POPE FRANCIS plans to appoint lay women to top jobs in the Vatican and to
dilute the power of Italian cardinals in a radical shake-up of the Catholic
Church’s government following a series of scandals.
In a move branded as “revolutionary” by Vatican watchers, the Pope last
weekend appointed eight cardinals to advise him on the governance and reform
of the Curia, the church’s bureaucracy which has been tainted by
controversies over child sex abuse by priests, leaks of papal files and
allegations of corruption.
In an interview with The Sunday Times, Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodriguez
Maradiaga of Honduras, whom Francis named to head the panel and who is now
seen as a “power behind the papal throne”, predicted a difficult fight ahead
for the Argentine pontiff.