Wednesday, October 16, 2013

New drive by Pope to stamp out corruption in Vatican

http://cdn4.independent.ie/world-news/europe/article29654456.ece/ALTERNATES/h342/NWS_20131012_WOR_023_29252122_I1.JPGIn a clear sign that he wants to be seen to be tackling endemic corruption at the Vatican, Pope Francis has welcomed the Church's highest-ranking whistleblower to a special audience.

The Pontiff met Monsignor Carlo Maria Vigano, the Holy See's ambassador to the US, whose letters provided the most explosive evidence to emerge from the Vatileaks scandal. 

Mgr Vigano's correspondence with former Pope Benedict XVI and his No 2, the Vatican Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone, suggested that he was effectively exiled in the US after attempting to lift the lid on rampant corruption in the Holy City.

Mgr Vigano served as the second-ranked administrator in the Curia – the body responsible for the administration of the Vatican – under Benedict's reign, from July 2009 to September 2011, before his transfer to America.

His letters, leaked to the press by Benedict XVI's butler, Paolo Gabriele, in the Vatileaks scandal, revealed how he had begged not to be transferred to the US after accusing fellow administrators of arranging corruption contracts that may have cost the Vatican millions of euro.

INVESTIGATION

There has been no official comment from the Holy See about the audience, but the Ansa news agency said some Vatican insiders claimed the meeting marked the start of a new crackdown on cronyism and graft in the Holy City, including the activities of its troubled bank, the IOR (Institute of Religious Works).

Robert Mickens, the veteran Vatican correspondent of 'The Tablet', said: "Pope Francis is clearly taking the subject of corruption very seriously and he wants to clean up the IOR. We already know what his thoughts on banks and bankers are."

In May, in a major speech condemning materialism and avarice, Francis declared that the church "must go forward... with a heart of poverty, not a heart of investment or of a businessman". St Peter, he said, "did not have a bank account".

But even as Francis was meeting Mgr Vigano, the intrigues – real or imagined – in the Holy See, which senior officials have tried but failed to keep a lid on, were emerging again, after a national newspaper printed claims from another senior cleric that shadowy figures were plotting to poison him.

Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, who was arrested in June after magistrates found evidence he had tried to smuggle €20m into Italy from Switzerland, told 'Libero' newspaper he feared he would be killed for dishing the dirt on financial corruption in the Holy See.

POISONING

"I have told of episodes that could put me in danger. I am trying to be stronger than the fear and nightmares that torment me, but despite my prayers, I am certain that I will die by poisoning," he said. He is due to begin a fast-track trial on December 3.
Mgr Scarano's lawyer has denied that the cleric laundered any money and said rich friends had given him funds to build a home for the terminally ill.

Magistrates believe, however, that Mgr Scarano, who owns a luxurious 700sqm flat in Naples, full of expensive art, used his two IOR accounts like overseas slush funds. 

Records show that on one occasion last year Mgr Scarano withdrew €560,000 from an IOR account in a single transaction. 

But more importantly, the affair highlighted once again the doubts over the transparency of transactions involving the IOR.

In June, investigators released a report on their investigation into the IOR. The document said that high demand for recycling cash, together with the lack of checks and controls by the IOR and the Italian financial institutions it dealt with, made the Vatican's bank a money-laundering hot spot. 

Earlier this month it emerged that the IOR was seeking to close 900 suspicious accounts.
According to 'Corriere della Sera' newspaper, four of the suspect accounts are linked to the Vatican embassies of Indonesia, Iran, Iraq and Syria.