Pope Francis held his first meeting on Friday with staff of the Vatican
department that was at the centre of last year's scandal over leaked
documents alleging corruption, ahead of expected changes to its
leadership.
The person he chooses to succeed
Cardinal Tarciscio Bertone as head of the Secretariat of State will be
among his most important decisions because he will be instrumental in
helping Francis set the tone for a humbler Church following a period of
scandals.
Bertone has been widely blamed for
failing to prevent the many mishaps and infighting in Church government
during the eight-year pontificate of now-retired Pope Benedict.
Francis
inherited a Church struggling to deal with priests' sexual abuse of
children; the alleged corruption and infighting in the Vatican's
central administration, known as the Curia; and conflict over the
running of the Vatican's scandal-ridden bank.
Benedict
left a secret report for Francis on the problems in the
administration, which came to light when sensitive documents were
stolen from the pope's desk and leaked by his butler in what became
know as the "Vatileaks" scandal.
The basic
failings of the Curia were aired, sometimes passionately, at
closed-door meetings of cardinals before they retired into the conclave
that elected Francis.
Anger at the mostly
Italian prelates who run the Curia was one of the reasons cardinals
chose the first non-European pope for 1,300 years and quashed the
chances of one of the front runners, Milan Archbishop Angelo Scola.
Francis
greeted each of the Secretariat of State's 300 staff members
individually and thanked them for their "priceless commitment" to the
administering the 1.2 billion-member Catholic Church, a Vatican
statement said.
Benedict's butler, Paolo
Gabriele, was arrested and sentenced by a Vatican court to 18 months in
prison last year but Benedict pardoned him and he was freed just
before Christmas.