Paedophile priests: Pope Francis set up tribunal Published duration 10 June 2015

image copyright AFP

Pope Francis has approved the creation of a tribunal to hear cases of bishops accused of covering up child abuse by paedophile priests.

The unprecedented move followed a recommendation from the Pope's newly created panel on clerical sex abuse.

The tribunal will have the power to punish bishops who failed to protect young victims.

Survivors' groups have long called for the Vatican to do more to make bishops accountable for abuse on their watch.

Last year, the UN strongly criticised the Church for failing to stamp out abuse and for allowing cover-ups.

A statement from the Vatican said the department would come under the auspices of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Its aim would be "to judge bishops with regard to crimes of the abuse of office when connected to the abuse of minors", the statement added.

image copyright EPA image caption Pope Francis has previously called child abuse a "moral damage carried out by men of the Church"

Analysis: James Reynolds, Rome correspondent

The Palace of the Holy Office stands on the edge of the Vatican - about five minutes' walk from where the Pope lives. The palace will now have to rearrange its furniture to make room for the secretary and staff of its new "Judicial Section".

This section will work as a formal tribunal. It will investigate Catholic bishops who may have covered for priests suspected of child sex abuse, and will have the power to punish bishops found to have acted improperly.

The tribunal is the idea of the Pope's own 17-member commission on sex abuse. Marie Collins, herself a survivor of sex abuse, is one of the commission's members. She's tweeted that she is very pleased that the Pope has agreed with the body's recommendation.

But the campaign group, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, says that it will " withhold judgement " until it sees if and how the new tribunal might act.

Father Federico Lombardi, a Vatican spokesman, said bishops could also be judged if they had failed to prevent abuse from taking place.

Initially the complaints would be investigated by one of three Vatican departments, depending on whose jurisdiction the bishops were under.

They would then be judged by the doctrinal department.

Gabrielle Shaw, chief executive of the UK's National Association for People Abused in Childhood (NAPAC), said the move was good news for victims.

"We would welcome anything which looks closely at clerical abuse and shows more openness from the Church," she added.

NAPAC's founder Peter Saunders is part of the Vatican advisory commission which recommended the step.

The panel was set up by Pope Francis in 2013 to help dioceses improve abuse prevention measures and support victims. It is made up of 17 clerics and lay people from around the world.

•Germany - A priest, named only as Andreas L, admitted in 2012 to 280 counts of sexual abuse involving three boys over a decade

•United States - Revelations about abuses in the 1990s by two Boston priests, Paul Shanley and John Geoghan, caused public outrage

•Belgium - The bishop of Bruges, Roger Vangheluwe, resigned in April 2010 after admitting that he had sexually abused a boy for years

•Italy - The Catholic Church in Italy admitted in 2010 that about 100 cases of paedophile priests had been reported over 10 years