Why the Vatican should not prosecute journalists

ROME
CathNews

As Pope Francis tours Africa he is bound to point out that one of the major scourges afflicting people across the continent, alongside disease, poverty and war, is corruption. And if he knows what he is talking about, as he surely does, he will be aware that an energetic free press is an invaluable ally in combating this pernicious blight.

Yet the Holy See is in the process of prosecuting representatives of the free press for publishing leaked documents which expose corruption within the Vatican itself. How does the Pope escape a charge of double standards, which his enemies are sure to lay?

He is entitled to say, as all governments which are leaked against in the media would argue, that trust is an essential requirement in any organisation, and trust is undermined when journalists publish leaked documents.

But that understandable irritation which all governments experience from time to time has to be set against the far more fundamental principle of freedom of the press. That is why, in any nation where the rule of law is respected, press freedom is guaranteed. And that is the freedom not just to publish stories the powers-that-be approve of, but far more fundamentally, the freedom to publish stories they do not.

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