"Every adult in Victoria who is aware of child sexual abuse must report it to police," he told reporters. "No more cover ups, no more hiding, no more sweeping these things under the carpet, no more shifting alleged perpetrators from one part of an organisation to another." Under the new laws, adults who fail to report suspected child sexual abuse will face up to three years' jail.
The Sydney Morning Herald reports:
Victorians who fail to report suspected child sexual abuse and workers who cover it up will face jail.
Premier Denis Napthine declared the era of cover up and silence over.
"Every adult in Victoria who is aware of child sexual abuse must report it to police," he told reporters.
"No more cover ups, no more hiding, no more sweeping these things under the carpet, no more shifting alleged perpetrators from one part of an organisation to another."
Under the new laws, adults who fail to report suspected child sexual abuse will face up to three years' jail.
Workers in positions of care who fail to take action to protect children from sex abuse face up to five years' jail.
The laws were created in response to a parliamentary inquiry last year that found senior church leaders trivialised child abuse and ensured perpetrators were not held accountable.
The committee's Betrayal of Trust report found Victorian Catholic clergy and the Salvation Army were the main culprits in inflicting "unimaginable harm" on children and had a culture of denial and concealment.
Legislation for the new laws was introduced into parliament on Tuesday.
A third offence for those who groom children for sex, drawing up to 10 years' jail, has already passed parliament and will come into effect in coming weeks.
Under the new legislation, priests who learn from children in a confessional that they have been abused are not required to tell police.
But if they become aware of abuse outside the confessional, they must report it under the legislation.
Dr Napthine said if a child told a priest of abuse during a confessional, the priest had a moral and ethical responsibility to talk to the child outside the confessional and report it.
"I don't think any priest, any person could live with themselves if they didn't do that."
Manny Waks of the anti-child-sex-abuse organization Tzedek reacted to the new law in part by hoping that people who had previously failed to report child sex abuse would be prosecuted:
“Tzedek welcomes this important development within the State of Victoria. It sends a strong, unequivocal message: each and every one of us must report any alleged case of child sexual abuse to the police.
At the same time, we sincerely hope that it is not too late to hold those who have transgressed in a major way – those that have “blood on their hands” – to full account. Irrespective of when mandatory reporting came into effect or that the new legislation has only been introduced now, deliberately covering up for paedophiles who continued to offend is the responsibility of those who enabled this to occur. By now it is blatantly clear that the Melbourne Yeshivah Centre leadership did just that and therefore those responsible must be held to full account. Tzedek stands by its long-standing commitment to continue to pursue justice in this regard.
Tzedek is proud to have been involved in and contributed to the Victorian Government Inquiry.”