British campaigners threaten pope with arrest

LONDON (Reuters) – British author and atheist  campaigner Richard Dawkins will try to have Pope Benedict  arrested to face questions over the Catholic church’s child  abuse scandal when he visits Britain later this year, one of his  lawyers said yesterday.

 Dawkins, a scientist and outspoken critic of religion, has  asked human rights lawyers to examine whether charges could be  brought against the pope. 

 The four-day trip, from Sept. 16 to 19, will be the first  papal visit since Pope John Paul II’s pastoral visit in 1982 and  is the first official papal visit to Britain.

 The Catholic church has rejected claims the pope helped to  cover up abuse by priests and the Vatican has accused the media  of waging a “despicable campaign of defamation” against him.  

 Dawkins and the English journalist Christopher Hitchens have  commissioned lawyers Geoffrey Robertson and Mark Stephens to  explore ways of taking legal action against the pope.  

 In an email to Reuters, Stephens said there are three  possible approaches: a complaint to the International Criminal  Court in the Netherlands, a private or public prosecution “for  crimes against humanity” or a civil case. 

 They will argue that the pope does not have diplomatic  immunity from prosecution as a head of state because the Vatican  has “permanent observer status” at the United Nations rather  than full membership and voting rights.  

 Dawkins, author of The God Delusion and The Selfish  Gene, told the Sunday Times newspaper that he suspected child  abuse by church members had been covered up. 

 Hitchens, who published a book in 2007 called God Is Not  Great: The Case Against Religion, said: “This man is not above  or outside the law. The institionalised concealment of child  abuse is a crime under any law.”  

 Critics have accused Benedict of negligence in handling  abuse cases in previous roles as a cardinal in his native  Germany, and in Rome. 

 The Vatican has denied any cover-up over the abuse of 200  deaf boys in the United States.  The pope has not commented directly on the wave of sexual  abuse allegations that has shaken the church around the world,  including the United States, Ireland, Italy and Germany.