for example, mistreatment, will be persecuted “ex officio”, that is, even when the purported victim does not file an official report. The second novelty concerns the introduction of a 20-year prescription period (statute of limitations) that, “in the case of offense to a minor” begins on his or her eighteenth birthday.  It is worth remembering that, in this case, we are not talking about canonical laws, but about Vatican City State criminal laws, where the “Codice Rocco”, which was promulgated in Italy during the fascist era, has never been adopted, and where the “Zanardelli Penal Code” still applies, and according to which, prescription periods for these crimes were never more than four years after the crime itself was committed.

Another significant innovation concerns the obligation to report;  as well as sanctions for any public official who fails to report abuses he is aware of to Vatican judicial authorities, except in case of the sacramental seal, that is the inviolable secret of Confession. This means that all those who, in the State and by extension in the Roman Curia, but also among the diplomatic staff at the service of the nunciatures,  play the role of public officials (that means  over 90% of those who work in the Vatican or for the Holy See) would be sanctioned in the event of failure to report.

Another significant innovation is the establishment by the Governorate, within the Vatican Department of Health and Welfare, of a service of accompaniment for victims of abuse, which will be coordinated by a qualified expert. The victims will therefore have someone to turn to for help, to receive medical and psychological assistance, to be made aware of their rights and of how to enforce them. There are also novelties regarding the selection and recruitment of Governorate Roman Curia staff: the candidate’s suitability to interact with minors must be ascertained.

Finally, the Pastoral Guidelines for the Vicariate of Vatican City. They may appear as a brief document when compared to similar texts of some Episcopal Conferences, but it should be remembered that there are only two parishes in the Vatican and that there are only a few dozen minors living there. The Guidelines are addressed to the priests, deacons and educators of the Saint Pius X Pre-Seminary, to the canons, parish priests and coadjutors of the two parishes, to the religious men and women who reside in the Vatican as well as to “all those who work in any capacity, as an individual or with an association, within the ecclesial community of the Vicariate of Vatican City”. It is specified, for example, that these persons must “always be visible to others when they are in the presence of minors”, that it is strictly forbidden “to establish a preferential relationship with a single minor, to address a minor in an offensive way or to engage in inappropriate or sexually allusive conduct, to ask a minor to keep a secret, to photograph or to film a minor without the written consent of his parents”. And much more.

From now on the Vicar of Vatican City has the obligation to report to the Promoter of Justice any news of abuse that “is not manifestly unfounded”, and to remove the alleged perpetrator of the abuse from pastoral activities as a precautionary measure. Anyone found guilty of abuse will be “removed from office” in the Vatican. If the person is a priest, all the canonical norms already in force, will be put into practice.

As announced at the end of the February summit, the documents will be followed by the publication, by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, of an anti-abuse ‘vademecum’ for the universal Church, and by the creation of mechanisms to help dioceses lacking qualified personnel to deal with these cases.

Pope Francis’ move is therefore clear and unequivocal: “The protection of minors and vulnerable persons is an integral part of the Gospel message that the Church and all her members are called to spread throughout the world”.

29 March 2019, 13:28

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Pope Francis issues new legislation for protection of minors

The Vatican on Friday released three new documents from Pope Francis concerning the protection of minors and vulnerable persons in the Vatican City State.

Vatican News    Vatican website

29 March 2019

By Christopher Wells

2019.02.23 Incontro Protezione minori nella Chiesa

Pope Francis addresses Bishops during the Meeting on the Protection of Minors, which took place last month  (Vatican Media)

“The protection of minors and vulnerable persons is an integral part of the Gospel message,” Pope Francis insists in the very first line of his Apostolic Letter. The Pope says that it is the duty of all “to generously welcome children and vulnerable persons, and to create a safe environment for them, giving priority to their interests”.

Motu proprio

Accompanied by new legislation for the Vatican City State, and new guidelines from the Vicariate for Vatican City, the Holy Father’s Letter aims at “further strengthening the institutional and normative framework for preventing and combatting abuse against children and vulnerable persons” in the Roman Curia and in Vatican City.

In particular, the documents published on Friday focus primarily on the protection of minors and vulnerable adults, and the prevention of crimes against them; while also providing new regulations concerning the duty of reporting abuse, caring for victims and their families, removing offenders from their positions, and prosecuting those guilty of abuse. In his Letter, the Pope also acknowledges the rights of the accused to a fair and impartial trial, including the presumption of innocence, rule of law, and proportionality in sentencing.

Further, Pope Francis provides new norms for training of Vatican officials and employees about “the risks of exploitation, sexual abuse, and maltreatment of children and vulnerable persons, as well as the means to identify and prevent such offences”.

New Law for Vatican City

Specific details of the new laws promulgated for Vatican City State include a definition of vulnerable persons as anyone in “a state of infirmity, of physical or mental deficiency, or of deprivation of personal liberty” which limits their comprehension, or their ability to resist an offence. Vulnerable persons are considered equivalent to minors for purposes of the new laws and guidelines.

The legislation also sets out a statute of limitations of twenty years, which for crimes against a minor begins when they reach the age of 18.

New “General Protective Measures” provide for purported victims to be informed of their rights, and of the adoption or cessation of measures taken against the liberty of the accused. Care for the confidentiality of victims and their families is a concern throughout the new documents; which also call for measures to protect them from retaliation or intimidation.

An “Accompanying Service” is also established, which will offer a “service of listening” as well as providing medical, psychological, and social services for victims. The service will also help victims understand and vindicate their rights, and assist them in going to the authorities.

Vicariate issues new Guidelines

The Guidelines adopted for the Vicariate of Vatican City are practical means to implement the new laws, and ensure “best practices” with regard to the care and protection of children and vulnerable adults. They insist that all laws and canons in this area must be “scrupulously respected”.

