Calgary Herald

Does the Holy See own the Vatican brand? Spain, so far, says yes

- ARITZ PARRA

MADRID A Vatican crackdown on the commercial use of its name and official emblems has encountere­d resistance from a Spanish website that refuses to give up referencin­g the seat of the Catholic Church in its masthead.

The case against InfoVatica­na. com, one of hundreds of copyright actions taken by the church, is part of a broader legal debate over whether the Holy See can claim full ownership of the “Vatican” brand and its derivative­s.

So far, Spain’s trademark office has taken the Vatican’s side. It ruled in September that the privately run website, which publishes articles about religion in Spanish and Italian, can’t register as a brand because that would mislead readers into thinking it was tied to the Holy See.

The Spanish Patent and Trademark Office also concluded that InfoVatica­na.com’s designers had used copyrighte­d symbols and emblems without the copyright owner’s permission.

Managers scratched yellow and white — the colours of the Vatican’s flag — from the website, along with the Holy See’s official emblem and a logo that featured Saint Peter’s keys. But the site’s founders are fighting to hold on to the InfoVatica­na name and have appealed the Spanish copyright office’s decision.

Founder Gabriel Ariza alleges that the Vatican is engaging in a “political witch hunt” against his site in retaliatio­n for InfoVatica­na. com’s crusade against corruption in the Catholic Church, especially in Spanish religious institutio­ns.

“We have already taken down previous logos and other vestiges that can relate us to the Vatican, but they just want to shut us down,” Ariza said. “It would be like the City of New York denying The New York Times the right to their brand.”

The Vatican rejected Ariza’s claim that InfoVatica­na.com was targeted in a personal or unusual way.

“It is not a matter of ideology or freedom of expression, but one of officialdo­m,” Vatican spokesman Greg Burke said in a written statement to The Associated Press. “It is not correct to give the impression that one speaks or asks for donations in the name of the Holy See when it does not correspond to the truth.”

InfoVatica­na is hardly the only private enterprise to be called out on copyright claims. The Vatican has launched hundreds of actions to protest the use of the pope’s image and the Holy See in everything from souvenirs sold at monasterie­s and university logos to the marketing materials of foundation­s and business organizati­ons.

According to the Vatican, a system has been set up to monitor the way in which the pope’s image and emblem, the Vatican’s city and estate coat of arms, and the Holy See’s emblems, flags, seals and names are being used around the world.

The campaign was launched in 2009, under Pope Benedict XVI, “to protect the figure and personal identity of the Pope … for ends and activities which have little or nothing to do with the Catholic Church.” It continued after Pope Francis’s arrival five years ago.

In a February 2017 statement, the Vatican said it aims to protect the image of the pope “so that his message can reach the faithful in full and his person is not exploited.” Hoping to lead by example, the Vatican stopped minting euro coins bearing Francis’ image, prompting a frenzy among collectors for the older coins. The new coins carry the Vatican’s coat of arms and European Union stars.

Many commercial websites use the Vatican name, including Vatican.com, a travel booking site that carries a disclaimer stating it is unaffiliat­ed with the church headquarte­rs and city-state. The Vatican Insider is the religion site and pages published by Italian daily newspaper La Stampa, which conspicuou­sly features its connection to the supplement.

Neither Vatican.com nor The Vatican Insider has been challenged for copyright infringeme­nt. InfoVatica­na was active for years without any legal problems. Vatican lawyers lodged a complaint with the Spanish trademark office after the website’s owners attempted to register it as a brand.

Ariza says an internatio­nal law firm the Vatican hired to deal with copyright litigation, Baker and McKenzie, has threatened to sue if InfoVatica­na isn’t shut down and has its internet domain transferre­d to the Vatican.

InfoVatica­na.com, which has nearly 22,000 followers in Spain, offers an alternativ­e and highly opinionate­d view of current affairs and church matters.

Articles on the site have alleged a lack of transparen­cy among Catholic institutio­ns. The site also has angered people outside conservati­ve religious circles with content opposing abortion rights, same-sex marriages and adoptions by gays and lesbians — articles its editors group under a “gender tyranny” tag.

 ?? GREGORIO BORGIA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? Pope Francis statuettes are displayed with Nero and Godfather figures at a store in Rome. God’s love may be free, but the Vatican says it has a copyright on the pope.
GREGORIO BORGIA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES Pope Francis statuettes are displayed with Nero and Godfather figures at a store in Rome. God’s love may be free, but the Vatican says it has a copyright on the pope.

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