Catholic priests in France will be forced to wear traffic-light coded identification tags to allow the public to check whether they may have faced se**al abuse charges.
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The scheme, announced by the Bishop’s Conference of France, will allow easier identification of priests able to lead mass and hear confessions.
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Cards will feature a QR code, scannable by mobile phone, that will flag a red, orange, or green light depending on whether its holder had been stripped of clerical status.
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But it also aims at protecting worshippers from se**al abuse, an issue made more pressing by revelations in November that 11 former or serving French bishops had been accused of abuse or had failed to report cases.
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Members of the public will see either a red light, an amber light, or a green light upon scanning one of the new cards.
Red lights indicate that a priest has been stripped of their status and cannot perform various clerical duties. Orange lights will indicate that a priest has limited powers due to experience or sanctions.
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Green lights will indicate that a priest is authorised to perform a full range of sacraments.
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The system is designed to support existing paper documents used by the Catholic church in France as it tries to clamp down on se* abuse in its ranks.
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In November 2022, 11 bishops were accused either of se*ual abuse or cover-up within the French Catholic Church.
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Among those facing either criminal or canonical prosecution was the former Archbishop of Bordeaux, Cardinal Jean-Pierre Ricard. He admitted to having ‘behaved in a reprehensible manner towards a 14-year-old girl’ when he was a priest, more than three decades ago.
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On the back of a two-and-a-half year investigation, an independent report published 4 October 2021 detailed an extensive history of abuse within the church, estimating 330,000 had been victims of abuse over a period of 70 years.
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