See: http://theconversation.com/vatican-silence-on-abuse-likely-to-continue-despite-un-plea-16049
Last week the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) asked the Vatican to disclose details of child sexual abuse cases involving Catholic clergy for the period November 1995 to January 2014.
According to officials, the aims of the questionnaire include seeking
 to establish what legal action is taken against “perpetrators of sexual
 crimes” and what support is provided for victims.  However, in England 
and Wales, as elsewhere, the Church is unlikely to be in any position to
 answer such questions in sufficient detail to satisfy either the UNCRC or survivors such as those represented by Minister and Clergy Sexual Abuse Survivors (MACSAS).
During the dozen years since the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of 
England and Wales declared it was fully committed to implementing all 
the recommendations of the Nolan Committee, research
 suggests there is a large gap between the Church’s rhetoric and the 
reality of its practice, while systems have been insufficiently robust 
to collect the information required.
In 2006, MACSAS suggested victims and survivors had not felt listened
 to, believed or supported, or “helped towards their healing” by the 
church. In 2011, following a survey of survivors’ experiences, the 
organisation concluded that victims “continue to be ignored and their 
needs disregarded by Church”.
In fact, no source provides comprehensive information about relevant cases or, for example, about the number of priests subsequently laicised (the church’s equivalent of being “struck off”) as called for in the Nolan Report.
 National bodies such as the Catholic Safeguarding Advisory Service and 
the National Catholic Safeguarding Commission (NCSC) remain dependent on
 information supplied by dioceses while questions by others about 
actions taken in relation to individual perpetrators are usually met 
with refusals to give information.
Information published by the national organisations has been 
inconsistent, and, in May 2012, the chair of the NCSC wrote to me, 
saying, “Apart from specific requests we have never gathered centrally 
on a regular ongoing basis the numbers of diocesan priests convicted of 
offences against children.”
In 2010, Channel 4 News identified
 22 priests in English and Welsh dioceses who had been convicted of 
sexual offences against children and had served all or part of their 
sentences, since November 2001.
Contrary to what you might expect, 14 (64%) had not been laicised. 
Two were priests from the Diocese of Salford. Both had been sentenced to
 six years. Their cases provide illustrative examples of how the church 
has responded in particular cases.
Thomas Doherty was convicted of five offences against a boy under 16,
 while William Green was convicted of 26 offences of indecent assault 
and sentenced in October 2008. In the absence of any public announcement
 that an exception had been made, parishioners assumed that Doherty had 
been laicised in accordance with Nolan’s recommendation 78. However, 
during autumn 2010 it emerged that Doherty had never been laicised.
In September 2010, a local newspaper
 highlighted the case of Green, noting both that “he has still not been 
defrocked or laicised” and that a spokesperson for the diocese had said 
that "Green is in the process of being laicised”. However, when they 
returned to the story three months later, they found that the diocese 
was now saying that “the laicisation was on-going and was out of their 
hands”. Since then, the diocese has consistently refused my requests to 
know whether or not Green has yet been laicised and his canonical status
 remains unknown to his victims and his former parishioners.
In this context, it seems unlikely that the Vatican will be either 
able or willing to provide the UNCRC with the information it requests.
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