They also call for the Vicar General, who has responsibility for pastoral care within Vatican City, to appoint a Referente, or Contact Person for the Protection of Minors, whose duties include preventing all forms of abuse; training Vatican officials and workers; and welcoming those who make claims of exploitation, sexual abuse, or maltreatment.

The Vicariate also provides definitive guidance for Vatican employees, with norms that require, for instance, that those working with minors should always be visible to others; must report any dangerous behavior; keeping parents informed; and using caution in dealing with minors.

New regulations also flatly forbid any corporal punishment; offending a child or engaging in inappropriate or sexually suggestive conduct; asking children to keep a secret; or filming or photographing a child without written consent from their parents.

The new Law for Vatican City State will go into force on June 1 of this year; while the new Guidelines for the Vicariate, which are being implemented ad experimentum for three years, take effect immediately.

29 March 2019, 11:56

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Pope Francis demands sex abuse claims be reported in Vatican City

Vatican City News    Vatican website

29 March 2019

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis on Friday issued sweeping new sex abuse legislation for Vatican personnel and Holy See diplomats that requires the immediate reporting of abuse allegations to Vatican prosecutors, a policy shift aimed at being a model for the Catholic Church worldwide.

The mandatory reporting provision marks the first time the Vatican has put into law requirements for Catholic officials to report allegations of sex crimes to police or face fines and possible jail time.

Francis also issued child protection guidelines for Vatican City State and its youth seminary, acting after the global sex abuse scandal exploded anew last year and The Associated Press reported that the headquarters of the Catholic Church had no policy to protect children from predator priests.

The law for the first time provides an explicit Vatican definition for “vulnerable people” who are entitled to the same protections as minors under church law. The Vatican amended its canon law covering sex abuse to include “vulnerable adults” several years ago, but never defined it.

According to the new Vatican definition, a vulnerable person is anyone who is sick or suffering from a physical or psychiatric deficiency, isn’t able to exercise personal freedom even on occasion and has a limited capacity to understand or resist the crime.

The issue of whether adult seminarians, religious sisters or other adults who are emotionally or financially dependent on clergy can be considered “vulnerable people” has come to the fore in the wake of the scandal over ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, a once high-ranking American cleric accused of molesting seminarians, and revelations of priests and bishops sexually preying on nuns.

The new law covers all personnel who live and work in the Vatican, the 44-hectare (110-acre) city state in the center of Rome, as well as the Holy See’s vast diplomatic corps in embassies around the world.

The Vatican’s ambassadors have figured in some of the most scandalous cases of sex abuse in recent years, with papal representatives accused of groping, distributing child pornography and sexually abusing minors in their far-flung posts.

The law now requires any Vatican public official who learns of an allegation of abuse to report it to Vatican prosecutors “without delay.” Failure to do so can result in a fine of up to 5,000 euros ($5,615) or, in the case of a Vatican gendarme, up to six months of prison.

The legislation requires that victims be welcomed, listened to and provided with medical, psychological and legal assistance, and sets the statute of limitations at 20 years past the victim’s 18th birthday.

Victims and their families are to be protected from any retaliation, the law says, answering longstanding problem faced by victims, including one who reported sexual abuse at the Vatican’s own seminary only to be kicked out the following year.

Mimicking some provisions in place in the U.S. church, the provisions require background checks for staff and volunteers working with minors and calls for safe environment training for all Vatican personnel.

The accused is to be removed from their job pending the investigation, and be allowed to defend themselves.

In a statement accompanying the new law, the Vatican’s editorial director, Andrea Tornielli, said while very few children actually live in the Vatican City State, Francis decided to make the legislation and accompanying guidelines a model.

Last year, AP reported that Vatican City had no policy to protect children or require suspected abuse to be reported to police, even though the Holy See required such policies in Catholic dioceses around the globe and had told the U.N. in 2013 that such a policy was in the works.

The absence of clear-cut policy became evident following revelations that a teenage seminarian in the Vatican’s youth seminary had, in 2012, accused one of the older boys of sexually molesting his roommate.

Nothing came of it. Vatican police, who have jurisdiction over the territory, weren’t called in to investigate. A series of bishops – including Cardinal Angelo Comastri, Francis’ vicar for Rome and the archpriest of St. Peter’s Basilica – said they investigated, but no one ever interviewed the alleged victim.

The student who lodged the complaint, Kamil Jarzembowski, was promptly kicked out of the seminary while the accused seminarian was ordained as a priest.

On Friday, Jarzembowski told AP the law was a positive step forward, particularly its explicit recognition that the pre-seminary falls under its jurisdiction.

“Before there was a situation where a group of kids were there, in the Vatican City State, but they were seemingly in a legal limbo,” he said.

He praised the mandatory reporting requirement, noting that all survivor advocacy groups “the first thing that they do is say there must be the obligation to report to public authorities.”

“I see this as something positive,” he told the AP.

At the Sunday conclusion of the historic sexual abuse summit convened by Pope Francis, Vatican officials announced “concrete initiatives” generated by the meeting. Summit moderator Fr. Federico Lombardi told journalists at the Vatican that bishops assembled here “have heard the voices of the victims of the terrible crimes of sexual abuse against minors committed by the clergy. We sincerely ask them for forgiveness, as we do also of all of our brothers and sisters, for what we did wrong and what we failed to do.”

The initiatives outlined today include promises of new anti-abuse discipline rules at the Vatican City State, a guidebook of sorts telling bishops around the world what their responsibilities are regarding abuse, and new task forces to assist parts of the world “that find it difficult to confront the problems and produce initiatives for the protection of minors.”

Vatican officials say these are “first steps” in an effort to “abolish every form of violence and abuse against minors.”