Cardinal refuses to go in cover up claim

The head of the Catholic Church in Ireland last night faced down calls for his resignation over revelations he failed to report complaints against a notorious paedophile priest to authorities.

Catholic Primate Cardinal Sean Brady admitted he was at a meeting where children abused by convicted sex offender Fr Brendan Smyth were forced to take a vow of silence.

But the senior churchman defended his role in the 1975 investigation, stating his actions were part of a process that removed the shamed cleric’s licence to act as a priest.

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Smyth was at the centre of one of the first paedophile priest scandals to rock the Catholic Church in Ireland which led to the collapse of the Irish Government’s Fianna Fail/Labour coalition in 1994. The prolific offender was later jailed for sex attacks on about 90 children in the north and south of Ireland over a 40 year period. Survivors of sex abuse – who believe the cleric could have abused hundreds as he was moved around parishes, diocese and countries – accused the Cardinal of reckless endangerment and demanded his resignation.

Colm O’Gorman, who founded support group One in Four, said the Cardinal was personally implicated in the gross failures of the Catholic Church in the management of Smyth.

He said: “For another 18 years, as Sean Brady rose through the ranks in the Catholic Church hierarchy, Brendan Smyth continued to rape and abuse children.” The Cardinal has denied he was involved in a cover-up, adding he was not the designated person to report Smyth to authorities back in the 1970s.

“I insist again I did act and acted effectively in that inquiry to produce the grounds for removing Fr Smyth from ministry and specifically it was underlined he was not to hear confessions, and that was very important,” he said. The revelation will damage the Catholic Church in Ireland where last year two reports criticised the past mishandling of child sex abuse.

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One found the Catholic Church and Irish government covered up almost four decades of sexual abuse and beatings by priests and nuns on thousands of children in state care, while another unveiled a catalogue of cover-ups by the Catholic hierarchy in Dublin to protect the church.

Last month the Cardinal and his bishops were summoned to Rome to face Pope Benedict XVI – who in recent days was forced to distance himself from a child abuse scandal in his native Germany.

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