AN UPDATE…. POPE: DIALOGUE IS THE ALTERNATIVE TO FRAGMENTATION AND CONFLICT – PILLAGING MONASTERIES: THE VATICAN’S HIDDEN FINANCIAL SCANDAL

AN UPDATE….

I need to update the column I posted on Saturday when the Vatican announced Pope Francis’ trip to L’Aquila on August 28 (POPE FRANCIS TO VISIT L’AQUILA IN AUGUST: IS THERE A MESSAGE IN HIS TRIP? | Joan’s Rome (wordpress.com))

I wrote that the day of his trip to L’Aquila, August 28 was supposed to be the first of two days of meetings with the entire College of Cardinals, meetings announced by Pope Francis at the Regina Coeli on May 29, along with the names of the 21 men who will become cardinals on August 27.

In reality, the official two-day meeting of the entire College of Cardinals is set for August 29 and 30, with August 28 ostensibly serving as a day for many, if not most, cardinals to get to know each other, perhaps by sharing a meal or even a long walk or even an exchange of ideas in small gatherings.

I’ve had several cardinals tell me over the past year or two that they don’t know the majority of their brother cardinals, Not only do they not know each other, big numbers of cardinals have never even met their fellow members of the College of Cardinals in person, much less sat down for a coffee, aperitivo, meal or a walk.

Pope Francis wants the cardinals, in the official meetings, to discuss the new Apostolic Constitution Praedicate Evangelium on the reform of the Roman Curia that entered into force yesterday, June 5, Pentecost. Since that document is a fait accompli, one can wonder what there is to discuss. Are challenges or questions forthcoming? We can only conjecture.

Might the cardinals have other issues on their mind, a thousand questions they want to ask of each other and the Holy Father? I think it’s a safe bet to say ’yes’ they do!

POPE: DIALOGUE IS THE ALTERNATIVE TO FRAGMENTATION AND CONFLICT

Pope Francis addressed members of the Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue on the occasion of their plenary assembly, noting that inter-religious dialogue is crucial in a world torn by conflict. (Vatican photo)

By Linda Bordoni (vaticannews)

Pope Francis’s speech to members of the Dicastery for Inter-religious Dialogue on Monday provided him with the occasion to reiterate his appeal for dialogue, based on the acceptance of diversity and respect for the other, as the only alternative to the fragmentation and conflict we experience in the world today.

His words came in the wake of his urgent plea on Pentecost Sunday to government leaders to step back and avoid leading humanity to ruin.

In his speech to the dicastery and to its president, Cardinal Miguel Ángel Ayuso Guixot, as it holds its plenary assembly, the Pope recalled that the institution was established by Pope St. Paul VI as the “Secretariat for Non-Christians” in his Pentecost homily in 1964, during the Second Vatican Council.

His intuition, the Pope said,  “was based on an awareness of the exponential development of relations between people and communities of different cultures, languages and religions – an aspect of what we now call globalization.”

For more: Pope: Dialogue is the alternative to fragmentation and conflict – Vatican News

PILLAGING MONASTERIES: THE VATICAN’S HIDDEN FINANCIAL SCANDAL

Crisis Magazine on another crisis: Pillaging the Monasteries: The Vatican’s Hidden Financial Scandal (crisismagazine.com) As if there are not enough problems with other financial issues in the Vatican, especially the trail underway in the Vatican with 10 people indicted, including a cardinal, for bribery, corruption, extortion, fraud, and abuse of office, in connection with Vatican investment in a real estate deal in London.

I heard a few vague whispers several years ago when I went to the fairly new Il Cantico Hotel for a reception (mentioned prominently in this story), and they had something to do with the large piece of property owned by Franciscans, now housing an elegant hotel. I’ve returned a number of times over the years for meals with pilgrim groups or receptions for or by Vatican offices and officials but never heard anything more.

Il Cantico is perhaps a 7-minute walk from my house, just past the Franciscan parish of St. Gregory VII where I have occasionally attended Mass. I was told on my first visit that the land on which Il Cantico was built, adjacent to St. Gregory, was owned by Franciscans but I do not remember if it was the Franciscans of that parish, though that seemed like a logical conclusion.

This is such a sad, shameful story! Is this just the tip of an iceberg?

Might these scandals possibly be among items the College of Cardinals wants to discuss with the Holy Father when they meet almost three months from now?

 

 

COUNCIL FOR ECONOMY MEETS TO APPROVE HOLY SEE 2020 FINAL BALANCE SHEET – 2020 ASIF REPORT SHOWS CONSTANT IMPROVEMENT

It is well known that the Vatican is in financial difficulty as we see from some figures published several times a year.   A Vatican statement, for example, on February 19 noted that the Secretariat for the Economy expects a multimillion-dollar deficit for 2021.

