Victims of clerical sex abuse have bitterly criticized plans by France’s Catholic bishops for all clergy to include a scannable QR code on their identity cards certifying whether they face restrictions for crimes or misdemeanors.
“If this move is aimed at regaining public trust, I don’t think it’ll prove effective,” said François Devaux, co-founder of the Parole Libérée (Liberated Word) association, formed in 2015.
“Meanwhile, if the church is professing greater transparency, this merely shows its leaders have understood nothing. An independent report in 2021 (published in France) made 45 recommendations for countering abuse — I think the church should implement these before it adds a 46th.”
The lay Catholic, who was one of dozens abused as children by a currently jailed Lyon-based priest Fr. Bernard Preynat, was reacting to plans by the bishops’ conference in France for priests’ traditional accreditation documents, or “celebrets,” to be replaced by digital cards…
View Cache