THE FORMER papal nuncio to Ireland archbishop Gaetano Alibrandi left
Dublin and the Vatican’s diplomatic service in 1989 after it emerged
there were large amounts of unaccounted for money in three Irish bank
accounts belonging to him.
The money is believed to have
originated in South America. He had been papal nuncio to Chile from 1961
and led the Chilean delegation to the second Vatican Council, which
opened in October 1962.
Dr Alibrandi was papal nuncio to Ireland
from 1969 and during his 20 years in the Republic he is believed to have
been involved in the appointment of 26 Catholic bishops.
The
disclosures about the circumstances of his departure from Ireland and
the Vatican’s diplomatic service were disclosed in the Dr Garret
FitzGerald Memorial Lecture at UCC last night by Seán Donlon, former
secretary general at the department of foreign affairs.
Speaking
to The Irish Times yesterday, Mr Donlon said: “It came to our
[Department of Foreign Affairs] attention that a substantial amount in
three bank accounts in Dublin [held by the archbishop] were way in
excess of what was needed to run the nunciature. The source [of the
money] appeared to be South America.”
He continued: “Because of
its size, we thought it appropriate to ask if the funds belonged to the
Holy See.” When contacted for an answer, Dr Alibrandi “quickly answered
‘no’ and that they belonged to ‘family’. When it was pointed out to him
that the money was then liable under Irish taxation law to Dirt, he said
he would retire shortly and the accounts would be closed”.
Shortly
afterwards Dr Alibrandi returned to his native Sicily, where he died in
2003, at the age of 89. A former personal secretary to cardinal
Giovanni Battista Montini, who became Pope Paul VI in 1963, Dr Alibrandi
was a noted Provisional IRA sympathiser during his tenure in Ireland.
He had “a very testy relationship with three taoisigh – Jack Lynch, Liam
Cosgrave and Garret FitzGerald,” Mr Donlon recalled.
The
archbishop put pressure on the government over the hunger strike by IRA
chief-of-staff Seán Mac Stíofáin in 1972, during which the latter was
visited at the Mater hospital in Dublin by Catholic archbishop of Dublin
Dermot Ryan and his predecessor John Charles McQuaid.
Similar
pressure was applied by Dr Alibrandi in 1977 when Martin Ferris and
other republican prisoners went on hunger strike at Portlaoise prison.
Mr
Donlon also recalled a terse meeting between Pope Paul VI and then
minister for foreign affairs Garret FitzGerald in March 1977 over an
appeal by the Irish government that the 1907 Ne Temere mixed marriage
decree be relaxed for Ireland. This appeal was refused.