That statement noted that, “With total revenues of 260.4 million euros and expenses of 310.1 million euros, the Holy See expects a deficit of 49.7 million euros ($60.3 million) in 2021, heavily impacted by the economic crisis generated by the COVID-19 pandemic.”

A brief statement from the Council for the Economy was released today – that follows. I then offer a link to the Vatican news story about the ASIF.

COUNCIL FOR ECONOMY MEETS TO APPROVE HOLY SEE 2020 FINAL BALANCE SHEET

A meeting of the Council for the Economy was held yesterday afternoon and this morning, July 14 and 15, 2021. The meeting was attended by the president, Cardinal Reinhard Marx, the Secretary, Msgr. Brian Edwin Ferme, and some members of the Council: Cardinals Péter Erdő, Archbishop of Esztergom-Budapest, Joseph William Tobin, Archbishop of Newark, Anders Arborelius, Bishop of Stockholm and Giuseppe Petrocchi, Archbishop of L’Aquila; also Prof. Charlotte Kreuter-Kirchhof, Dr. Eva Castillo Sanz, Dr. Marija Kolak, Dr. Alberto Minali and Dr. María Concepción Osákar Garaicoechea.

Cardinals Wilfrid Fox Napier, archbishop of Durban, Odilo Pedro Scherer, archbishop of São Paulo, Gérald Cyprien Lacroix, archbishop of Québec, Dr. Leslie Jane Ferrar, and the honorable Ruth Maria Kelly

Also present for the assembly at the Vatican were Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Secretary of State, Fr. Juan Antonio Guerrero Alves, prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy (SPE), and Dr. Alessandro Cassinis Righini, auditor general.

The purpose of the meeting was the approval of the Holy See’s final balance sheet for 2020, presented to the extent of their respective competence by the prefect of the SPE, and a reflection on the investment policy of the Holy See, moderated by Dr. Eva Castillo Sanz.

On the evening of July 14, at the end of the session, Cardinal Marx celebrated Mass for those present. The meeting ended at 13:00 on July 15, with the next meeting scheduled for September 2021

2020 ASIF REPORT SHOWS CONSTANT IMPROVEMENT

An extensive account of the activity carried in the past year, an analysis of Moneyval’s positive judgment in the fight against money laundering and the financing of terrorism, the current state of regulation, supervision and financial information as well as of international cooperation are highlighted in the ASIF 2020 Report published today. A summary of the report, along with some graphs can be found here: 2020 ASIF Report shows constant improvement – Vatican News

Vatican media photo: This building – a former prison – now houses IOR, Istituto per le Opera di Religione:

Also this: The Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy explains the 2021 budget in an interview with Vatican Media: “Our budgeted expenses are the lowest in recent history, but we are not cutting services or restructuring staff.” Fr Guerrero: “The Holy See reduces costs, not its mission” – Vatican News

VATICAN FINANCES: ACCOUNTABILITY AND TRANSPARENCY – CARDINAL PAROLIN SAYS HE ARRANGED CONTROVERSIAL HOSPITAL LOAN, PAPAL FOUNDATION GRANT

Pope Francis today started his first full day of activities on his visit to Thailand, the first of two nations he will visit between now and November 26. I have posted a separate column on that journey.

VATICAN FINANCES: ACCOUNTABILITY AND TRANSPARENCY

I also posted this today on Facebook and Twitter: A cogent and easy to read piece that goes to the heart of the matter: https://religionnews.com/2019/11/20/four-powers-the-pope-needs-to-grant-the-new-chief-of-vatican-finances/
And the Wall Street Journal posted this:

VATICAN LOSES ACCESS TO INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL WATCHDOG INFORMATION – The Egmont Group, a network of financial intelligence units, has suspended the Vatican watchdog from accessing its secure web system – by Francis X. Rocca

ROME -An international network of financial watchdogs has suspended the Vatican’s access to its information, dealing a major blow to the Vatican’s financial credibility under Pope Francis. The Egmont Group, a Toronto-based network of more than 160 national financial intelligence units around the world, has decided to suspend the Vatican watchdog from access to its secure web system, through which members share information about money laundering, financing of terrorism, tax fraud and other financial crimes….” (https://www.wsj.com/articles/vatican-loses-access-to-international-financial-watchdog-information-11574199689)

CARDINAL PAROLIN SAYS HE ARRANGED CONTROVERSIAL HOSPITAL LOAN, PAPAL FOUNDATION GRANT

Vatican City, Nov 20, 2019 / 10:26 am (CNA) – The Vatican Secretary of State told CNA this week that he is responsible for arranging a controversial loan for the purchase of a bankrupt Italian hospital, and that he arranged with Cardinal Donald Wuerl a grant from the U.S.-based Papal Foundation to cover the loan when it could not be repaid.

