Vancouver Sun

Vatican decries ‘ blackmail’

Three letters stolen from Pope’s apartment leaked to Italian newspaper

- BY NICK SQUIRES

The leaking of secret Vatican documents refuses to let up. Now someone is warning top officials must be fired or more damaging letters will be send to newspapers.

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican said Wednesday it was being blackmaile­d by the leaking of confidenti­al documents taken from the Pope’s private apartment as someone threatened to release more embarrassi­ng material unless two senior Vatican officials were fired.

In the latest round of leaks, an Italian newspaper was sent three letters apparently stolen from the Vatican, two of which were signed by the Pope’s private secretary and had their contents blanked out. An anonymous note claimed the blacked- out material dealt with “shameful events inside the Vatican” and threatened to reveal the contents of the letters “if there is an attempt to hide the truth of the facts.”

The accompanyi­ng letter called for the resignatio­n of Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, who as secretary of state is the Vatican’s de facto prime minister, and Mgr. Georg Ganswein, the Pope’s secretary. It claimed that Paolo Gabriele, the butler arrested over the affair, was simply a scapegoat.

Father Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, said the note represente­d “a grave threat” to Benedict XVI’s seven- year papacy. “Blackmail is a plausible way of defining it,” he said. “We have arrived at a situation of blackmail threats.”

Vatican prosecutor­s were questionin­g Gabriele for the second day Wednesday. He has been accused of stealing the papers.

Lombardi said reports in several newspapers that two cardinals were part of a network of moles who stole and leaked compromisi­ng documents were “without foundation.”

He insisted that, for the moment, the butler was the only person being investigat­ed in the scandal, which has provided

a rare glimpse into high- level feuds and jockeying for power within the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church.

Many of the leaked documents appeared to be aimed at discrediti­ng Bertone, the Pope’s deputy, and toppling him from power.

Gabriele, 46, was arrested two weeks ago after investigat­ors said they found a cache of stolen papers in his family’s Vatican apartment. If found guilty of theft, he would lose the apartment and could be “exiled” from the Holy See, the Italian press reported.

Mario Monti, Italy’s prime minister, spoke about the scandal for the first time, saying he was sorry for the pain it had caused the 85- year- old German Pontiff.

“I am surprised and profoundly saddened by what I’ve read of the Vatican affair,” Monti told Famiglia Cristiana, a Catholic magazine.

“But I also think about the very deep pain that many people are suffering, and of the pain that it has caused to the heart of the Holy Father.”

Many of the leaked documents were published last month in a book entitled His Holiness — The Secret Papers of Benedict XVI, which has become a bestseller.

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 ?? MAX ROSSI/ REUTERS ?? Pope Benedict XVI kisses a baby held by personal secretary Georg Ganswein on Wednesday. A blackmaile­r has threatened to release embarrassi­ng material unless Ganswein and Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone are fired.
MAX ROSSI/ REUTERS Pope Benedict XVI kisses a baby held by personal secretary Georg Ganswein on Wednesday. A blackmaile­r has threatened to release embarrassi­ng material unless Ganswein and Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone are fired.
 ??  ?? WORLD NEWS UPDATED 24/ 7 AT VANCOUVERS­UN . COM/ WORLD
WORLD NEWS UPDATED 24/ 7 AT VANCOUVERS­UN . COM/ WORLD

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