The Pope is replacing the Vatican’s “foreign
affairs minister” just days before the sede vacante period starts: Mgr.
Ettore Balestrero is being promoted last minute to the post of Apostolic
Nuncio of Colombia.
He is being replaced by Antoine Camilleri, former
personal secretary to Dominique Mamberti, the Vatican Secretary for
Relations with States.
This is an unusual last minute nomination and an
important one, particularly as the key role changeover is taking place
at a very delicate moment, just days before Ratzinger leaves the papacy.
Balestrero was born in Genoa in 1966 and was ordained a priest in the
Diocese of Rome in 1993. He entered the diplomatic service in 1966 and
went on to serve in Korea and the Netherlands.
In 2001 he returned to
Rome, entering the Vatican Secretariat of State’s Relations with States
section.
In August 2009 he took over from Mgr. Pietro
Parolin, who was appointed as Nuncio to Venezuela and became
Undersecretary for Relations with States. He has handled some of the
Vatican’s most important dossiers to date: the dossier on relations with
China, on negotiations with the State of Israel and on transparency and
anti-money laundering. Balestrero also headed the Vatican delegation at
the Moneyval assembly, he dealt with the latest Vatican Bank (IOR)
incidents and he supported René Bruelhart’s appointment as head of the
FIA, the Vatican financial information authority.
Balestrero also did a
lot for the Vatican’s relations with Europe and European institutions in
the fields of ethics and religious freedom. He was one of the Vatican
Secretary of State, Tarcisio Bertone’s closest collaborators and built
up a strong relationship with Benedict XVI’s personal secretary, Georg
Gänswein.
The Nunciature which Balestrero is being promoted
to is an important one, although the influence the Genoese prelate has
been able to exercise over the past three years was certainly greater in
the Secretariat of State’s upper ranks. His departure could become part
of the Conclave puzzle.
Balestrero’s post is being taken up by Camilleri, a
Maltese prelate who is a year older than him and has served as a
diplomat in Papua New Guinea, Uganda and Cuba. Before his current
promotion he was personal secretary to the Vatican’s “foreign affairs
minister”, Mamberti.