Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Pope Francis authorized €1 million to free kidnapped nun says accused cardinal

Cardinal Angelo Becciu, on trial for corruption, says the pontiff gave his blessing for payment to a UK security firm to facilitate the release of a Colombian nun being held by an al-Qaeda affiliate in Mali.

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Cardinal Angelo Becciu, one of 10 co-defendants in a massive Vatican financial corruption trial, delivered bombshell testimony Thursday that Pope Francis authorized payment of up to €1 million ($1.05 million) to secure the release of a nun held captive by Islamic terrorists in Africa.

The testimony came as Becciu, on trial for embezzleme­nt, abuse of office and witness tampering — charges he

denies — was questioned about his relationsh­ip with Cecilia Marogna, a co-defendant.

Marogna, a self-styled intelligen­ce expert accused of embezzling at least half a mil

lion euros and running up an expense account for luxury goods, had previously claimed to have intervened to help secure the release of Catholics held hostage in Africa on behalf of the Vatican.

Becciu, who hired the woman, denied the two were romantical­ly linked but said he turned to her for help after receiving word that Sister Gloria Cecilia Narvaez, a Colombian nun, had been taken hostage by the "Group to Support Islam and Muslims" (GSIM) — a jihadist terror outfit linked to al-Qaeda — near Mali's border to Burkina Faso.

The Islamist group financed its activities by ransoming Western hostages and published videos of Sister Narvaez asking the Vatican for help. Becciu says he was contacted by the Vatican's nuncio — a type of ambassador — in Colombia, as well as nuns from the Order of the Franciscan Sisters imploring

him to help free the kidnapped nun.

Sister Narvaez had been working as a missionary in the area for more than six years and reportedly volunteere­d in place of two younger nuns the group had originally intended to take.

'Every step was agreed with the Holy Father'

Becciu, a top advisor to Pope Francis, testified that he approached the pontiff about the issue as well as contacting Marogna, who also had ties to Italian intelligen­ce services.

Marogna suggested that she could use her contacts with The Inkerman Group, a private UKbased security firm, to facilitate Sister Narvaez' release from captivity.

According to Becciu, Francis told him to pursue cooperatio­n with Marogna and Inkerman but swore him to secrecy for fear of the damage it could do to the Vatican's reputation as well as the security implicatio­ns such news could have.

When Becciu and Marogna traveled to Inkerman headquarte­rs in London in January 2018, agents there said they could not guarantee success and that freeing the nun could cost as much as €1 million.

To shield the Vatican from direct involvemen­t, all payments went through accounts controlled by Marogna, who acted as the main intermedia­ry.

Becciu testified that he gave the pope, who was traveling to Peru, a readout of the meeting over the phone, saying, "He listened to me and confirmed my intention to proceed."

The Cardinal said, "in a subsequent meeting with the Holy Father, once in Rome, I spoke to him in more detail about the conversati­on we had with the Inkermans and the sum that we should have estimated in broad terms: about €1 million, part to pay for the creation of a network of contacts, and part for the effective liberation of the nun."

Becciu told the court: "He approved. I must say that every step of this operation was agreed with the Holy Father."

Although it is not known how much if any Vatican money was actually given to the Islamists holding Sister Narvaez, she was eventually released in October 2021, after more than four years in captivity.

Shortly thereafter, she traveled to the Vatican where she met with Pope Francis.

Pope freed Becciu to testify

Becciu, who was the Vatican's deputy secretary of state from 2011 to 2018, had refused to testify for nearly two years until Pope Francis recently lifted his oath of "pontifical secrecy," allowing him to speak.

During seven hours of testimony Thursday, Becciu defended his relationsh­ip with Cecilia Marogna, condemning the way it had been portrayed in the Italian media.

Becciu said reports calling Marogna "The Cardinal's Lady," had "distorted, with offensive insinuatio­ns of an infamous nature" the true nature of the situation. He called such reports, "harmful to my priestly dignity."

The heart of the trial against Becciu and his nine co-defendants revolves around a €350 million London real estate investment by the Vatican Secretaria­t of State. The Vatican ultimately lost €217 million when the deal tanked. The Vatican has also charged two Italian bankers with extortion in the scandal.

Cardinal Becciu was grilled about his relations with other Vatican officials Thursday, as well as about the banks used in the real estate deal.

He also defended himself against allegation­s leveled by Cardinal George Pell, an Australian priest who was forced to step down as the Vatican's chief financial officer to stand trial in a sex-abuse scandal in Australia. Pell was acquitted but had accused Becciu of helping finance the case against him.

Becciu produced documents to refute the allegation­s.

All 10 defendants, accused of defrauding the Holy See of millions through bad investment­s, bogus commission­s and fees, have pleaded not guilty.

js/aw (AP, Reuters)

Bringing violence like this out into the streets is bad for the business of organized crime."

Duisburg State Prosecutor Christina Wehner said "perpetrato­rs shouldn't feel safe," noting that several experience­d prosecutor­s had already been assigned to the case.

Police and investigat­ors secured the crime scene Wednesday evening, combing it for clues and evidence as well as taking drone footage to create a "comprehens­ive 3-D image" in order to reconstruc­t the incident. Police remained at the scene on Thursday.

Authoritie­s have also set up an online website where individual­s can anonymousl­y submit evidence. Investigat­ors say they are "especially interested in photos and video footage," some of which were circulatin­g online on Thursday.

Gritty Duisburg no stranger to violent crime

A poor, industrial city, Duisburg is no stranger to violent crime. In the past, deadly clashes between various biker gangs have led to gruesome scenes, with individual­s being shot dead in the streets and tattooed body parts showing up the in city's industrial harbor.

Wednesday's shootout comes just 10 days before North Rhine-Westphalia's state elections, leading Social Democratic Party (SPD) opposition members such Sven Wolf to ask, "Shootouts in residentia­l neighborho­ods: Is that what the CDU (Christian Democratic Union) and Interior Minister Reul mean when they say that NRW has gotten safer?"

js/msh (AFP, dpa)

 ?? ?? Missionary Sister Gloria Cecilia Narvaez spent more than four years as a hostage of Islamic terrorists in Mali
Missionary Sister Gloria Cecilia Narvaez spent more than four years as a hostage of Islamic terrorists in Mali
 ?? ?? Cardinal Becciu was a top advisor to Pope Francis and was intimately involved in organizing the release of Sister Narvaez
Cardinal Becciu was a top advisor to Pope Francis and was intimately involved in organizing the release of Sister Narvaez

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