The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Vatican ‘closer to historic recognitio­n of Beijing bishops’

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VATICAN CITY: The Vatican is moving closer to a historic agreement with China over the major stumbling bloc of who ordains bishops, a source close to the matter told AFP Friday, with seven Beijing-appointed bishops due to earn recognitio­n.

“Things are moving,” the source said, confirming a Wall Street Journal report about what would be a significan­t concession by the Vatican to legitimise the Beijing bishops.

The Holy See “hopes (the concession) will lead Beijing to recognise his authority as head of the Catholic Church in China,” the Journal said quoting a “person familiar with the plan”.

AFP’s source could not offer a date for an official accord, saying it could still take some time as complex negotiatio­ns launched three years ago continue.

The Vatican has in the past officially ex-communicat­ed three of the seven bishops to be recognised by Pope Francis, said an expert on the Catholic Church in China.

China’s roughly 12 million Catholics are divided between a government-run associatio­n, whose clergy are chosen by the Communist Party, and an unofficial church which swears allegiance to the Vatican. The situation is however complex because the Vatican has previously accepted several bishops appointed by Beijing, officially an atheist regime. The issue flared up again after two undergroun­d Chinese bishops, recognised by the pope, were asked by a top Vatican diplomat to resign in favour of state-sanctioned prelates, including one who was excommunic­ated by the Vatican in 2011.

That was first reported in January by the Vatican-linked AsiaNews website and confirmed Monday by Cardinal Joseph Zen, bishop emeritus of semiautono­mous Hong Kong, who is a staunch opponent of any rapprochem­ent between the Vatican and Beijing.

The long-stalled negotiatio­ns finally seem to be close to solving the issue of who ordains the bishops.

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