Activists fighting for truth and justice for victims of sexual abuse
by Catholic priests hold out little hope for progress under the next
pope as controversy brews over a US cardinal who covered up for predator
clerics.
A Catholic association has asked retired Los Angeles
archbishop Roger Mahony to stay away from next month's conclave after he
was stripped of all public duties for mishandling claims against dozens
of priests.
Campaigners say the disgraced cardinal's behaviour is
precisely what Pope Benedict XVI has failed to crack down on and point
to other "cardinal electors" linked to abuse scandals that have rocked
the Catholic Church in recent years.
"He should have the good
sense to stay well away from Rome," said Roberto Mirabile, director of
the Italian anti-abuse group La Caramella Buona, whose lobbying helped
convict a paedophile parish priest near Rome last year.
Supporters
reject the demonisation of Benedict on this issue and say he has been
the first pontiff to really confront the problem, meet with victims and
punish abusers, as well as try to formulate Church-wide rules against
abuse.
"The atmosphere has really changed in the Church over abuse
of minors during his pontificate," said Marco Scarpati, Italy director
for Ecpat, an international organisation against child prostitution,
pornography and trafficking.
"The Vatican has taken in claims,
opened quite in-depth investigations and acted with a severe hand
against convicted priests," he said.
But victims groups say that is far from enough given the scale of the problem.
"We're
not in the least bit optimistic," said Sue Cox of the Britain-based
Survivors Network Europe, herself a victim of a paedophile priest when
she was 10-13 years of age.
"They would prefer for it all to go
away," she told AFP, voicing her fear that "with all the pomp and
ceremony they will try to bury the past."
The scourge of abusive
priests burst into the light of day more than a decade ago with a
cascade of scandals rocking the Church worldwide, from Ireland to the
United States, from Australia to the pope's native Germany.
The
Vatican says it continues to receive around 600 claims against abusive
priests every year, many of them dating back to the 1960s, 1970s and
1980s.
Barbara Dorris of the Survivors Network of those Abused by
Priests, or SNAP, in the United States said the tide of revelations
cannot be turned back. "Criminal cases are breaking all over," she said.
"The floodgates are opening."
Cox and other activists say the
conclave includes several cardinal electors who are implicated directly
or indirectly in the scourge.
Chief among them is Mahony, who was
archbishop of Los Angeles from 1985 to 2011 and appeared to
systematically protect abusers from criminal prosecution, according to
hundreds of documents released by the investigation.
An online
poll carried out by Italian Catholic weekly Famiglia Cristiana found an
overwhelming majority of respondents were against Mahony.
Another
US cardinal who is expected to attend the March conclave, Justin Francis
Rigali, resigned as Philadelphia archbishop for age reasons.
But
activists say the resignation was in fact linked to a wide-ranging
scandal in the city involving 37 priests for which an underling took the
fall.
Another of the 117 cardinal electors who can vote on a new
pope is Belgian Godfried Danneels, who had computer files seized at his
home three years ago over suspicion that he may have helped cover up
hundreds of abuse cases.
Irish cardinal Sean Brady has faced
resignation calls from campaigners for allegedly failing to stop a
serial abuser, saying he was not senior enough when he took part in a
Church investigation of the priest in the 1970s.
The Vatican has
taken a number of recent initiatives, including an unprecedented
conference at the Gregorian University in Rome last year which brought
together victims, bishops from around the world and psychologists.
The
Vatican in 2011 also called on bishops' conferences around the world to
come up with guidelines on how to deal with abuse, but not all
countries have responded and there is concern that countless abuses
remain hidden.
"Benedict XVI was very courageous in breaking the
wall of silence that covered many cases," said Maltese bishop Charles
Scicluna, formerly the Vatican's chief prosecutor against abuses.
Victims groups have made demands that sound radical for a 2,000-year-old institution known for its secrecy and rigid hierarchy.
SNAP
says the Vatican could publish the names of predatory priests on the
Internet or order bishops to report all cases of sexual abuse to the
police.
Robert Hoatson, head of the US group Road to Recovery,
says if eradicating abuse "means firing all the bishops that have
covered up, so be it."