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Atheist
campaigner Richard Dawkins wants Pope Benedict XVI to be
arrested during his state visit to Britain in September.
LONDON, Apr. 12, 2010 -
Atheist campaigner Richard Dawkins wants Pope Benedict
XVI to be arrested during his state visit to Britain in
September.
Dawkins and atheist author Christopher Hitchens have
approached human rights lawyers about whether the
pontiff can be arrested over his alleged cover-up of achild abuse by Catholic priests.
The pope is due to visit London, Glasgow and Coventry
during his state visit to the United Kingdom from Sept.
16 to 19.
The atheist campaigners believe the pope should be
arrested for “crimes against humanity” and believe he
can be arrested using the same legal principle that led
to the arrest of the late Chilean dictator Augusto
Pinochet during his 1998 visit to Britain.
“This is a man whose first instinct when his priests are
caught with their pants down is to cover up the scandal
and damn the young victims to silence," said Dawkins,
author of The God Delusion.
“This man is not above or outside the law,” added
Hitchens, author of God is Not Great. “The
institutionalized concealment of child rape is a crime
under any law and demands not private ceremonies of
repentance or church-funded payoffs, but justice and
punishment.”
In recent weeks, the pope has faced intense scrutiny
over his handling of child abuse cases across Europe and
in the United States.
Over the weekend, it emerged that Benedict, as a
cardinal, had signed a letter in 1985 cautioning that
the “good of the universal church” should be weighed up
against any action taken against Californian priest
Stephen Kiesle, who had a record of abusing boys.
In light of this and other news, the lawyers for Dawkins
and Hitchens say they believe there is a case for the
pope’s arrest and say he cannot claim diplomatic
immunity as he is does not head a state recognized by
the United Nations.
“There is every possibility of legal action against the
pope occurring,” one of the lawyers, Mark Stephens, was
quoted by The Times as saying. “Geoffrey [Robertson] and
I have both come to the view that the Vatican is not
actually a state in international law. It is not
recognized by the U.N., it does not have borders that
are policed and its relations are not of a full
diplomatic nature.”
The Vatican, meanwhile, has denied reports claiming that
the pope had attempted to block the defrocking of Kiesle,
suggesting that the abuse scandal had been orchestrated
by opponents of the pope.
Cardinal Angelo Sodano, dean of the College of
Cardinals, told the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore
Romano: "The pope embodies moral truths that aren't
accepted, and so, the shortcomings and errors of priests
are used as weapons against the Church.”
In light of the abuse scandal, security has been
tightened for the pope’s two-day visit to Malta this
week over fears of protests. Posters promoting the
pontiff’s visit have been defaced by Adolf Hitler style
moustaches and the word “pedophile.”
The Mediterranean island, which is 90 percent Roman
Catholic, has not escaped the abuse scandal rocking the
Church. Many of the abuse claims on the island involve
the St. Joseph Orphanage at Santa Venera.
The pope is visiting the island to mark 1950 years since
the apostle Paul was shipwrecked there. (Jenna Lyle,
Christian Today Reporter)
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