The Borneo Post

Pope axes Knights chief in condoms row

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The Grand Master was received on Tuesday by Pope Francis who requested his resignatio­n, which the Grand Master agreed to.

VATICAN CITY: The head of the Knights of Malta has resigned on the request of Pope Francis, the Order said yesterday, ending a bitter power battle linked to a row over condoms.

The resignatio­n of Grand Master Matthew Festing followed a month-long stand- off that had become a test of the reforming pope’s authority over rebellious Church conservati­ves.

“The Grand Master was received on Tuesday by Pope Francis who requested his resignatio­n, which the Grand Master agreed to,” a spokesman for the Order told AFP.

Confirming Festing’s departure, the Vatican said Francis had “expressed his appreciati­on and recognitio­n for (Festing’s) loyalty and devotion to the successor to St Peter (the pope) and his readiness to humbly act in the interests of the Order and the Church.”

In theory, Briton Festing was in the job for life.

His resignatio­n has to be approved by the Order’s sovereign council, which has been convened for Saturday.

The unpreceden­ted and very public dispute between the Vatican and the Knights was seen by Holy See watchers as a proxy war between Church liberals and conservati­ves, led by American cardinal Raymond Burke.

The row erupted last month when Francis appointed a fivestrong team to examine the circumstan­ces in which the

Spokesman for the Order

Order’s number three was forced out of his job.

The Knights, a Church-linked charity body descended from the crusaders of the Middle Ages, refused to cooperate.

They said the December dismissal of Grand Chancellor Albrecht von Boeselager was an internal affair.

Festing subsequent­ly claimed in a leaked letter that three of the Vatican’s appointees had a conflict of interest because of links to a Geneva-based fund in which the Order also had a stake.

That blatant defiance of papal authority appears to have been the last straw.

Von Boeselager’s dismissal had been seen by some as being the result of him being too liberal for Burke, who has acted as the Vatican’s liaison with the Order since being sidelined from more important roles by Francis.

Others said the issue was whether the Vatican was properly kept in the loop and whether Von Boeselager, who has a brother who is said to be close to Francis, was wrongly informed the pope had approved his sacking.

Burke is a prominent conservati­ve figure who has been outspoken in his criticism of Francis’s efforts to reform Church teaching on questions related to the family, marriage and divorce.

Reports in the specialist Catholic press suggested Von Boeselager was targeted because Order charities he oversaw had taken part in a programme distributi­ng free condoms to prostitute­s and others in Myanmar to prevent the spread of AIDS.

Von Boeselager had claimed that he stopped the Order’s involvemen­t as soon as he became aware of it and refused to resign.

Burke reportedly insisted he had to go.

Conservati­ves say any use of condoms violates Church teaching that considers all forms of contracept­ion to be an unacceptab­le barrier to life.

Francis and his predecesso­r Benedict XVI have both adopted a more flexible stance, signalling that the use of condoms can be acceptable in circumstan­ces where their use preserves life, such as in AIDS-ravaged communitie­s. — AFP

 ??  ?? Pope Francis waves as he arrives to lead his Wednesday general audience in Paul VI Hall at the Vatican. — Reuters photo
Pope Francis waves as he arrives to lead his Wednesday general audience in Paul VI Hall at the Vatican. — Reuters photo

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