Inuit leader met in Rome with head of Catholic order to discuss charge against priest

Natan Obed discussed the church's responsibility in ensuring Johannes Rivoire is put on trial in Canada

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Caption: Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami President Natan Obed, who leads the national body representing Inuit, said he believes Pope Francis can play a personal role in bringing justice to the victims of Father Johannes Rivoire. (Gregorio Borgia/AP)

The leader of the national organization representing Inuit says he had a meeting with the head of a Catholic order in Rome to discuss the case of a priest accused of crimes against children in Nunavut.
"I would hope that the Catholic Church's faith dictates that they would work with us in a case where there are severe allegations of sexual abuse, especially sexual abuse of minors," said Natan Obed, president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami.
Obed said he had a one-hour meeting Thursday with Louis Lougen, superior general of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, to discuss the church's responsibility in ensuring Johannes Rivoire is put on trial in Canada.
The meeting came after Obed asked Pope Francis during a meeting at the Vatican on Monday to personally intervene in Rivoire's case.
"I imagine this is an extraordinary request of the Pope, but that was the entire point of the request," said Obed.
"The Pope is someone who has extraordinary powers above and beyond the power that we have tried to work with over time on this case."

Priest faces arrest warrant

A Canada-wide arrest warrant was issued in February for Rivoire, who is in his 90s and lives in Lyon, France. Nunavut RCMP said officers received a complaint last year regarding sexual assaults that allegedly occurred about 47 years ago.
Rivoire was in Canada from the early 1960s to 1993, when he returned to France.
A warrant was also issued for his arrest in 1998. He faced at least three charges of sexual abuse in the Nunavut communities of Arviat, Rankin Inlet and Naujaat. More than two decades later, the charges were stayed.
The Public Prosecution Service of Canada said at the time it was partly due to France's reluctance to extradite.
Obed said he was told that Lougen had personally contacted the priest and that Rivoire has refused to abide by a direction to return to Canada.
Lougen pledged to work with Inuit to seek justice in the case, although no details were provided, Obed added.
On Friday, Obed was among Indigenous delegates who attended a final meeting with the Pope at the Vatican. In a historic apology, Francis said he was "very sorry" and asked for God's forgiveness for the deplorable conduct of church members.
"I believe we are at a time where the eyes of Canada and the eyes of the world are on this particular encounter, a papal apology, and also understanding more about what has happened and the fact that justice has not been possible for the victims," Obed said.
"I think it compels the Catholic Church to act."
Earlier in the week, Obed asked the Pope to speak with Rivoire directly and ask him to go to Canada to face the charge. Obed also asked the Pope to request that France step in if Rivoire is not receptive.
Canadian Oblate leader Rev. Ken Thorson has also written to Canadian Justice Minister David Lametti, offering the religious order's co-operation in any investigation.
Inuit leaders and politicians, from senators to Nunavut premiers, have continued to urge that the priest face trial. Those calls have grown with the discovery of unmarked graves at the sites of former residential schools run by the Catholic Church.
Piita Irniq, an Inuit elder who has been fighting for more than a decade to have Rivoire returned to Canada, has said there are at least six Inuit still living who allege Rivoire abused them.
"There's been a lot of press and a lot of talk, so I think the people I've talked to are very hopeful," Irniq said earlier this week.
"It feels more like justice."