All it took was one day and both Archbishop of
Ljubljana Anton Stres and the Archbishop of Maribor Marjan Turnsek were
out of the picture: last Wednesday Francis accepted both their resignations in
accordance with paragraph 2 of Canon 401 of the Code of Canon Law, which
states: “A diocesan bishop who has become less able to fulfill his office because of ill health or some other grave cause is earnestly requested to present his resignation from office.”
The Vatican’s decision to wave goodbye to the archbishops of two of
Slovenia’s six Catholic dioceses, after reports of financial
mismanagement, is a very serious one indeed.
And it comes after Benedict
XVI accepted Archbishop Franc Kramberger’s resignation on 3 February
2011, in accordance with the abovementioned paragraph of Canon law.
Kramberger preceded Turnsek’s as Archbishop of Maribor.
In this case, the Vatican provision applies to
financial problems in Archdiocese of Maribor, where the 70 year old
Archbishop of Ljubljana, Anton Stres, was auxiliary bishop for a few
years.
A scandal exploded in 2010, when the Holy See sent an Apostolic
Visitor to Slovenia after Rome had received a series of unusual requests
regarding some loans that had been granted.
A rather embarrassing
picture emerged: the archdiocese had made massive losses of 800 million
Euros which had been invested in a chain of failing businesses,
including a nationwide TV network known for its variety of porn
channels.
This is why Benedict XVI accepted former archbishop
Kramberger’s resignation.
But as the various different pieces of the
jigsaw came together, it became clear that financial mismanagement in
the diocese had in fact begun in 2003 if not earlier and Mgrs Stres and
Turnsek were greatly to blame.
Stres had been appointed Archbishop of
Ljubljana in 2009 and former coadjutor archbishop Mgr. Turnsek, 58,
succeeded Mgr. Kramberger. This is the background to today’s
resignations.
The Holy See Press Office announced the news and
Archbishop Stres gave a press conference in Ljubljana, stating he had
been informed of Francis’ request for him to give up the leadership of
Slovenia’s largest Episcopal see, last 29 April.
The archbishop accepted
the request, claiming he had never denied his responsibility in the
Maribor affair. “I hope and pray to God that this step I have taken will
help restore credibility to the Slovenian Church, as it deserves it,”
Stres said in a statement.
A similar statement was issued by Archbishop
Turnsek: “I have done my best to deal with the situation but was not
able to for various reasons.”
Looking beyond the Archdiocese of Maribor case,
the question which arises is whether Francis’ tough crack down on
financial behaviour in the Church will extend from the Vatican Bank
(IOR) to dioceses across the world.
In Cameroon, the resignation of the
66 year old Archbishop of Yaoundé, Simon-Victor Tonyé Bakot, has also
been causing quite a stir.
Bakot was formerly president of the country’s
bishops’ Conference.
Francis accepted his resignation on Monday, in
line with paragraph 2 of Canon 401.
As always the Holy See has not
divulged the reasons for this.
But a news article on the archbishop’s
resignation published yesterday in the French section of the Vatican Radio
website, indirectly hinted at finances being the cause.
The article
roughly reads: “According to the Cameroon press, Mgr. Bakot is allegedly
involved in a number of property-related operations. Various members of
the clergy and faithful have spoken out against this and against his
management of the diocese’s land. They also complain about the
ethnically influenced positions he often takes. The Jeune Afrique (Africa’s leading news magazine, Ed.)
website claims that the diocese of Yaoundé possesses the largest amount
of real estate property in the country, after the State, but still
faces serious debt problems.”