Pope should be tried over the church’s sex abuse scandals, Gang rape in Cambodia
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- Pope should be tried over the church’s sex abuse scandals:
Corrigan - Cardinals Start to Ponder Subtleties of a Big Task - George:
Any ties to sexual abuse could disqualify papal candidate - Gang rape
widespread in Cambodia
Pope should be tried
over the church’s sex abuse scandals: Corrigan Thursday Mar 07, 2013
An international lawyer says that the Roman
Catholic Church and Pope can be sued in the International Court of Justice over
hundreds of filed sexual abuses cases.
The comments come as the leader of
Catholic church Pope Benedict XVI has officially resigned, ending an eight-year
pontificate shaped by struggles to move the church past sex abuse scandals.
Meanwhile international lawyers are looking into former Pope Benedict XVI’s
legal status to see whether the former pontiff is liable to a legal action over
failing to stop child sex abuse by church priests....
Corrigan: Well, if
it goes to the International Court of Justice I think certainly the Roman
Catholic Church can be sued.
Priests, bishops, archbishops, all along the
hierarchy have been sued successfully in the past and there are a number, maybe
even hundreds of sexual abuse cases which have been filed against the church,
many of which have been upheld and sometimes they are dealt with internally
through Canon law and internal secrecy which is supposed to protect the victim
but also certainly has the appearance of protecting the church and sort of
hiding this problem which needs to be brought up in the open and there have been
numerous priests and other religious figures who have been convicted of sexual
abuse of children and women and others.
Cardinals Start to Ponder Subtleties of a Big
Task By DANIEL J. WAKIN March 4, 2013 VATICAN CITY....
On Monday,
a senior American cardinal made a rare mention of the clerical sexual abuse
scandal in that discourse. Cardinal Francis George, the archbishop of Chicago,
said the new pope “obviously has to accept the universal code of the church now,
which is zero tolerance for anyone who has abused a child.” Speaking in answer
to a question at a news conference, Cardinal George said, “There’s a deep-seated
conviction, certainly on the part of anyone who has been a pastor, that this has
to be continually addressed.”.... http://goo.gl/KBI2X http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/05/world/europe/cardinal-george-of-chicago-urges-zero-tolerance-of-sex-abuse.html
George: Any ties to sexual abuse could disqualify papal
candidate By Manya A. Brachear, Chicago Tribune reporter March 7,
2013
ROME — Days before Pope Benedict XVI resigned and Roman Catholic
cardinals descended on Rome to select his successor, Scottish Cardinal Keith
O'Brien was, for all intents and purposes, fired.
As one of the cardinal
electors for the next pope, O'Brien, who later apologized for sexual misconduct
with other clergy, could have had a say in the next pope. Technically, he could
have become the next pontiff.
But in an exclusive interview with the
Tribune before the American cardinals' moratorium, Chicago's Cardinal Francis
George said there are attempts to vet candidates to avoid surprises. He also
said ties to anyone guilty of sexual misconduct — whether intended or unintended
— could put a man's candidacy in question if it could distract from his
spiritual mission.
David Clohessy, executive director of the
Chicago-based Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, also known as SNAP,
said that kind of vetting should have been taking place for decades. On
Wednesday, Clohessy's group issued a list of a dozen cardinals whose selection
as pope would cause further offense to victims of sex abuse by
priests.... http://goo.gl/usCwJ http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/religion/ct-met-sex-abuse-0307-20130307,0,7784915.story
Gang rape widespread in Cambodia Published on Mar
7, 2013
In a recent survey, five percent of men reported they
participated in gang rape in Cambodia, one of the highest rates in the
Asia-Pacific region. Still, fewer than 20 gang-rape cases were prosecuted in
Cambodia last year. A law against domestic violence, passed in Cambodia in 2005,
has led to a 15 percent reduction in violence in the home. There is increasing
recognition that sexual violence needs to be tackled in the Southeast Asian
nation. Al Jazeera's Aela Callan reports from Phnom Penh, Cambodia's capital.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SyxhEfBubGI http://goo.gl/h7hSP