Focolare Movement

Safeguarding of young people and vulnerable adults: a new structure for CO.BE.TU.

Nov 7, 2021

15 experts in law, formation and  psychology,  from different geographical and cultural areas. An independent team that collaborates and supervises both the safeguarding and protection of young people and cases of abuse of power within the Focolare Movement.

15 experts in law, formation and  psychology,  from different geographical and cultural areas. An independent team that collaborates and supervises both the safeguarding and protection of young people and cases of abuse of power within the Focolare Movement. This team took office on September 17 and its coordinator is the Italian lawyer Orazio Moscatello, a criminal and civil lawyer, expert in Family and Juvenile Law. The Commission for the Safeguarding and Protection of Young People and Vulnerable Adults (CO.BE.TU.) has been expanded and strengthened in order to offer an increasingly competent and comprehensive service to those who have suffered or are suffering abuse within the Focolare Movement and to those who wish to report that this is or has taken place. The new members will be able to  intervene and make a professional contribution in two specific areas:

  •  training and prevention
  •  management of reports of abuse, both sexual abuse of young people  and abuse of power.

The issue of abuse was one of the priorities dealt with by the Focolare General Assembly last January,”  Orazio Moscatello explains.  “The Assembly is aware of what has been done and is  being done now in  this field, but it has called for a renewed commitment to prevent abuse on the part of  all members of the Movement, as stated in the final working document. In fact, point 2 of the text presents the conclusions and commitment of the Focolare for the next 5 years by stating: “We commit ourselves to strengthen what is already in place to prevent all forms of abuse – physical, sexual or abuse of power or conscience. We ask the victims for forgiveness and assure them of our complete support;  with great sorrow, we  recognize,  all those situations in which we have not been able to protect them. We are committed to an even greater  fostering of a culture of safeguarding and protection for all people, providing appropriate training and using clear communication.” Shortly after this declaration was drafted, Focolare President Margaret Karram arranged for the Commission for the Safegarding  of Young People and the Independent Commission for the Protection of Adults to be unified into a single entity. In addition, to ensure the full independence of the commission, its members will not have roles of responsibility in the central or dispersed instruments of governance  of the Movement,during their three-year term of office.

Stefania Tanesini

For further information or to report situations of abuse, contact: cobetu@focolare.org

___

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to Newsletter

Thought of the day

Related post

In the same boat: a journey toward peace

In the same boat: a journey toward peace

8 months of navigation, 30 ports, 200 young people. The ship for peace, ‘Bel Espoir’ set sail in March 2025 from Barcelona (Spain) and will continue its voyage until October. Its route will link five shores of the Mediterranean. On board, eight groups of twenty-five young people of various nationalities, cultures and religions that share a common desire to build a better world. They will live together and get to know each other, amid debates and personal experiences, tackling new issues at each stop. Among them are traveling twenty Living Peace ambassadors and other young people from the Focolare Movement. Bertha from Lebanon shares her experience. She is involved in the MediterraNEW project which works for the education of young people, predominately migrants in the Mediterranean.

Argentina: commitment in intercultural dialogue with indigenous peoples

Argentina: commitment in intercultural dialogue with indigenous peoples

Agustin, Patricia and their two children are an Argentinian family. After following a course at Sophia ALC, the Latin-American branch of the university institute that is based in the international little town of Loppiano (Italy), they began to research their roots among the indigenous peoples, and this gave rise to a strong commitment in intercultural dialogue.