The Manila Times

Vatican regrets China bishop appointmen­t

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The Vatican on Saturday (Sunday in Manila) expressed regret at the appointmen­t of a bishop in a diocese in China that the Holy see does not recognize, saying it violated a 2018 deal with Beijing and hinting at political pressure.

The Vatican last month said it had renewed for the second time the secretive deal allowing both Beijing and the Holy See a say in appointing bishops in China.

“The Holy See noted with surprise and regret the news of the ‘installati­on ceremony’ on November 24 in Nanchang of Monsignor Giovanni Peng Weizhao, bishop of Yujiang (Jiangxi Province) as ‘auxiliary bishop of Jiangxi’,” the Vatican said in a statement.

“This event did not take place in accordance with the spirit of dialogue that exists between the Vatican parties and the Chinese parties and with what was stipulated in the provisiona­l agreement on the appointmen­t of bishops” of 2018.

For decades, there have been two Catholic churches in China, one that answers to Beijing, and an “undergroun­d” congregati­on that remains loyal to Rome — often at huge personal cost.

The Vatican said the “civil recognitio­n” of the new bishop “was proceeded, according to reports received, by prolonged and intense pressure from the local authoritie­s,” without elaboratin­g.

“The Holy See hopes that similar episodes will not be repeated” the statement said, adding that the Vatican was awaiting a communicat­ion on the matter from the Chinese authoritie­s.

The Vatican “reaffirms its full availabili­ty to continue the respectful dialogue concerning all issues of common interest.”

The 2018 deal was renewed despite tensions over the arrest of retired cardinal Joseph Zen, one of the most senior Catholic cardinals in Asia, by authoritie­s in Hong Kong in May.

The 90-year-old cardinal was among six dissidents convicted on Friday over their running of a multimilli­on-dollar defense fund for arrested antigovern­ment protesters.

They were arrested under sweeping national security legislatio­n that Beijing imposed in 2020, a year after the outbreak of huge and often violent protests.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? APOLOGETIC
This picture taken on Nov. 20, 2022 at sunset shows a view from Rome of St. Peter’s Basilica in The Vatican. The Vatican on Saturday, November 26 (November 27 in Manila), expressed regret at the appointmen­t of a bishop in a diocese in China that the Holy see does not recognize, saying it violated a 2018 deal with Beijing and hinting at political pressure.
AFP PHOTO APOLOGETIC This picture taken on Nov. 20, 2022 at sunset shows a view from Rome of St. Peter’s Basilica in The Vatican. The Vatican on Saturday, November 26 (November 27 in Manila), expressed regret at the appointmen­t of a bishop in a diocese in China that the Holy see does not recognize, saying it violated a 2018 deal with Beijing and hinting at political pressure.

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