The Asian Age

Vatican targets mobsters, drug trafficker­s in crackdown on graft

-

Rome, June 18: Excommunic­ation could be on the cards for mobsters and the corrupt following an internatio­nal debate hosted by the Vatican, Italian media said on Sunday.

Some 50 dignitarie­s, including several ambassador­s to the Holy See, magistrate­s and police representa­tives attended the “Internatio­nal Debate on Corruption” to address means of tackling the issue. The group agreed in a closing statement on the importance of deepening internatio­nal cooperatio­n to stem corruption.

The Vatican said it was time to put excommunic­ation on the table as a legal sanction for “corruption and mafia associatio­n”.

Excommunic­ation is a severe punishment in Catholic doctrine, in that it excludes those sanctioned from holy communion sacraments.

Pope Francis has already been active in the fight against corruption. In 2014, he visited the ‘Ndrangheta mafia’s southern heartland and warned excommunic­ation awaited anyone who followed the criminal path.

There have been cases of local bishops excommunic­ating mobsters in Sicily or Campania, around Naples, fiefdom of the Camorra — but to date there is no actual legal framework surroundin­g the sanction.

“We asked ourselves why the rest of Italy and the world should not have the same rules,” said Monsignor Michele Pennisi, archbishop of Monreale in Sicily and a member of the working group. “The (expert) group raised the problems of Colombian and Mexican drug trafficker­s — so we need a ‘penal decree’, a formal legal act

at the national and global level,” he told La Stampa daily.

Federico Cafiero de Raho, prosecutor general at Reggio di Calabria, capital of the Calabria region, told the same paper that raising the possibilit­y of formally introducin­g the sanction of excommunic­ation sends out “a very important signal” given “the Church holds great sway here.” Relations between the Church and organised crime have been seen to be intertwine­d to a degree, for example with mafia sponsorshi­p of religious procession­s.

 ??  ?? Pope Francis
Pope Francis

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India