Cardinal O'Malley reiterates responsibility to report
sex abuse
(Vatican Radio) Cardinal Seán
O’Malley, President of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors
on Monday issued a statement stressing the “moral and ethical responsibility”
to report all suspected cases of sexual abuse to the civil authorities.
Speaking on behalf of all the
Commission members, the cardinal said: “The crimes and sins of the sexual abuse
of children must not be kept secret for any longer. I pledge the zealous
vigilance of the Church to protect children and the promise of accountability
for all”.
The statement also stressed
the Commission’s “extensive education efforts” within local Churches over the
past two years and reiterated the members’ willingness to provide this material
at courses offered in Rome, “including to the annual training program for new
bishops and to the offices of the Roman Curia for their use in their own child
protection efforts”.
Please see below the full
statement from Cardinal Seán O’Malley, President of the the Pontifical
Commission for the Protection of Minors
Cardinal Seán O’Malley, OFM
Cap., president of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors,
together with all the Commission Members, issued today the following statement
on the obligation to report suspected sexual abuse to civil authorities:
“As Pope Francis has so
clearly stated: ‘The crimes and sins of the sexual abuse of children must not
be kept secret for any longer. I pledge the zealous vigilance of the Church to
protect children and the promise of accountability for all’. We, the President
and the Members of the Commission, wish to affirm that our obligations under
civil law must certainly be followed, but even beyond these civil requirements,
we all have a moral and ethical responsibility to report suspected abuse to the
civil authorities who are charged with protecting our society”.
Cardinal O’Malley’s statement
continued, “In the United States, our Bishops’ Charter clearly states the
obligation that all dioceses/eparchies and personnel report suspected abuse to
the public authorities. Every year at our November meeting, at a training
session for new bishops, this obligation is reaffirmed, and every other
February the Conference runs a second training program for new bishops which
also clearly and explicitly includes this obligation. As the Holy Father’s
advisory commission for the protection of minors, we recently shared with Pope
Francis an overview of the Commission’s extensive education efforts in local Churches
over the past two years and reiterated the Members’ willingness to provide this
material at courses offered in Rome, including to the annual training program
for new bishops and to the offices of the Roman Curia for their use in their
own child protection efforts”.
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