A priest in Derry has said he would be prepared to go to jail rather than break the seal of confession.
Father Paddy O'Kane was responding to the Irish justice
minister, Alan Shatter, who said that forthcoming child protection
measures, will "apply regardless of any internal rules of any religious
grouping".
A priest could be convicted of a criminal offence if they
were told of a sexual abuse case and failed to report it to the civil
authorities, under the new legislation.
Mr Shatter said past failures in the Catholic Church had led paedophiles to believe they could act with "impunity".
Father O'Kane, from Holy Family Church in Ballymagroarty, said he will not accept the rules.
He said he did not think the law will go through.
"If it does priests will be prepared to go to jail rather than break the seal," he said. "It's at the very core of what a priest is. If a priest were to break the seal he will be automatically excommunicated. Priests cannot function if they're not allowed to keep the seal of confession."
A number of child protection measures were announced
following the Cloyne report which was published last month.
It found the
diocese failed to report all complaints of abuse to police.
The inquiry into the Cloyne Diocese was set up by the Irish
government in January 2009 following a report published the previous
month.
It was conducted by the National Board for Safeguarding
Children (NBSC) - a body set up by the Catholic Church to oversee child
protection policies.
It found child protection practices in the diocese were "inadequate and in some respects dangerous".
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