ACTIVISTS in the US documenting clerical sex abuse cases
within the Catholic Church expressed dismay yesterday at the findings
of the Cloyne report.
They also voiced scepticism that the Vatican or
church authorities in Ireland will ever allow the extent of abuse to be
fully revealed.
"The Cloyne Report is disheartening confirmation that even today, despite the Church’s knowledge of the profound anguish of thousands of victims, its reform policies are public relations ploys, not true child protection programs," said Anne Barrett Doyle, the Boston-based director of BishopAccountability.org, an online database documenting the Catholic sex-abuse crisis worldwide.
Barbara Blaine, president of a US-based pressure group called Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, said the report’s conclusion that the Vatican encouraged the Cloyne cover-ups "should surprise no one".
"A key reason bishops ignore, minimise and hide child sex crimes," she said, "is because Vatican officials have largely urged, and sometimes insisted, that they do so."
"The Cloyne Report is disheartening confirmation that even today, despite the Church’s knowledge of the profound anguish of thousands of victims, its reform policies are public relations ploys, not true child protection programs," said Anne Barrett Doyle, the Boston-based director of BishopAccountability.org, an online database documenting the Catholic sex-abuse crisis worldwide.
Barbara Blaine, president of a US-based pressure group called Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, said the report’s conclusion that the Vatican encouraged the Cloyne cover-ups "should surprise no one".
"A key reason bishops ignore, minimise and hide child sex crimes," she said, "is because Vatican officials have largely urged, and sometimes insisted, that they do so."