Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Powerful cardinal resigns his post

Move comes amid probe of property deal that lost millions

- NICOLE WINFIELD

ROME — The powerful head of the Vatican’s saint-making office, Cardinal Angelo Becciu, resigned from the post Thursday and renounced his rights as a cardinal amid a financial scandal that has reportedly implicated him indirectly.

The Vatican provided no details on why Pope Francis accepted Becciu’s resignatio­n in a statement late Thursday. In the one-sentence announceme­nt, the Holy See said only that Francis had accepted Becciu’s resignatio­n as prefect of the Congregati­on for the Causes of Saints “and his rights connected to the cardinalat­e.”

Becciu, the former powerful No. 2 in the Vatican’s secretaria­t of state, has been reportedly implicated in a scandal involving the Vatican’s investment in a London real estate deal that has lost the Holy See millions of dollars in fees paid to middlemen.

The Vatican prosecutor has placed several Vatican officials under investigat­ion as well as the middlemen, but not Becciu. He has denied all wrongdoing and it’s not clear whether the scandal, which has convulsed the Vatican for a year, is behind his resignatio­n.

The last time a cardinal’s rights were removed was when American Theodore McCarrick renounced his rights and privileges as a cardinal in July 2018 amid a sexual abuse investigat­ion. He was subsequent­ly defrocked by Francis last year for sexually abusing adults as well as minors.

Before him, the late Scottish Cardinal Keith O’Brien in 2015 relinquish­ed the rights and privileges of being a cardinal after unidentifi­ed priests alleged sexual misconduct. O’Brien was, however, allowed to retain the cardinal’s title and died a member of the college.

In the Vatican statement, the Holy See identified Becciu as “His Eminence Cardinal Angelo Becciu,” making clear he remained a cardinal but without any rights.

At 72, Becciu would have been able to participat­e in a possible future conclave to elect Francis’ successor. Cardinals older than 80 can’t vote. But by renouncing his rights as a cardinal, Becciu has relinquish­ed his right to take part.

Becciu was the “substitute,” or top deputy in the secretaria­t of state, from 2011-18, when Francis made him a cardinal and moved him into the Vatican’s saint-making office. He had been named by Pope Benedict XVI and entrusted with essentiall­y running the Curia, or Vatican bureaucrac­y, a position that gave him enormous influence.

The financial problems date from 2014, when the Vatican entered into a real estate venture by investing more than $200 million in a fund run by an Italian businessma­n. The deal gave the Holy See 45% of the luxury building at 60 Sloane Ave. in London’s Chelsea neighborho­od.

The money came from the secretaria­t of state’s asset portfolio, which is funded in large part by the Peter’s Pence donations of Catholics around the world for the pope to use for charity and Vatican expenses.

The Holy See decided in November 2018, after Becciu had left the secretaria­t of state, to exit the fund, end its relationsh­ip with the businessma­n and buy out the remainder of the building. It did so after Becciu’s successor determined that the mortgage was too onerous and that the businessma­n was losing money for the Vatican in some of the fund’s other investment­s.

The buyout deal, however, cost the Vatican tens of millions of dollars more and sparked the Vatican investigat­ion that has so far implicated a half-dozen Vatican employees.

Becciu has insisted he wasn’t in power during the 2018 buyout deal and always acted in the sole interests of the Holy See. In the Vatican prosecutor’s initial warrant, Becciu is not named.

 ??  ?? Becciu
Becciu

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States