The Borneo Post

China-Vatican deal on bishops imminent — Chinese prelate

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BEIJING: A historic agreement between the Vatican and Beijing on the appointmen­t of bishops in China could be signed as early as tomorrow, a Chinese government­approved bishop said in a report.

Negotiatio­ns have reached ‘the fi nal stages’, Bishop Guo Jincai, secretary- general of the Bishops Conference of the Catholic Church in China, was quoted as saying by the state- owned Global Times newspaper yesterday.

The agreement could happen just ahead of Easter Sunday.

“If everything goes right, the deal could be signed as early as the end of this month,” said Guo, who is recognised by China’s Communist government.

The Vatican relaunched longstalle­d negotiatio­ns with Beijing three years ago.

The two sides now seem close to resolving a major obstacle to progress, the question of who gets to designate bishops: China or the Holy See?

Under the deal, the Vatican could agree to recognise seven bishops who were chosen by the Communist government, in the hope that Beijing will accept the pope’s authority as head of the Catholic Church in China, a source close to the matter told AFP last month.

Beijing and the Vatican severed diplomatic relations in 1951 and although ties have improved as China’s Catholic population grows, they have remained at odds over the appointmen­t of bishops.

China’s roughly 12 million Catholics are divided between a government-run associatio­n, whose clergy are chosen by the atheist Communist Party, and an unofficial undergroun­d church loyal to the Vatican.

While some believe an agreement will bridge divisions between the two, others fear concession­s to China may backfire on the ‘ undergroun­d’ devout, many of whom suffered years of persecutio­n for following the pope.

The Vatican has previously accepted several bishops appointed by Beijing, officially an atheist regime.

Some opponents — among them the respected Hong Kong Cardinal Joseph Zen — say the agreement risks abandoning loyal believers and amounts to a deal with the devil.

Last month, an open letter by lay Catholics mostly based in Hong Kong expressed concern that the recognitio­n of Beijing- appointed bishops would lead to ‘confusion and pain, and schism would be created’.

Eric Lai, one of the letter’s initiators, said it would be “shocking” if it was true that the deal would go though this weekend.

“This weekend the Church celebrates the Easter Vigil. It would be ironic to see a deal unfavourab­le to Chinese Catholics exercising true faith made at this time,” he told AFP.

“Up to now I see no willingnes­s of Chinese government to compromise on its tight control over religion,” Lai added.

On Tuesday night, Chinese police released an undergroun­d bishop at the heart of the BeijingVat­ican negotiatio­ns after holding him for a day, sources told AFP on Wednesday.

Vincent Guo Xijin, bishop of the diocese of Mindong in the southeaste­rn province of Fujian, is recognised by the Vatican but not by the Chinese authoritie­s.

He was recently urged by the Vatican to step aside for stateappoi­nted Bishop Vincent Zhan Silu and to accept being demoted to auxiliary bishop, as part of preparatio­ns for the agreement. — AFP

 ??  ?? Pakistani residents and volunteers search for victims in the debris of a collapsed warehouse in Rohri district of Sindh province, north of Karachi. — AFP photo
Pakistani residents and volunteers search for victims in the debris of a collapsed warehouse in Rohri district of Sindh province, north of Karachi. — AFP photo

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