Pope Francis has come under fire from victims groups following news
that he had quietly sacked the Vatican’s envoy to the Dominican Republic
over allegations of pedophilia. “Like all of his predecessors, Pope Francis is acting belatedly,
secretively and recklessly,” said Barbara Dorris, outreach director for
the US-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), on
Thursday.
“Catholic officials act only when forced to do so by media pressure,” she said in a statement.
“When they do act, they act secretively – in this case, by not
disclosing the allegations, the suspension or the reason for the
suspension.” On August 21, Monsignor Josef Wesolowski, the papal nuncio in Santo
Domingo, was sacked without the Vatican sharing the news with the
public. On Wednesday, Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi told the I.Media
news agency on Vatican affairs that an investigation was under way in
Rome into allegations of child s*x abuse against him. The Dominican press said the diplomat had s*x for money with underage
boys in the “Zona colonial”, the historic centre of Santo Domingo. Wesolowski, a 65-year-old Pole who has been the papal envoy in Santo
Domingo for five years, was ordained in 1972 by the then Archbishop of
Krakow, Cardinal Karol Wojtyla, who later became Pope John Paul II. John Paul II appointed him nuncio to Bolivia, his first posting.
Wesolowski also worked in several countries in Central Asia and was
appointed to the Dominican Republic by Pope Benedict in 2008. Pope Francis has vowed to crack down against abuse in the Catholic
Church, reiterating the zero-tolerance approach eventually taken up by
his predecessor Benedict following a wave of revelations. In July, Francis bolstered criminal legislation against child abuse
in the Vatican, issuing a decree that included “a broader definition of
the category of crimes against minors” including child prostitution,
s*xual acts with children and child p****graphy. The new laws introduce specific forms of crime that are indicated in
international conventions that the Vatican has already ratified
including against racism and war crimes and on children’s rights.
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