THE Government last night stuck to its pledge to force priests to
break the secrets of the confessional box and reveal abuse as tensions
boiled over with the Vatican.
Relations between the Vatican and Ireland plunged to a new low as the Holy See's Ambassador was recalled to Rome to discuss the fallout from the Cloyne Report.
On
top of the diplomatic row, a senior Vatican official dismissed the
Government's plans to bring in a new law to compel priests to pass on
details of abuse revealed in confession.
In the wake of Taoiseach Enda Kenny's scathing attack on the Vatican, Monsignor Giuseppe Leanza was summoned back to Rome so he could brief Pope Benedict XVI
and senior church officials on details of the damning report which
accused the Catholic hierarchy of covering up for paedophile priests.
SIGNIFICANCE
The Government attempted to play down the significance of the move.
However,
the Taoiseach will not be retracting any of his comments and sources
believe the Vatican is now taking the request for a comprehensive
response to the report seriously.
"The ball is very much in
their court. It's become clear to them (the Vatican), that this
administration has a different approach to previous administrations," a
government source told the Irish Independent.
The
Vatican deputy press officer Father Ciro Benedettini said: "The recall
of the Nuncio denotes the seriousness of the situation and the Holy
See's desire to face it objectively and determinedly.
"Nor does it exclude some degree of surprise and disappointment at certain excessive reactions."
Diplomatic
sources claimed the language in the statement was not as provocative
as was being suggested and the Government was told at the weekend
about the withdrawal of the Nuncio.
Tanaiste Eamon Gilmore said the decision to recall the Papal Nuncio to the Vatican for consultations was a matter for the Holy See.
"The
Government is awaiting the response of the Holy See to the recent
report into the Catholic Diocese of Cloyne and it is to be expected
that the Vatican would wish to consult in depth with the Nuncio on its
response," he said.
Archbishop Gianfranco Girotti, of the
Vatican's Apostolic Penitentiary, dismissed suggestions priests should
break the secrets of the confessional box and reveal details of
abusing clergy.
"Ireland can approve all the laws it wants but it
should know the church will never allow itself the obligation to
betray the confessional to civil authorities.
"It is absurd to
think that priests should be obliged to betray what is said in the
confessional box," Archbishop Girotti said.
Justice Minister Alan Shatter
reiterated his plan to bring in the new law on withholding
information on crimes against children and vulnerable adults, which he
said "will apply regardless of any internal rules of any religious
grouping".
"The central focus of the Government is child protection."