Ritual Abuse Conference - August 2010
_http://ritualabuse.us/smart-conference/_ 
(http://ritualabuse.us/smart-conference/) 

Bishop  admits ignoring abuse cases 09 Jul 2010 Germany's senior Roman 
Catholic bishop  Robert Zollitsch has admitted his mistakes in dealing with 
allegations of sexual  abuse against an alleged pedophile priest. The 
Archbishop 
of Freiburg and head  of the German Bishops Conference said on Friday that 
he should have probed more  intensely the sexual abuse accusations laid 
against a priest, who is believed to  have molested boys when he worked in the 
town of Oberharmersbach from 1968 to  1991, AP reported. "I was shocked about 
the unfathomable extent of the abuse in  Oberharmersbach, which has become 
apparent only in recent months," said  Zollitsch, who was diocese staff 
manager at the time and responsible for priest  placements. According to a 
statement issued by the diocese, Zollitsch also met  with victims and their 
families, delivering apologies to those whose lives have  been shattered by 
sexual abuse scandals that have rocked the Catholic Church  over the past 
months. 
The statement has pointed to accusations against 44 other  priests in the 
first six months of 2010.  
_http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=134100&sectionid=351020604_ 
(http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=134100&sectionid=351020604)     




Editorial: The Pope’s Duty  7/8/10 
When rolling  scandal forced the American Catholic bishops conference to 
take action against  pedophile priests, the prelates issued a tough policy 
requiring accused child  molesters be reported immediately to secular 
authorities. This mandate finally  acknowledged that crimes against children 
should 
take priority over bureaucratic  church policies that served to cloak rogue 
priests and bishops in a fog of  ecclesiastical evasion.
Eight years after the American church’s overdue  order, it is shocking that 
Pope Benedict XVI and the Vatican have not yet  applied it to the worldwide 
Roman Catholic Church. The pedophilia scandal has  erupted in other 
nations, leaving parents concerned about a repetition of the  harrowing 
experience 
in America, where more than 700 priests had to be dismissed  across a 
three-year period. Yet the Vatican is reportedly working on new  “guidelines” — 
not mandates. They are likely to fall short of zero-tolerance and  other 
requirements in the American church that parishes and communities be  alerted 
to 
abusers.  _http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/09/opinion/09fri3.html_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/09/opinion/09fri3.html)   

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