WITH the Pope's butler now convicted of theft and under Vatican house
arrest awaiting a probable pardon from Pope Benedict XVI, the Vatican
will be hoping that the Vatileaks scandal can be put behind it. Yet it
is not clear that it can.
Even the most conservative of Catholics
living here in Rome yearn for transparency and real reform, their
initial scepticism of corruption in the Vatican beaten down by years of
evidence to the contrary.
The Pope's spokesman, Federico Lombardi,
believes that the media goes too far and presents the normal human
frailties in the Vatican's government as fights, divisions and interest
group struggles, which he says goes well beyond reality.
Yet it is precisely the efforts at transparency that seem to cause the Vatican to shoot itself in the foot on a regular basis.
Take
the case of the Vatican's government number two Archbishop Carlo Maria
Vigano, who cleaned up much of the financial corruption and was then
packed off to the US as nuncio, a high-profile position but not one that
he sought.
It was this unseemly transfer of Archbishop Vigano
which the Pope's butler cited as the reason for exposing corruption in
the Vatican.
Transparency around the long-awaited clean-up of how
the Vatican dealt with child abuse came in the form of Monsignor Charles
Scicluna, who for over a decade took a tough line on abusive priests,
many of whom were Irish. Msgnr Scicluna once criticised the "deadly
culture of silence" or "omerta" in the church which, he said, "is in
itself wrong and unjust".
Yet now Msgnr Scicluna is being sent back to Malta and no successor has been named.
This is seen as the Vatican again shooting itself in the foot.
If child abuse is at the top of the Vatican's agenda, you don't send away your top man before you have a successor to announce.
And
this is despite drafting in a Fox news TV anchor, Greg Burke (Opus Dei)
to try and salvage some PR for the gaffe-prone secretariat of state.
AND
it is in this void that the rumour mill grinds.
The latest rumours
concern the investigation into the Legionnaires of Christ, once headed
by the drug-taking and child-abusing Fr Marcial Maciel, a deceased
Mexican priest who was very close to Pope John Paul II.
According to informed sources, €173m has been discovered in the accounts of the Legionnaires.
Fr
Maciel was well known for his closeness to wealthy Mexican benefactors
but these allegations suggest that he was heading up a massive
money-laundering business for Mexican drug cartels.
If this is
true it could be devastating as the Legionnaires were the chief
paymasters for years behind the scenes, contributing to Pope John Paul's
trips around the world, including, it is alleged, Ireland in 1979.
Under Pope John Paul, Fr Maciel was untouchable.
Add
to this mix the Vatican Bank, which has for years been in the midst of a
scandal over tax fraud and money laundering and which has seen the
Italian authorities along with the Council of Europe's experts on money
laundering putting it under close scrutiny
While Fr Lombardi might
well have cause for saying that the media loses the run of itself, it
is the "omerta" that still exists that fuels speculation.
However, the biggest problem facing the Vatican is itself -- as former President McAleese has pointed out.
So
too did Fr Alberto Athie, the Mexican priest who in 1998 tried to bring
sexual abuse claims against Fr Maciel to the attention of the then
Cardinal Ratzinger, the Vatican itself.
The Vatican is responsible
for the ultimate failure in governance, because it is a medieval model
-- with no divine mandate -- and is demonstrably unfit for the purpose
of governing a modern church of 1.5 billion Catholics.