Written by Justin Dodd
Wednesday, 17 July 2013 00:00
VATICAN
CITY — Few eyebrows were raised last week when Pope Francis brought the
Vatican’s legal system up to date by criminalizing leaks of official
information and formalizing laws against sex crimes. But now that the
laws have been made public, a closer look revealed that the pope has
made it illegal to report sex crimes against children.
According to the new laws,
revealing or receiving confidential Vatican information is now
punishable by up to two years in prison, while newly defined sex crimes
against children carry a sentence of up to twelve years. Because all sex
crimes are kept confidential, there is no longer a legal way for
Vatican officials to report sex crimes.
“We didn’t mean for this to happen,
obviously,” lamented Vatican foreign minister Monsignor Dominique
Mamberti. “It’s quite the papal pickle that His Holiness has placed upon
our heads. Sex crimes are more illegal than ever, but technically it’s
illegal to report them.” Mamberti said that the simultaneous passing of
each law is merely a coincidence and insisted that the Church is not
trying to protect itself against further embarrassment, but critics
outside the Vatican are skeptical.
“They know exactly what they’re
doing,” claims Fabrizio Perona of Italy’s La Repubblica newspaper. “They
just thought nobody would notice. The Church wants to impress the world
by getting tough on sex crimes, but they criminalized leaks, which is
the only way anybody would ever discover their crimes. It’s genius, if
you stop and think about it.”
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