As Vatican meeting on Chilean mishandle closes, destiny of religious administrators dubious
An emergency meeting between Pope Francis and Chilean religious administrators about the conceal of sexual mishandle in the nation finished on Thursday in the midst of developing hypothesis among pastorate and media that some of them would leave.
In a letter the Vatican said the pope gave to each of the 34 religious administrators toward the finish of four days of gatherings, Francis said the discourses were "straightforward" and they had talked about "difficult occasions with respect to manhandle - of minors, of energy and of still, small voice".
He said the ministers had consented to short, medium and long haul changes so as to reestablish equity and Church solidarity, however did not detailed. The gathering finished with "the firm goal to repair the harm done," the pope said.
One of the religious administrators is holding a news meeting on Friday and there has been developing theory that he, or the Vatican, could declare the abdication of at least one of the ministers most corrupted by the outrage that has shaken the nation.
The key cleric in the emergency is Juan Barros, whom the pope selected toward the southern city of Osorno in 2015 regardless of charges that he had concealed sexual mishandle of minors by his tutor, Father Fernando Karadima. Barros has said he was uninformed of any bad behavior.
A Vatican representative said he couldn't affirm a report by Argentina's Clarin daily paper that Barros and a few different priests had offered the pope their renunciations.
Minister Juan Ignacio Gonzalez of the city of San Bernardo said toward the beginning of the gatherings he couldn't discount a portion of the polluted diocesans leaving or being sacked, the same number of Chileans have requested.
"It doesn't rely upon us. Every individual must choose this together with the pope," he said.
Amid his outing to Chile in January, Francis said he had no confirmation against Barros, trusted he was guiltless, and that allegations against him were "defame" until demonstrated something else.
Be that as it may, days subsequent to coming back to Rome, the pope, refering to new data, sent sexual manhandle specialist Ecclesiastical overseer Charles Scicluna of Malta to Chile to address casualties, witnesses and other Church individuals. He delivered a 2,300-page report that was talked about at the Vatican gatherings.
Theory that measures could be declared soon were further fuelled on Thursday when Father Jordi Bertomeu, the Spanish cleric who helped Scicluna in the examination, advised correspondents in Rome to "expect a few measures".
Casualties have likewise blamed different ministers for either concealing the mishandle by Karadima, of postponing examinations, or of defaming them in the media and belittling them in private discussions and messages.
A month ago, Francis held four days of gatherings with Juan Carlos Cruz, James Hamilton and Jose Andres Murillo, three men manhandled by Karadima when they were youngsters in Santiago.
Karadima, who prepared four of the religious administrators for the ministry decades prior, was discovered blameworthy in a Vatican examination in 2011 of mishandling young men in Santiago in the 1980s.
He never confronted non military personnel equity due to the statute of constraints. Presently 87 and living in a nursing home in Chile, Karadima has dependably denied the assertions.
In a letter the Vatican said the pope gave to each of the 34 religious administrators toward the finish of four days of gatherings, Francis said the discourses were "straightforward" and they had talked about "difficult occasions with respect to manhandle - of minors, of energy and of still, small voice".
He said the ministers had consented to short, medium and long haul changes so as to reestablish equity and Church solidarity, however did not detailed. The gathering finished with "the firm goal to repair the harm done," the pope said.
One of the religious administrators is holding a news meeting on Friday and there has been developing theory that he, or the Vatican, could declare the abdication of at least one of the ministers most corrupted by the outrage that has shaken the nation.
The key cleric in the emergency is Juan Barros, whom the pope selected toward the southern city of Osorno in 2015 regardless of charges that he had concealed sexual mishandle of minors by his tutor, Father Fernando Karadima. Barros has said he was uninformed of any bad behavior.
A Vatican representative said he couldn't affirm a report by Argentina's Clarin daily paper that Barros and a few different priests had offered the pope their renunciations.
Minister Juan Ignacio Gonzalez of the city of San Bernardo said toward the beginning of the gatherings he couldn't discount a portion of the polluted diocesans leaving or being sacked, the same number of Chileans have requested.
"It doesn't rely upon us. Every individual must choose this together with the pope," he said.
Amid his outing to Chile in January, Francis said he had no confirmation against Barros, trusted he was guiltless, and that allegations against him were "defame" until demonstrated something else.
Be that as it may, days subsequent to coming back to Rome, the pope, refering to new data, sent sexual manhandle specialist Ecclesiastical overseer Charles Scicluna of Malta to Chile to address casualties, witnesses and other Church individuals. He delivered a 2,300-page report that was talked about at the Vatican gatherings.
Theory that measures could be declared soon were further fuelled on Thursday when Father Jordi Bertomeu, the Spanish cleric who helped Scicluna in the examination, advised correspondents in Rome to "expect a few measures".
Casualties have likewise blamed different ministers for either concealing the mishandle by Karadima, of postponing examinations, or of defaming them in the media and belittling them in private discussions and messages.
A month ago, Francis held four days of gatherings with Juan Carlos Cruz, James Hamilton and Jose Andres Murillo, three men manhandled by Karadima when they were youngsters in Santiago.
Karadima, who prepared four of the religious administrators for the ministry decades prior, was discovered blameworthy in a Vatican examination in 2011 of mishandling young men in Santiago in the 1980s.
He never confronted non military personnel equity due to the statute of constraints. Presently 87 and living in a nursing home in Chile, Karadima has dependably denied the assertions.
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