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Bishop Hegarty travels to Vatican 16.02.10

by Linda McGrory

BISHOP of Derry, Dr Seamus Hegarty is to deliver a seven-minute speech to Pope Benedict as part of the two-day Vatican summit into clerical sex abuse in Ireland.
Bishop Hegarty flew out to Rome on Sunday morning equipped with a speech he was required to prepare for the Pope.
Bishop Hegarty's spokesman, Fr Michael Canny yesterday said he was not privy to the contents of Dr Hegarty's speech.
"All the Irish bishops were asked to prepare a seven-minute talk to be delivered in person by them to the Pope," said Clonmany-born Fr Canny.
"I cannot say what is in the speech because I haven't seen it. Bishop Hegarty prepared it himself and I was not privy to it," he added.
Bishop of Derry, Dr Seamus Hegarty. The Vatican meetings began at 8am yesterday and will continue today, with the Pope sitting through 168 minutes of testimony and reflection from the Irish bishops.
Primate of All-Ireland Cardinal Seán Brady described the summit as “one step in a process...which will lead to a journey of repentance, renewal and reconciliation”.
Bishop Hegarty joined Cardinal Brady and the 23 other bishops on Sunday for a
month’s mind Mass for Cardinal Cahal Daly in Rome.
Cardinal Brady said all the bishops were "singing off the same hymn sheet" in regard to the safeguarding of children.
While the Rome summit was called chiefly in response to the Murphy report into child abuse in the Dublin Archdiocese, Bishop Hegarty has been under pressure locally to account for his handling of allegations when he was Bishop of Raphoe, from 1982 to 1994.
The group, Voice of the Faithful Ireland (VOFI), has strongly challenged Bishop Hegarty to explain his handling of the Eugene Greene case.
In an interview last month, VOFI spokesman, Seán Ó Conaill said: “During the period 1982-1994 Bishop Seamus Hegarty was Bishop of Raphoe. The prolific child rapist Eugene Greene served as a priest in Raphoe in that period. Gardaí did not become aware of his crimes against 26 young men until 1997."
Meanwhile, last November, in response to the Murphy report, Bishop Hegarty issued a statement regarding child sex abuse allegations against priests in the Derry Diocese.
The statement said: "In October 2005, the Diocese of Derry put on public record information regarding allegations of child sex abuse made against priests of this diocese. Recently, (August 2009), the diocese furnished the Health Service Executive with up-to-date figures, relating to the entire diocese, regarding priests who are still alive, irrespective of the place or date to which the allegation refers."
The statement continued: "Seventeen who were priests of the diocese at the time to which an allegation refers, have had some form of child sexual abuse allegation made against them. In addition, one priest, who was on loan to the diocese, has been convicted of child sexual abuse. There is also a number of allegations where the identity of the priest is unknown.
"All allegations have been reported to the appropriate civil authority – PSNI, DHSSPS, HSE and Gardaí. It is routine that all allegations are passed to the civil authorities, whose role it is, to investigate such matters. The diocese again encourages anyone who has been abused to approach the civil authorities," the Bishop’s statement concluded.
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