Cardinal Pietro Parolin told CNA he felt “compelled” to address the matter “in order to put an end to a controversy that takes away time and resources from our service to the Lord, to the Church and to the Pope, and disturbs the conscience of many Catholics.”

“The operations involving IDI…are ascribable to myself,” Parolin told CNA Nov. 19, while insisting that his actions regarding the IDI were both legal and transparent.

CNA asked Parolin to confirm that he personally had arranged a 2014 loan of 50 million euros from APSA, the Vatican’s central bank, to partially fund the purchase of the bankrupt IDI hospital. The cardinal confirmed that he had.

The IDI was purchased in 2015 by a for-profit partnership of the Vatican’s Secretariat of State and the religious order that had owned and managed the hospital while it went bankrupt, incurred 800 million euros of debt, and saw some of its former administrators prosecuted and jailed for systematic fraud and embezzlement.

Though Parolin said the arrangement was “carried out with fair intentions and honest means,” the APSA loan is likely to draw scrutiny from European banking regulators, as the loan seems to violate 2012 regulatory agreements prohibiting the bank from making commercial loans.

Those agreements were the result of an on-site inspection by Moneyval, the Council of Europe’s Committee for combating money laundering and terrorist financing, and legally prohibit APSA from providing services to individuals or taking part in commercial transactions.

CNA also asked Parolin to confirm that he had personally devised a plan with Wuerl to request Papal Foundation funds to cover APSA’s bad loan. The cardinal confirmed that he had.

The $25 million grant request was widely understood to be an effort to remove the bad debt from APSA’s ledger before it drew attention, after it became obvious that the debt-ridden and insolvent hospital could not repay its loan to the Vatican central bank.

Wuerl, however, told the Papal Foundation board that the funds were intended to save the IDI from closure by covering short term operating deficits. But lay board members raised questions about whether the cash was really intended to meet an operating shortfall at the hospital, or to cover the bad debt at APSA.

Papal Foundation trustees and donors expressed also skepticism about the amount requested, which was far larger than its normal disbursements, which ordinarily are grants of a few hundred thousand dollars to charities around the world, selected by the Holy See.

After one board member objected to the loan by letter, former cardinal Theodore McCarrick, who was then a member of the board, wrote that raising concerns was “irresponsible, and seriously harmful to The Papal Foundation.”

McCarrick was under investigation for sexually abusing minors at the time he intervened in the matter.

Despite objections, the grant was ultimately approved by the Papal Foundation board in a secret ballot – sources inside the foundation told CNA that board members believe all but one of the bishop members voted for it, while all but one of the lay members voted against approving the grant.

Dispersal of the money stalled after the board continued to ask questions about the final destination of the funds.

Two initial installments were sent to Rome in late 2017 and early 2018, totaling $13 million. After internal disagreements about the grant went public, Cardinal Wuerl said he would ask the Vatican to cancel the request and return the funds. In early 2019 Parolin wrote to the board saying the $13 million would be reclassified as a loan, rather than a grant, and would be repaid as credits against future grant requests.

When the grant money stalled, APSA was forced to write off 30 million of the 50 million euro loan, wiping out APSA’s profits for the 2018 financial year.

Bishop Nunzio Galantino, head of APSA, acknowledged the loan and its write-off in September, even though APSA is legally prohibited from making loans that finance commercial transactions, due to its 2012 moneyval agreement.

After the Oct. 21 publication of a book that alleged the Vatican was nearly insolvent, Galatino blamed the loan for APSA’s failure to register a profit for the first time in its history.

Parolin answered CNA’s questions this week after Cardinal Angelo Becciu, who has widely been reported to have been the driving force behind both arranging the loan and pushing for the Papal Foundation grant, contacted CNA to deny his involvement in those matters. He told CNA that both matters were the “competence” of the Secretary of State, Parolin.

Becciu told CNA by text message earlier this month that he had not known about the APSA loan until after it was arranged, and that he had no part in requesting a grant from the Papal Foundation.

The 2014 APSA loan was arranged over the strong objections of Cardinal George Pell, then serving as the Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy and charged by Pope Francis with enforcing financial accountability on the Roman Curia. CNA has also reported a loan request for the same purpose had been vetoed by the IOR, the Vatican’s deposit bank, after its president, Jean-Baptiste Douville de Franssu, and Pell agreed that the IDI was unviable and the money would never be repaid.

