The Vatican yesterday acknowledged “grave failures” over the handling of a child sex abuse scandal involving priests in southern Ireland but denied that it tried to block investigations.

In its long-awaited response to an official report, commissioned by the Irish government, the Vatican expressed deep concern at the findings and “abhorence” for the crimes committed.

“The Holy See is deeply concerned at the findings of the commission of inquiry concerning grave failures in the ecclesiastical governance of the diocese of Cloyne,” said the Vatican in its official response to the report.

The Vatican also “wishes to state its abhorrence for the crimes of sexual abuse which took place in that diocese,” it added.

Ettore Balestrero, the under-secretary for relations with states, handed over the response yesterday to Helena Keleher, the Irish government’s deputy ambassador to the Vatican.

July’s publication of the report into more than a decade of abuse by priests in Cloyne sparked outrage in the Irish government and triggered an unprecedented attack by Prime Minister Enda Kenny who called the Roman Catholic Church’s behaviour “absolutely disgraceful”.

He said yesterday he had not yet had an opportunity to read the Vatican statement and that his government would comment in due course.

“I need to read this report and speak to the Tanaiste (deputy prime minister and foreign minister Eamon Gilmore) and obviously the government will comment,” Kenny told reporters.

Ireland’s Cardinal Sean Brady welcomed the Vatican statement, describing it as “carefully prepared and respectfully presented”.

“The reply conveys the profound abhorrence of the Holy See for the crime of sexual abuse and its sorrow and shame for the terrible sufferings which the victims of abuse and their families have endured within the Church of Jesus Christ, a place where this should never happen.”

While Pope Benedict XVI last year wrote a letter to Irish Catholics expressing shame and remorse over the abuse of children by members of the clergy, campaigners say the Church has been guilty of a cover-up.

In the statement yesterday, the Vatican denied it had tried to block inquiries by the Irish authorities.

“The Holy See wishes to make it quite clear that it in no way hampered or sought to interfere in any inquiry into child sexual abuse in the diocese of Cloyne,” it said.

The official report condemned the Church’s handling of abuse claims against 19 clerics in Cloyne, county Cork, between 1996 and 2009, saying it was “inadequate and inappropriate”.

The report was strongly critical of the failures of the former bishop of Cloyne John Magee who had been private secretary to three successive popes – Paul VI, John Paul I and John Paul II.

It said Magee, who resigned last year, had “to a certain extent detached himself from the day-to-day management of child abuse cases”.

In language never before used by an Irish leader, an outraged Kenny later told parliament that the Church’s inability to deal with the child-sex cases showed a culture of “dysfunction, disconnection, elitism and narcissism” at the Vatican.

The Vatican subsequently recalled its envoy to Ireland in order to formulate an official response.

The Cloyne case is only the latest in a series of abuse scandals for the Catholic Church in Ireland that were first exposed in a 2009 report detailing hundreds of cases of sexual abuse of children by priests going back decades.

Church leaders in Ireland have also expressed outrage over the findings of the report.

Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin said in July that “great damage has been done to the credibility” of the Church.

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