An Italian Catholic bishop expelled from Chad for criticising the
mismanagement of oil revenues returned to Italy after 36 years
of missionary work in the impoverished central African state.
"Monsignor
Michele Russo has arrived here in Rome," a member of the Comboni
missionary congregation told AFP.
An airport official in Chad earlier
said he had left the country on a flight via Paris.
The
government on Friday announced the expulsion of Russo, who has been
bishop in the oil-rich southern Doba region for 23 years and has
campaigned for ordinary people to receive a much greater share of Chad's
new oil wealth.
Chad authorities said a sermon delivered by the
67-year-old Russo and broadcast by a private radio station was "likely
to disturb public order" and that the bishop had "engaged in activities
incompatible with his status".
The Vatican missionary news agency
Fides on Saturday quoted Church sources in Chad saying that Russo's
words had been mistranslated by the radio station, adding that the
government of Chad appeared "open to dialogue" on the case.
Chad's
conference of bishops has expressed "great sadness" over the expulsion
of the prelate, saying in a statement that it "regrets this situation
that is without precedent in the history of the Catholic Church in
Chad".
Russo's small diocese has 10 parishes and some 400,000
inhabitants, of whom around 20 percent are Catholic. A majority of
Chadians are Muslim.
A member of the Comboni congregation, Giulio
Albanese, told Vatican Radio: "Behind all this, according to some
observers, there are the interests of local politicians and oil
companies, which have been suspicious of him for a while."
Russo
has long been critical of the government of the country that began
producing oil in 2003 and in a statement to Fides earlier this month he
said Africa's natural wealth had been mismanaged for decades by "human
greed".
"The riches, because of human greed, have turned from
blessing into curse for the local population," he said. "The natural
wealth of Africa should be used to build the future of the daughters and
sons of the continent."
"After 50 years of uncontrolled
exploitation, with the complicity of local governments and indifference
towards the African people and their future, I think it's time to become
aware of these facts," he added.
Chad produces on average around 120,000 barrels per day, according to government estimates from 2011.
Oil
revenue has allowed the poverty-stricken central African country to
modernise its army, upgrade its roads and build numerous public
buildings.
But there has been criticism of the government in some
quarters for not doing enough with the windfall to better the lives of
ordinary Chadians.
In an interview with the Italian development
website Negrizia in 2009, Russo said that local society had "come apart"
since Chad began producing oil.
He accused major powers of
"robbing" Chad, the government of "selling the country" and the
population of misusing the "crumbs" of oil revenue left over.