While Parolin took responsibility for the IDI arrangements, Vatican officials across several dicasteries have told CNA Becciu was involved in organizing both the loan and coordinating the lobbying effort for the Papal Foundation grant. That effort included a visit to McCarrick by the secretary of APSA, Fr. Mauro Rivella, in Washington, DC, shortly after the grant request was made. The visit took place before McCarrick pushed board members to approve the grant, and after an investigation into McCarrick’s sexual misconduct had begun.

Still, Parolin insisted that “as far as I know, Cardinal Becciu had no role whatsoever in” those matters.

Nevertheless, Becciu’s personal connections to the IDI hospital go back at least as far as his appointment to the position of sostituto in 2011.

Shortly after Becciu began working as the second-ranking official in the Secretariat of State, Fr. Franco Decaminada, the IDI’s president – subsequently arrested, prosecuted, imprisoned, and laicised for theft and fraud – approached him for support on a proposal that the Secretariat of State supply the IDI with 200 million euros, ostensibly to fund a take over of another hospital by the IDI, which was already teetering on insolvency.

In October, Becciu told CNA he did not recall any such proposal, though it had been reported previously in Italian media. Shortly after that proposal was made, Decaminada hired Becciu’s niece Maria Piera Becciu, as his personal secretary.

In October, CNA asked Becciu if he or his position at the Secretariat of State had played any role in the hiring of his niece at the IDI. He told CNA that, “she applied for the position and was hired.”

Last month, Becciu told CNA that his interest and involvement with the IDI ceased when Cardinal Parolin was appointed Secretary of State.

“Cardinal Parolin assumed the office of Secretary of State [in 2013] and I no longer concerned myself with IDI,” he said.

While taking responsibility for the APSA loan and the Papal Foundation request, Parolin told CNA that the interpretation of those events “by certain media is a different matter, presenting these operations as non-transparent, irregular or even illegal: this, as far as I am concerned, is not the truth.”

But beyond the APSA loan and Papal Foundation grant, other aspects of the IDI purchase have raised serious questions.

In addition to the APSA loan, the Vatican also used 30 million euros diverted from the Bambino Gesu, another hospital under its oversight, to purchase the bankrupt IDI. That money was taken from an 80 million euro grant the Italian government had given the Bambino Gesu.

Cardinal Guisseppe Versaldi arranged that diversion. At the time, Versaldi led the partnership to buy the IDI, oversaw the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See and was the Vatican’s delegate to oversee the Italian province of the Sons of the Immaculate Conception, the religious congregation that had owned the hospital, had a partnership with the Vatican to buy it again, and had also been dragged into insolvency.

Wiretaps recorded Versaldi discussing the plan with Giuseppe Profiti, the president of Bambino Gesu, with the two agreeing to conceal the misdirection of the funds from Pope Francis.

Versaldi and Profiti later denied any wrongdoing, and the cardinal claimed he only wanted to spare the pope the technical details of the efforts to save the IDI.

In his comments to CNA Parolin also addressed a lament from Becciu, who told CNA this month that while he is uncertain which Vatican officials have suggested he is connected to the IDI affair, he believes he could be the victim of a misinformation campaign, designed to sully his reputation by linking him to the affair.

Parolin does not think that to be the case.

“I believe there is no curial plot. In any case, I am completely extraneous to any operation of the kind: if there were such an operation I would condemn it in the strongest possible terms,” Parolin told CNA.

A spokesman for Wuerl told CNA that the cardinal “has no comment beyond reiterating those facts already on the public record regarding the Papal Foundation application process.”

VATICAN RELEASES 2014 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

You may recall that in mid-June, on a flight to Rome from a cousin’s funeral in Chicago, I sat next to Bret Bonanni, one of the members of the USA Water Polo team on the plane on their way to a round of matches in Europe. On June 15, their one free day in Rome, nine of the team members joined me and Santiago Perez, head of the Vatican’s Sports Desk at the Council for the Laity, on a three-hour tour of Vatican City, the gardens and the basilica. I wrote about that morning and posted a photo.

Each of the team members wrote me a beautiful thank-you email and I have been able to stay in touch, especially with Bret and his parents, who were in Europe for the matches and took me to dinner in Rome. They are all currently in Toronto where the USA Water Polo teams, both men and women, won the Gold Medal matches last night! Seems they are now on the road to Rio 2016!

