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Latest issue: 15 September 2006
Last updated: 11 February 2012

tpr

From the editor’s desk


Protect all the innocent Free 

In response to the Nolan Report in 2001, the Catholic Church in England and Wales tightened its procedures for dealing with allegations of sexual abuse of children against priests. The aim was not only to rescue its reputation, which had been badly damaged by a series of appalling cases, but also to make the Church an example of childprotection best practice. It has undoubtedly come a long way towards that goal, but there is a growing unease among the clergy that the price they have had to pay may be too high. The procedures that the church authorities follow when faced with allegations of sex abuse are drastic and immediate in their impact on the accused, who may be innocent. Perhaps they have to be that stringent, but at the recent meeting of the National Conference of Priests the complaint was heard that the procedures often contravene the rules of natural justice and are not fully compatible with canon law. Accused priests quickly sense that the usual onus of proof has been reversed, and that they are guilty unless they can prove themselves innocent.

Some of the examples of thoroughly bad practice cited at the meeting by Fr Paul Bruxby, a canon lawyer, would make an English judge's hair stand on end. Natural justice requires that the accused priest should be given a fair opportunity to defend himself. Fairness means informing the accused of the allegation against him in time to prepare a defence, the right to challenge witnesses, the right to legal advice and representation and the avoidance of unintentional self-incrimination, always with a presumption of innocence.

All those rights automatically apply at the initial stage of an investigation when, under the Nolan procedures, allegations are passed to the police and local authority social services. The real problem comes when the secular authorities decide, for whatever reason, not to prosecute, when the rules say that the Church must still satisfy itself that the priest may ...


The solution to terrorism

Previous weeks


Axing chaplains is folly


It's time to move on, Mr Blair Free 

Tony Blair must be reflecting ruefully on Enoch Powell's dictum that all political careers end in failure. He has been trying to engineer an end to his own that defied the rule: to go at a moment of his own choosing, basking in the applause of a grateful public, having fought his enemies to a standstill. But there is no warm autumnal glow in prospect: the political weather for the rest of his Prime Ministership ...


An organisation that we need Free 

Even the United States realises it needs the United Nations. The idea popular among neo-conservatives in Washington that the UN was useful only in so far as it did America's will has given way to a wiser understanding, whispered in President Bush's ear by both his new Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and his best friend Tony Blair, that not all problems in the world can be settled by American might and the ...


The new-style papacy


A blessing for Britain


The Vatican view of women Free 

Pope Benedict was leaving himself open to challenge when he remarked in an interview that women "are very present in the departments of the Holy See". It was a tacit invitation to delve into the Annuario Pontificio, the Vatican's Year Book, and count them. The result, according to our Rome correspondent Robert Mickens, is that no more than 15 per cent of the named total of officials of the Holy See are ...


What is needed after the war Free 

To adapt Winston Churchill's famous phrase, jaw-jaw has replaced war-war in the Middle East, at least for the time being, and that has to be a change for the better. Israel now has to digest the rough handling its army received from Hezbollah, decide whether the campaign was a catastrophe or not, and if so, whom to sack. The Government of Lebanon has to begin the huge task of reconstruction following Israel's ...


Treasure Distinctiveness

       

 In this week’s issue

Bavaria?s Benediktfest Free 
'God has taken on a human face' Free 
The gift of service
Valediction and venom
Saving Russia's rural soul
Green witness
Tomorrow's Church debates today
A mirror for Gaia
Practical visions
As usual, nanny knows best

 Latest News

Dublin archbishop says Ireland not ready to welcome Pope Benedict
Surprise at delay over Becker's appointment as cardinal
Longley sees value of secularism
SSPX plays for time
Australian ordinariate named

Can the Church support abuse victims on its own terms?
Elena Curti

Is the Church too slow in recognising that academies are the future for Catholic schools?
Christopher Lamb

Goodwin the scapegoat
Elena Curti

The pain of being a coeliac Catholic
Sr M, guest contributor

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