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Ending the silence on sex abuse: Vatican holds extraordinary summit to prevent cover-ups

  • Meeting, which begins on Thursday, bring together some 190 presidents of bishops’ conferences, religious orders and Vatican offices

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Pope Francis arrives in St Peter's Basilica at the Vatican for an audience with pilgrims coming from the diocese of Benevento. Photo: AP Photo
Associated Press

If Pope Francis needed a concrete example to justify summoning church leaders from around the globe to Rome for a tutorial on clergy sex abuse, Sister Bernardine Pemii has it.

The nun, who recently completed a course on child protection policies at Rome’s Jesuit university, has been advising her bishop in Ghana on an abuse case, instructing him to invite the victim to his office to hear her story before opening an investigation.

Sister Bernardine Pemii, of the Daughters of Charity in Ghana. Photo: AP Photo
Sister Bernardine Pemii, of the Daughters of Charity in Ghana. Photo: AP Photo
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If Pemii hadn’t stepped in?

“It would have been covered. There would have been complete silence,” Pemii told The Associated Press recently. “And nothing would have happened. Nobody would have listened to the victim.”

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Francis is convening this week’s summit at the Vatican to prevent cover-ups by Catholic superiors everywhere, as many around the world continue to protect the church’s reputation at all costs, denying that priests rape children and by discrediting victims even as new cases keep coming to light.

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