Vatican calls Ireland’s allegations ‘unfounded’

September 04, 2011|By Rachel Donadio, New York Times

VATICAN CITY - In a strong rebuke to the Irish government, the Vatican said yesterday that it had never discouraged Irish bishops from reporting sexual abuse of minors to the police and dismissed assertions that it had undermined efforts to investigate such abuse as “unfounded.’’

The Vatican’s statement was the latest salvo in a tense diplomatic standoff with Ireland since the release in July of the latest in a series of scathing Irish government reports into sex abuse by priests and evidence of a widespread cover-up.

The Vatican recalled its ambassador to Ireland for consultations after the report was released, but he is now expected to return.

The report said the Vatican had encouraged bishops to ignore child-protection guidelines adopted by Irish bishops, including mandatory reporting of abuse to the civil authorities.

In its statement yesterday, the Vatican also criticized a speech to Parliament by Prime Minister Enda Kenny on July 20, in which he denounced the “dysfunction, the disconnection, the elitism that dominate the culture of the Vatican today.’’

The Vatican said it “understands and shares the depth of public anger and frustration at the findings’’ of the report, “which found expression in the speech’’ by Kenny. But it said both the report and the speech hinged on a “misinterpretation’’ of a key letter.

The July report found that clergy members in the rural diocese of Cloyne had not acted on complaints against 19 priests from 1996 - when Irish bishops had issued guidelines to protect children - to as recently as 2009.

The Cloyne Report was the fourth report into the pedophilia scandal in Ireland since 1994 but the first to point a finger directly at Rome.

It was followed by Kenny’s speech and a statement by Parliament saying that the Vatican’s intervention “contributed to the undermining of the child protection framework and guidelines of the Irish state and Irish bishops.’’

The Vatican said yesterday that that assertion was “unsubstantiated’’ and the result of a “misinterpretation’’ of a confidential 1997 letter to the bishops of Ireland by a former Vatican ambassador.

The ambassador wrote that he had “serious reservations’’ about the child-protection policies adopted by the bishops under intense public pressure in 1996, saying that they violated the due process of canon law.

The Cloyne Report said that letter “effectively gave individual Irish bishops the freedom to ignore the procedures’’ and “gave comfort and support’’ to priests who “dissented from the stated Irish church policy.’’

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