A Vatican investigative committee has convicted Lebanese priest
Mansour Labaki of sexually abusing at least three children and
soliciting sex from a number of others, a French Christian magazine
reported on Monday.
The
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), a Vatican body that
investigates allegations of pedophilia committed by members of the
Church, sentenced Labaki to “a life of prayer,” and barred him from
attending public mass, speaking to the media, or contacting the children
he allegedly molested, La Croix said.
Labaki, a Maronite cleric,
author and composer, had built a reputation in Lebanon as a caregiver to
orphans and needy children through the various charities and orphanages
to his name.
A profile written on Labaki in a US-based Catholic
periodical last year quotes him as saying that he treats the orphans
under his care as if they were his own children.
The priest added
that his newest shelter Kfar Sama, located in an eastern suburb of
Beirut, was built “not only for orphans, but [for] those who are looking
for tenderness.”
La Croix said the CDF launched an investigation
into Labaki in 2011 after “several people” in France reported sexual
crimes he committed.
The body found him guilty in a decree issued
April 23, 2012 of pedophilia.
Labaki filed an appeal, but the Vatican
upheld the verdict in a final decision issued on June 19 of this year,
the magazine said.