At the beginning of the pontificate of His Holiness, Pope Francis, there were questions (as there have been for some time now) about whether he would clean up some of the problems in the Curia (the governing body of the Vatican City State). In the past couple of months, it appears that this cleanup is indeed in progress.
The Holy Father appointed a committee of Cardinals to act as advisors, there’s a new financial authority now overseeing the Vatican Institute for
Works of Religion (IOR), which has recently been admitted to membership in the prestigeous Edgemont Group, an international network of financial intelligenge units, and today, even as the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child has issued a call for the Vatican to explain how it deals with the rights of children around the world, the Holy Father has issued
an Apostolic Letter outlining clarifications and definitions of criminal
matters in the Vatican.
This morning, the Pope’s Apostolic Letter was officially
presented by His Excellency, Dominique Mamberti, the Vatican Secretary for
Relations with States. Here is the
English-language translation of His Excellency’s explanations provided to those
who were present at the Press Conference:
Presentation
of His Excellency, Dominique Mamberti
Vatican Secretary for Relations with States
The laws approved by the Pontifical Commission for the Vatican
City State bring about a broad-ranging normative change, necessary for the
function that this State, entirely sui generis, is called upon to carry out for the benefit
of the Apostolic See. The original and foundational aim of the Vatican, which
consists of guaranteeing the freedom of the exercise of the Petrine ministry,
indeed requires an institutional structure that, the limited dimensions of the
territory notwithstanding, assumes a complexity in some respects similar to
that of contemporary States.
Established by the Lateran Pacts of 1929, the State
adopted the judicial, civil and penal structures of the Kingdom of Italy in
their entirety, in the conviction that this would be sufficient to regulate the
legal relationships within a State whose reason for existence lies in the
support of the spiritual mission of Peter’s Successor. The original penal
system – constituted by the Italian Penal Code on June 30, 1889 and the Italian
Penal Code of February 27, 1913, in force from June 7, 1929 – has seen only
marginal modifications and even the new law on sources of law (No. 71 of October
1, 2008) confirms the criminal legislation of 1929, while awaiting an overall redefinition
of the discipline.
The most recently approved laws, while not constituting a
radical reform of the penal system, revise some aspects and complete it in
other areas, satisfying a number of requirements. On the one hand, these laws
take up and develop the theme of the evolution of the Vatican judicial
structure, continuing the action undertaken by Pope Benedict XVI in 2010 to
prevent and combat money-laundering and the financing of terrorism. In this
regard, the provisions contained in the 2000 United Nations Convention Against
Transnational Organised Crime, the 1988 United Nations Convention Against
Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances, and the 1999
International Convention for the Suppression of Financing of Terrorism, are to
be implemented, along with other conventions defining and specifying terrorist
activity.
The new laws also introduce other forms of crime
indicated in various international conventions already ratified by the Holy See
in international contexts and which will now be implemented in domestic law.
Among these conventions, the following are worthy of mention: the 1984
Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhumane or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment, the 1965 International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Racial Discrimination, the 1989 International Convention on the Rights of
the Child and the 2000 Optional Protocols, the 1949 Geneva Conventions on War
Crimes, etc. A separate section is dedicated to crimes against humanity, including
genocide and other crimes defined by international common law, along the lines
of the 1998 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. From a
substantial point of view, finally, further items of note are the revision of
crimes against the public administration, in line with the provisions included
in the 2003 United Nations Convention Against Corruption, as well as the
abolition of the life sentence, to be substituted by a maximum custodial
sentence of 30 to 35 years.
While many of the specific criminal offences included in
these laws are undeniably new, it would however be incorrect to assume that the
forms of conduct thereby sanctioned were previously licit. These were indeed
punished, but as broader, more generic forms of criminal activity. The
introduction of the new regulations is useful to define the specific cases with
greater certainty and precision and to thus satisfy the international
parameters, calibrating the sanctions to the specific gravity of the case.
