The head of the Irish church's
child protection watchdog said he considered resigning over his
irritation at a lack of church cooperation.
Ian Elliott, chief executive of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church, said May 11 that he had asked himself "on several occasions" if he should
quit, but decided to stay because he believes he is "making a difference
for children."
Elliott has worked in the field of child safeguarding for almost 40
years, but he said his current role with the church is "the most
challenging situation I have ever been in."
At a news conference to release his board's third annual report, he also
said that he has repeatedly expressed his frustration to the pope's
apostolic visitors, who are currently undertaking an inquiry into the
crisis in the Catholic Church in Ireland.
"I am hopeful that when the report of the apostolic visitation is made
available later this year, our discussions will have had a major
impact," he said.
Elliott said each Irish parish now has a trained child safeguarding
representative, "the essential backbone" of the church's efforts in the
sphere.
However, he said that while all allegations of abuse in the church are
now being reported to the police and social services, less than 25
percent of cases are being forwarded to his office for inquiry.
He said
these "reporting deficits" made it difficult for him to report whether
bishops and religious superiors are handling abuse properly.
Elliott told CNS that he "expects to receive information on all
allegations, concurrent to reporting these to the civil authorities.
Of the 272 allegations of abuse noted in the report, 86 were made
against deceased clerics or religious; 174 involved those who are out of
ministry, retired, or have been dismissed from the clerical state; and
12 allegations involved those who are in ministry or were returned to
ministry after an assessment of the allegations did not warrant another
course, according to the report.
Elliott said he was also frustrated that all dioceses had withdrawn
cooperation from an audit of how abuse was handled.
The dioceses cited
concerns about protecting data, but he said those perceived difficulties
had now been overcome and he was confident that the audit could
proceed.
A similar audit of the Diocese of Cloyne led Bishop John Magee to step
aside in 2009 after Elliott's office found that safeguarding policies in
place were "inadequate and in some respects dangerous."
Bishop Magee
resigned in 2010 and is expected to be heavily criticized in a
forthcoming report by Judge Yvonne Murphy. Justice Minister Alan Shatter
is expected to publish the report in mid-May.
Elliott admitted that his report into Cloyne "undoubtedly had an impact"
on the relationship between his office and the Irish church hierarchy.
He said "it became obvious to many people within the church that the
board was going to be different than it had originally been perceived.
"But that's what we're about, we're about facing up to difficult issues," he said.
Welcoming the report by the national board, the Irish bishops'
conference, the Conference of Religious of Ireland and the Irish
Missionary Union said it "demonstrates significant progress in many key
areas, notably in policy development and training, as well as some
important areas of challenge that have yet to be completely resolved."
"As sponsoring bodies, we are fully committed to working with the board
to consolidate the progress made to date and to addressing those issues
which have been a cause of some frustration to both the sponsoring
bodies and the board, particularly around data protection and the
sharing of statistics and other specific information with the national
office," the statement added.
The board was set up in 2006 and aims, through the development of
policies and procedures, to guide all 186 constituent parts of the
Catholic Church in Ireland toward the best practice in safeguarding
children. It is also empowered to monitor that practice through regular
audits and reviews.
The report was issued as the Vatican announced it would publish a letter
to the world's bishops aimed at ensuring a "coordinated and effective
program" of child protection and of dealing with allegations of clerical
sexual abuse.