Caritas Philippines takes
measures to prevent clergy sexual abuse
Philippine Catholics at a public liturgy |
Caritas Philippines said it will make proactive background
checks of all its directors at the national and diocesan levels regarding sex
abuse.
By Robin Gomes
Caritas Philippines has joined efforts to curtail the sexual
abuse of minors by priests in the country. Fr. Edwin Gariguez,
Executive Secretary of Caritas Philippines, said that part of the measure
is to conduct ‘background checks’ of all Caritas directors.
He said they would make proactive background checks of all
directors at the national and diocesan levels.
The priest made the statement during the launching of the
“Alay Kapwa” Lenten campaign for Luzon at the Cathedral Shrine and Parish of
the Good Shepherd in Quezon City on Feb. 3.
Caritas Philippines, also known as the National Secretariat
for Social Action, Justice and Peace (Nassa), is the social action arm of the
Catholic Church in the country. It is a member of Caritas
Internationalis, the global confederation of 165 national Catholic relief and
development agencies.
Fr. Gariguez clarified that the goal is to determine whether
a priest has been involved in any abuse case, particularly of children.
Addressing the diocesan social action directors present, he explained that
Caritas is showing that it does not tolerate such abuses.
“Thus, if the need for each diocese to have a training on
this matter and the mechanism on how this will be done, we will create and
provide it for the protection ministry,” he said.
In July 2019, the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the
Philippines (CBCP) agreed to create a new office that will look into the cases
of clerical abuse and augment the efforts in the diocesan level.
In May last year, Pope Francis issued his Moto Proprio, “Vos
estis lux mundi” (You are the light of the world), establishing that all
dioceses must have a “public, accessible and reliable” system for reporting
cases of clergy sex abuses. It includes the obligation for clerics and
religious to report abuse, while every diocese must provide itself with a
system that is easily accessible to the public, to receive such reports.
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