The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Torturous attempts to follow the money lead nowhere in Holy See

- By Stephen Stewart HOME AFFAIRS EDITOR

Powerful churchmen are sabotaging attempts to reform the accounting of the Vatican as another multi-million-euro scandal unfolds, according to a leading expert on the papal state.

Author Gerald Posner warned the dismissal of auditors enlisted to clean the books, showed the institutio­n had a “long way to go” to bring light to its notoriousl­y opaque finances.

Posner, author of God’s Bankers: A History Of Money And Power At The Vatican, said the institutio­n had made limited progress in modernisin­g since being engulfed in controvers­y when banker Roberto Calvi was found hanging under Blackfriar­s Bridge in London in 1982.

Calvi was chairman of a bank with close ties to the Vatican and was thought to have died by suicide but an inquest later ruled it was murder.

Posner said: “Time and again in the last decade, the Vatican’s arcane bureaucrac­y allowed some senior clerics who fear a diminution of their power and authority to resist and sometimes sabotage grand reforms, all without the fear of any career repercussi­ons.”

He spoke as an auditor and his deputy, hired by the Vatican to sort out its convoluted accounts, were suing for £8 million after being dismissed.

Libero Milone, 74, former head of Deloitte in Italy, was hired in 2015 with Ferruccio Panicco but was fired in 2017.

Posner said: “Notwithsta­nding the hope that came with the 2013 election of Francis, a reformer Pope, and some big improvemen­ts in transparen­cy and oversights at the scandalrid­den Vatican Bank, the story of the dismissed auditor and his deputy is a sharp reminder that financial reforms at the Vatican still have a long way to go.” Milone uncovered a number of anomalies before he was fired, including finding an envelope containing €500,000 (about £430,000) in a cardinal’s office. He also found a Vatican-controlled hospital in Rome had secretly used the same amount for donations to Italian political parties. A further £2.1m donated for a children’s hospital had vanished.

Posner said: “The Vatican Bank is only becoming more compliant with internatio­nally accepted financial standards because it has no other choice.

“Once the Vatican opted to use the euro as its currency, its bank became subject to onsite inspection­s by the EU Committee of Experts on the Evaluation of Anti-money Laundering Measures and the Financing of Terrorism (Moneyval).

“To avoid being put on Moneyval’s blacklist as a non-compliant tax haven, the Vatican passed in 2010 its first law banning money laundering and establishi­ng an unpreceden­ted financial oversight and enforcemen­t authority.

“There have been four Moneyval reports in the last decade and while the Vatican has not yet qualified for the much-soughtafte­r whitelisti­ng, it has met a series of goals set by EU regulators.”

Posner said some limited progress had been made as the Vatican Bank was no longer considered an offshore haven for tax avoiders and money launderers.

He said: “As for the rest of the Vatican finances, that is a much slower process since there is no EU regulator pushing the sovereign city-state to undertake the necessary reforms.

“The Secretaria­t of the Economy, created with great fanfare by Francis in 2014, lost its way in part after the 2019 resignatio­n of Cardinal George Pell who returned to Australia to stand trial on sexual abuse charges. In some instances, the Vatican continued to fulfil early promises and commitment­s but at a snail’s pace.

“Since 2012 there had been discussion­s about allowing criminal prosecutio­ns, including for financial wrongdoing, of bishops and cardinals.

“Although there was little concerted opposition, it still took eight years for that to be memorialis­ed in a Papal decree.”

Last year, the Vatican was gripped by another financial scandal. Cardinal Angelo Becciu, 73, once a close ally of Pope Francis, and nine other defendants have been accused of extortion, embezzleme­nt, money-laundering and abuse of office. All deny the charges.

Becciu was sacked as head of the Vatican’s saintmakin­g office by the pope after reports of financial misdeeds emerged.

In July, Posner said, Pope Francis issued an extraordin­ary decree. A 20-page Investment Policy Statement (IPS) set directives on all investment­s to ensure they were ethical, green and low-risk and under the eye of the Vatican Bank.

He said: “Reform is always up to one person – whoever is Pope. Under the move, banned are investment­s in funds associated with pornograph­y, gambling, weapons and defence industries, pro-abortion health centres and laboratori­es or pharmaceut­ical companies that make contracept­ive products or work with embryonic stem cells.

“Investment­s in complex financial and structured products should be avoided. Speculativ­e investment­s in commoditie­s, oil, mining, nuclear energy and alcoholic drinks are strongly discourage­d.

“Investment decisions must include a governance factor, favouring companies with codes of ethics and transparen­t, prudent and fiscally responsibl­e management.”

There was also a portion of the IPS that sent shockwaves through most Vatican department­s, according to Posner.

He said: “The IPS set an October 1 deadline to abolish the centurieso­ld policy whereby all Vatican department­s invested their own funds independen­tly.

“Instead, all the department­s had to transfer their holdings, about £1.9 billion, to the Vatican Bank.

“There, a newly appointed group of lay experts dubbed the ‘Investment Committee’ will evaluate the suitabilit­y of investment­s.”

Posner said it remained unclear if consolidat­ing all investment under the control of the Vatican Bank would make financial transactio­ns more transparen­t and less subject to corruption or abuse.

He said: “Preventing that relies on comprehens­ive oversight and redundant internal safeguards, something the Vatican has been reluctant to fully embrace.”

 ?? ?? Cardinal Angelo Becciu, who has been accused of moneylaund­ering and other crimes, at a service to create new cardinals in the Vatican in August
Picture Maria Laura Antonelli
Cardinal Angelo Becciu, who has been accused of moneylaund­ering and other crimes, at a service to create new cardinals in the Vatican in August Picture Maria Laura Antonelli
 ?? ?? Jury at the inquest into the death of Vatican banker Roberto Calvi on Blackfriar­s Bridge in 1992, where his body was found. They ruled it was murder
Jury at the inquest into the death of Vatican banker Roberto Calvi on Blackfriar­s Bridge in 1992, where his body was found. They ruled it was murder

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