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  German Bishops Will Bring in Prosecutors Early

By Verena Schmitt-Roschmann
The Associated Press
April 15, 2010

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hNOfSa1jBGKk_KjTBCQ6rTFoqJ7AD9F3J8L82

Pope Benedict XVI waves from the popemobile during his weekly general audience, in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, Wednesday, April 14, 2010. The Vatican has gone into full-fledged damage control mode in the priest sex abuse scandal ahead of Pope Benedict XVI's first foreign trip since it erupted. Officials are promising surprising new initiatives. The pope's personal secretary is speaking out. And bishops around the world are being told to report abuse cases to the police. The revved-up strategy comes as the Vatican tries to stem the damage from weeks of revelations about priests who raped and molested children, and the church officials who kept it quiet _ before the pontiff's visit to Malta this weekend. Abuse victims on that majority Roman Catholic Mediterranean island are seeking a papal audience and apology.
Photo by Pier Paolo Cito

BERLIN — German bishops will revise their sexual abuse guidelines to make clear that prosecutors should be brought in early to investigate, the national bishops conference and the Justice Ministry said Thursday.

Germany — Pope Benedict XVI's homeland — has been shaken since January by the scandal over alleged abuse by clerics. On Thursday, the head of the bishops conference, Archbishop Robert Zollitsch, met with Justice Minister Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger.

The minister, who has been critical of the Roman Catholic church over recent weeks, told Zollitsch that internal church investigations must not delay or hamper public prosecutors' work, according to a statement issued after their meeting.

The bishops, who already have announced that they will review their guidelines, will change them to make clear "that public prosecutors will be brought in early on in suspected cases," it said.

Existing guidelines dating back to 2002 say accused priests are advised to contact law enforcement on their own in "proven cases" of abuse and that church authorities may contact prosecutors — but they are not required to.

The Justice Ministry and the church will work together in a task force that would determine possible compensation in cases where the statute of limitations has expired, according to Thursday's statement.

Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger irked Zollitsch in February by saying she believed the church was not truly interested in clearing up all sexual abuse cases. She also spoke of a "wall of silence" surrounding the church.

Separately, dissident theologian Hans Kueng, an 82-year-old former colleague and friend of Pope Benedict, urged bishops to push for reforms in the church.

Kueng said the church was now in its deepest crisis since the Protestant Reformation after the recent revelations of sexual abuse had caused an erosion of trust.

In an editorial published Thursday in daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung and other publications, Kueng said bishops should call for a new synod to discuss reforms.

He also accused the pope of not living up "to the great challenges of our time," saying on the fifth anniversary of Benedict's election to the papacy that his traditionalist approach had failed.

Some German dioceses recently have reported steep increases in the number of people leaving the church.

Zollitsch's Freiburg archdiocese said 2,711 left the church in the southwestern region in March — compared with 1,058 a year earlier.

The Wuerzburg diocese in Bavaria said 1,233 left the church there in March — three times the 407 recorded a year earlier. The Munich archdiocese, where Benedict once served as archbishop, said it did not yet have figures for March.

Dozens of people protested at Berlin's Brandenburg Gate on Thursday against abuse in church and other institutions. They brought a model of a nun with a stick and the words "Never Again" emblazoned on her chest.

 
 

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