Sunday Times

Pope ‘rejects’ France’s gay ambassador to Vatican

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THE pope has reportedly barred the nomination of a close aide of President François Hollande as new French ambassador to the Vatican because he is gay.

The apparent rejection calls into question the pontiff’s reputation as holding more liberal views on homosexual­ity.

Laurent Stefanini, 54, a senior diplomat and Hollande’s chief of protocol, was nominated in early January, but the Vatican had maintained a stony silence over whether it accepted his credential­s, officials in Paris said.

The usual timeframe for acceptance is a month and a half. After that, a prolonged silence after a nomination is normally interprete­d as a rejection.

The Elysée said that the choice of Stefanini to represent France at the Vatican resulted from “a wish by the president and a cabinet decision” and that the president regarded him as “one of our best diplomats”.

French media widely report- ed that Stefanini has been blackballe­d because he is a homosexual.

Le Journal du Dimanche quoted a Vatican insider as saying that the rejection was “a decision taken by the pope himself”.

Liberation, the left-leaning daily, said that “the Vatican’s homophobia seriously tarnishes Pope Francis’s image as being (slightly) more open-minded than his predecesso­rs on sexuality”.

Stefanini is reportedly widely respected by many in the Catholic Church, following his previous stint as number two in the French embassy at the Vatican from 2001 to 2005.

Very discreet about his private life, he was “highly thought of in Roman circles”, said Antoine-Marie Izoard, a Vatican specialist with the I-Media press agency.

Cardinal Andre Vingt-Trois of Paris reportedly interceded personally with the pope to back the nomination.

La Croix newspaper said Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, the former Vatican foreign minister, who is currently president of the Pontifical Council for Interrelig­ious Dialogue, also supported the appointmen­t.

The pope has to date adopted a considerab­ly softer line on homosexual­ity than his predecesso­r. “If a person is gay and seeks God and has goodwill, who am I to judge?” he said two years ago, adding that gay peo- ple should not be marginalis­ed but integrated into society.

However, that did not stop him criticisin­g the French government passing a law in 2013 legalising gay marriage and adoption rights for gay couples, leading to protests from the country’s Catholics.

Observers say the pope cannot be seen to be adopting an overly gay-friendly approach that would shock the church’s more conservati­ve elements. —

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