Some of the new categories of criminal activity
introduced (for instance, crimes against the security of air or maritime
navigation or against the security of airports or fixed platforms) may appear
excessive considering the geographic characteristics of Vatican City State. However,
such regulations have on the one hand the function of ensuring respect for
international anti-terrorism parameters, and on the other, they are necessary
to ensure compatibility with the condition of so-called dual criminality, to enable the extradition of persons charged or
convicted of crimes committed abroad should they seek refuge in the Vatican
City State.
Special emphasis is given to the discipline of civil
responsibility of juridical persons derived from a criminal violation (arts. 46-51 of the law containing
complementary regulations on criminal matters), introducing sanctions for
juridical persons involved in criminal activities as defined by the current
international legal framework. To this end an attempt has been made to
reconcile the traditionally cautious approach observable also in the canonical
order, according to which societas puniri non potest with the need, ever
more evident in the international context, to establish adequate and deterrent
penalties also against juridical persons who profit from crime. The solution
adopted was therefore that of establishing administrative responsibility of
juridical persons, obviously when it is possible to demonstrate that a crime
was committed in the interests of or to the advantage of that same juridical
person.
Significant modifications are introduced also in terms of
procedure. These include: updates in the discipline of requisition,
strengthened by measures regarding the preventative freezing of assets; an
explicit statement of the principles of fair trial within a reasonable time
limit and with the presumption of innocence; the reformulation of regulations
regarding international judicial cooperation with the adoption of the measures
established by the most recent international conventions.
From a technical and regulatory point of view, the
plurality of sources available to experts was organised by means of their
combination in a harmonious and coherent body of legislation which, in the
frameworks of the Church’s magisterium and the juridical-canonical tradition,
the principal source of Vatican law (Art. 1, Para. 1, Law No. 71 on the sources
of law, October 1, 2008) takes into account simultaneously the norms
established by international conventions and the Italian juridical tradition,
reference to which has always been made by the Vatican legal order.
In order to better order a legislative work with such
broad-ranging content, it has been drafted as two distinct laws. One brings
together all the legislation consisting of modifications to the penal code and
the code of criminal procedure; the other will instead consist of legislation
of a nature which does not permit a homogeneous section within the code
structure and is therefore gathered in the form of
a latereor complementary penal code.
Finally, the penal reform hitherto presented is completed
with the adoption by the Holy Father Francis of a specific Motu proprio, also bearing yesterday’s date,
which extends the reach of the legislation contained in these criminal laws to
the members, officials and employees of the various bodies of the Roman Curia,
connected Institutions, bodies subordinate to the Holy See and canonical
juridical persons, as well as pontifical legates and diplomatic staff of the
Holy See. This extension has the aim of making the crimes included in these
laws indictable by the judicial organs of Vatican City State even when
committed outside the borders of the State.
Among the laws adopted yesterday by the Pontifical
Commission for Vatican City State there is also the law consisting of general
legislation on the subject of administrative sanctions. This law had already
been proposed in Art. 7, Paragraph 4 of Law 71 on the sources of law of October
1, 2008, and establishes the general principles and regulation of the
application of administrative sanctions.
For some time there has long been an awareness of the
expedience of an intermediate tertium genus between penal and civil offences, also in relation
to the growing relevance of administrative offences. As a discipline of principle,
the provisions of such a law would be used whenever another law establishes the
imposition of administrative penalties for a breach of law, no doubt to specify
the procedure for their application to the competent authority and the order of
other minor effects.
One of the cornerstones of the system introduced by this
law is constituted by the so-called rule of law, as a result of which
administrative sanctions may be imposed only in cases defined by law. The
procedure for implementation is divided into a phase of investigation and
challenge of the infringement by the competent offices, and a second phase of
imposition of the sanction, which will fall within the competences of the
President of the Governorato.
Finally, there will be the right to appeal heard by a single judge except in cases
of more severe penalties, for which the jurisdiction of the Court is
established.
To conclude this brief presentation, it may be observed
that the laws indicated above are notable not only for their undeniable substantial
and systematic relevance, but also because they represent a further significant
step on the part of the Vatican legislator towards the refinement of its legal
code, necessary to assume and promote the constructive and useful proposals of
the international Community with a view to more intense international
cooperation and a more effective pursuit of the common good.
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