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  Home > Asia


Australia Abuse: Archbishop Rejects Call To Report Confessions


 


 December 16th, 2017  |  09:27 AM  |   2234 views

AUSTRALIA

 

A senior member of the Roman Catholic Church in Australia has rejected a key recommendation of a landmark inquiry into child sex abuse.

 

It said priests should report abuse confided to them, even in the secret context of the confessional.

 

But the archbishop of Melbourne said any priest who broke the seal of confession would be excommunicated.

 

This means they would cease to be a member of the Church and would no longer be allowed a Catholic funeral.

 

The Most Rev Denis Hart said a law requiring this of priests would undermine a central tenet of Catholicism, the sacredness of the confessional.

 

"The seal of the confessional, or the relationship with God that's carried through the priest and with the person, is inviolable," he said.

 

In a statement, the Vatican said the report "deserved to be studied seriously".

 

The five-year inquiry's final report said institutions had "seriously failed" to protect children.

 

These institutions included the churches and the report found that 62% of abuse cases in religious institutions were in Catholic institutions.

 

Religious ministers and school teachers were the most commonly reported perpetrators, the report said.

 

The report also called on the Catholic Church to overhaul its celibacy rules

 

The royal commission, Australia's highest form of public inquiry, heard more than 8,000 testimonies from victims of abuse, with accusations covering schools, churches and sports clubs over decades.

 

"It is not a case of a few rotten apples," the report said. "Society's major institutions have seriously failed... The problems have been so widespread, and the nature of the abuse so heinous, that it is difficult to comprehend."

 

Since 2013, the royal commission has referred more than 2,500 allegations to authorities.

 

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said "a national tragedy" had been exposed.

 


 

Source:
courtesy of BBC NEWS

by BBC NEWS

 

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