Posted on 03/05/2019 4:40:48 PM PST by ebb tide
Archbishop Luigi Ventura is accused of inappropriately touching a young male staffer of Paris City Hall
Frances European affairs minister encouraged the Holy See last week to aid in an investigation of the apostolic nuncio to France, who has been accused of sexual assault in Paris.
Archbishop Luigi Ventura, 74, is accused of having inappropriately touched a young male staffer of Paris City Hall during a Jan. 17 reception for the New Year address of Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo. He is being investigated by Parisian authorities.
Nathalie Loiseau, Frances Minister of European Affiars, told French television channel CNews March 1 that this inquiry needs to be allowed to reach its conclusion, what matters is that the truth be known.
At this point, [Archbishop Ventura] benefits from diplomatic immunity, but the Holy See is clearly aware of the serious accusations that have been brought against the apostolic nuncio and I dont doubt for a second that the Holy See will do the right thing Im waiting for the Holy See to take its responsibilities in hand.
The deputy in the Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs added that if the facts are proven, they are very serious because when you are a religious leader you are supposed to have a moral authority, so I would say thats an aggravating circumstance.
Diplomatic immunity, which allows diplomats in a country to do their work without fear of interference from the host countrys laws or lawsuits from the host country, is based in the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations of 1961.
The need for the practice has been highlighted by various accusations of spying or other wrongdoing between two countries with strained relationships. But the standard diplomatic protections can be removed by the diplomats home country, in special circumstances and at the countrys discretion.
In recent years, the Holy Sees practice has generally been to recall diplomats accused of civil crimes in their host countries. They are then tried by the civil court in the Vatican and by a canonical court, and they may later be stripped of diplomatic immunity so they can also be prosecuted by the host country.
For example, allegations of sexual misconduct arose against the apostolic nuncio to the Dominican Republic in 2013. The nuncio, Archbishop Józef Wesołowski, resigned later that year.
Wesołowski was found guilty of sexual abuse by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in June 2014, and was subjected to dismissal from the clerical state. Vatican City then decided also to hold a criminal trial for the former diplomat on charges of pedophilic acts and possession of child pornography. Wesołowski died in August 2015 while awaiting his criminal trial.
In August 2014, then-Holy See press officer Fr. Federico Lombari said that Wesołowski may be subjected to judicial procedures from the courts that could have specific jurisdiction over him in the Dominican Republic, and that he no longer had diplomatic immunity as he had been removed from his post as nuncio.
Lombardi added that the Vatican had from the very first moments that this case was made known to them, moved without delay and correctly in light of the fact that former nuncio Wesołowski held the position of a diplomatic representative of the Holy See, particularly in recalling the former nuncio to Rome for canonical trial.
Similarly, in April 2018 Vatican police arrested former diplomat Fr. Carlo Alberto Capella, who was being investigation for the violation of laws concerning the possession of child pornography and its distribution or sale.
Capella was recalled from the US Nunciature in September 2017 after the Vatican was informed by the US State Department that there was a possible violation of laws relating to child pornography images by a member of the Holy Sees diplomatic corps.
The US State Department requested that the Vatican lift Capellas diplomatic immunity, which requeste was declined. However, information regarding the findings of the US State Department was passed along to the Vaticans Promoter of Justice.
Ventura has served as nuncio to France since 2009.
Ping
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