Pope Leo tells Catholic bishops not to hide abuse allegations

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FILE PHOTO: Pope Leo XIV blesses people as he holds a general audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, September 10, 2025. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane/File Photo

Pope Leo blesses people as he holds a general audience in St Peter's Square at the Vatican on Sept 10.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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VATICAN CITY - Pope Leo has instructed the Catholic Church’s newest bishops to confront

sexual abuse by priests

and not to hide allegations of misconduct, in a text released by the Vatican on Sept 12.

Sexual abuse scandals have afflicted the Church in various places around the world in recent decades, damaging its standing as a moral voice, sparking costly lawsuits, and resulting in the resignations of several prominent bishops.

“(Allegations) cannot be put in a drawer,” the Pope said in a closed-door meeting the day before, with some 200 bishops appointed to lead Catholic dioceses across the world in the past year, according to a Vatican summary of the event.

“They must be faced, with a sense of mercy and true justice, toward the victims and toward the accused,” Pope Leo said in the text.

Pope Leo, elected in May after the death of Pope Francis, has previously told priests to be “firm and decisive” in confronting sexual abuse.

Pope Francis, who led the 1.4-billion-member Church for 12 years, made confronting sexual abuse by priests a key priority of his tenure, with mixed results.

Pope Leo also appeared to show support for some of Pope Francis’ other priorities in the meeting with new bishops, encouraging them to create a Church welcoming to all people, as the late pope often called for.

Pope Leo told the clerics they should “renew their contact with the world in order to answer the questions the men and women of our time are asking,” according to the summary.

“Ready-made answers learned 25 years ago in the seminary are not enough,” the Pope said. REUTERS

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