A LEADING child protection expert has urged the Victorian
government to hold a public inquiry into the handling of child-sex
cases by a Catholic religious order after the Catholic Church suppressed
a report it asked him to write. 






Sydney University law professor Patrick Parkinson wrote to
the Victorian Attorney-General, Robert Clark, and Police Minister, Peter
Ryan, seeking an inquiry into the behaviour of the Salesians of Don
Bosco. 






In his letter, Professor Parkinson says the church's actions have
cast doubt on its commitment to protect children before it protects
itself.


 




Professor Parkinson, who chaired a review of child protection laws in
NSW and twice helped the church review its system for dealing with abuse
complaints, said he wrote the report for the church's professional
standards committee on condition it be made public. 





But more than a year
later this had not happened, due to strong lobbying to suppress it by
the Australian head of the Salesians, Father Frank Moloney.





Professor Parkinson told the Herald the issue was no longer his
report but the protection by the Salesians of three priests - Fathers
Frank Klep, Jack Ayers and Julian Fox - which could be resolved only by a
public inquiry.





The Salesians moved Father Klep to Samoa in 1998 just before he was to
face court on five charges of indecent assault, having served nine
months doing community work in 1994. He returned to Australia in 2004
and was jailed in 2006 for five years and 10 months.





In 2000, the order made a settlement with a Melbourne man who said
Father Fox - a former Australian head of the order - abused him at the
Salesian College in Rupertswood, Sunbury, in 1978-79.





A later Australian head wanted Father Fox, now in Rome and still a
Salesian priest, to return to Australia to face questions at the request
of Victoria Police, but he was overruled.






The same year, the Salesians paid to settle a complaint from a Melbourne
man who said he was abused at Rupertswood in 1967-68. Father Ayers, who
has lived for many years in Samoa, is still a Salesian priest.





In his letter, Professor Parkinson said the cases raised questions about
the responsibility of religious orders to co-operate with police and
about conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.





"What has taken place in seeking to suppress this report since August
2010 has raised further serious concerns in my mind about the commitment
of the church to place the protection of children above the protection
of itself,'' he said.





The Australian Catholic Bishops Conference said Professor Parkinson was
engaged to review its Towards Healing abuse protocol, and inquired into
the Salesian cases as part of that on his own initiative.





Professor Parkinson and the Salesians tried to reach an agreed
understanding of what happened, but "unfortunately Professor Parkinson
insisted on maintaining positions which the Salesians claim were
incorrect''.