Pope appoints new child protection team

An Australian and a New Zealander are among eight new members appointed by Pope Francis to the Vatican's child protection body.

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Pope Francis has appointed eight new members from five continents to the Vatican's child protection body, including an Australian, a New Zealander and a British victim of pedophile priests.

The commission of experts, which is tasked with advising Francis on how to deal with a sex abuse scandal which rocked the Catholic Church in the 2000s, is now "a wide representation of situations and cultures," the Vatican said on Wednesday.

Led by American cardinal Sean O'Malley, the body -- set up a year ago -- is now made up of seven women and nine men, from both the clerical and lay worlds, with new members hailing from Australia, Britain, Colombia, New Zealand, Philippines, South Africa, United States and Zambia.

Peter Saunders from Britain is the second pedophile victim to be appointed to the commission created to root out paedophilia in the Catholic Church, after Marie Collins from Ireland, an outspoken campaigner for the rights of victims.

Saunders, who was abused throughout his childhood by two priests, set up NAPAC, the National Association for People Abused in Childhood, which aims to support victims and develop resources for responding to child abuse.

The appointment of new members to the body -- including child protection trainers, psychologists and specialists in human rights -- follows Francis's move in November to create a separate commission to speed up the appeal process for priests found guilty by the Church of child sex abuse.

Speeding up the process would see sex abusers handed a definitive conviction more quickly, as well as helping innocent priests eager to clear their names.

For more than a decade, the Catholic Church has been rocked by a cascade of paedophilia scandals, with victims describing the trauma of abuse at the hands of people charged with their care.

A UN committee in February denounced the Church for its secretive handling of child abuse accusations and for failing to stamp out predatory priests, and urged it to hand over known and suspected abusers for prosecution.

Pope Francis hit back, saying the Church had "acted with transparency and accountability" in its handling of the scourge.


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