Here is a photo from the link to the victory story:

USA WATER POLO TEAM

http://www.teamusa.org/News/2015/July/16/Veteran-Captain-Tony-Azevedo-Leads-Recently-Formed-Mens-Water-Polo-Team-To-Gold

VATICAN RELEASES 2014 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The Vatican today released its 2014 financial statements and, noting that new accounting systems had been used for 2014, there was good news and bad news.

Income from areas like the Vatican Museums and the sales of stamps almost doubled profits from the previous year (from 33 million euros to 63.5 million euros), but the budget deficit to run the Roman Curia grew over 2013 (up from 24.5 million euros to 25.6 million).

Previously unreported assets of 1.1 billion euros, and previously unreported liabilities of 222 million euros meant that net assets rose by 939 million euros.

The biggest single outlay in 2014 for the Vatican was salaries for 2,880 personnel at 64 Holy See entities – 126.6 million euros.

The Governorato – the administration that basically runs Vatican City state – the museums, pharmacy and medical offices, clothing and food stores, post office, police and fire department – has a staff of 1,930 people.

Another entry: 21 million euros in contributions from the world’s dioceses and 50 million euros from the Vatican bank.

Here is the report released by the Secretariat for the Economy, headed by Cardinal George Pell:

2014 Financial Statements: Consolidated Financial Statements of the Holy See and Financial Statements of the Governorate of Vatican City State

At the Council for the Economy meeting on 14 July 2015, Cardinal Pell and the staff from the Secretariat for the Economy presented the Consolidated Statements for the Holy See and the Financial Statements for the Governatorato.  The Statements had been prepared by the Prefecture for Economic Affairs and reviewed and verified by the Secretariat, the Audit Committee of the Council and the External Auditor. It was noted that 2014 was a year of transition to new Financial.

Management policies based on International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS). The former accounting principles and consolidation perimeter (comprising 64 Holy See entities) were used in preparation of the 2014 Statements.  Managers were however asked to ensure they had included all assets and liabilities and provide appropriate certification as to completeness and accuracy.  Working with the external auditor, third party confirmation of balances were requested so that, consistent with sound audit practice, amounts could be independently verified.  To include all assets and liabilities in the accounts at year end and to prepare for the new policies, a number of closing entries were included which make direct comparison with 2013 figures difficult.  Where appropriate relevant points of comparison were provided to the Council.

The journey of transition to new policies is progressing well and the Secretariat was pleased to report high levels of interest and cooperation in the entities.   The 2014 Financial Statements reflect  an  enormous  amount  of  work  by  staff  in  many  Holy  See  entities,  particularly  in  the Prefettura for Economic Affairs and the Secretariat for the Economy and Council members expressed their gratitude for the rigourous and professional work and the strong commitment to implementing the financial reforms approved by the Holy Father.

The Financial Statements for the Holy See for 2014 indicate a deficit of 25.621 M Euro which is similar to the deficit of 24.471 M Euro reported in the 2013 Statements.  Had the same accounting treatment applied in 2014 been applied in 2013, the 2013 deficit would have been reported as 37.209 M Euro – the improvement in 2014 was largely due to favourable movements in investments held by the Holy See. The main sources of income in 2014, in addition to investments, include the contributions made pursuant to Canon 1271 of the Code of Canon Law (21 M Euro) and the contribution from Institute of Works of Religion (50 M Euro).

Net Assets increased by 939 M Euro as adjustments were made to include all assets and liabilities in the closing balances for 2014.  For the entities included in the consolidation perimeter, assets previously off the Balance sheet amounted to 1,114 M Euro and liabilities amounted to 222 M Euro.  While the patrimonial situation in the Pension Fund was not reflected in the closing Balance Sheet, it was reported that the new Pension Fund Board will be asked to prepare an updated assessment of the overall situation.

As in previous years, the most significant expense included in the Holy See Financial Statements is the cost of staff (126.6 M Euro) and the Statements indicate total staffing of 2880 in the 64 Holy See entities included in the consolidation.

The Financial Statements for the Governatorato for 2014 indicate a surplus of 63.519 M Euro which is a significant improvement on the 2013 surplus of 33.042 M Euro, largely due to continued strong revenue from the cultural activities (especially the Museums) and favourable movements in investments.  Net Assets increased by 63.5 M Euro and there were no adjustments necessary to include additional assets and liabilities in closing balances for 2014.  The Statements indicate a total staffing in the Governatorato of 1930.

Following the meeting of the Council for the Economy, the Secretariat for the Economy was advised the Auditor confirmed that a clear audit certificate had been issued for the Holy See and Governatorato Financial Statements.

The Council also received a further update on the 2015 Budget. The 2015 Budgets were prepared under the new Financial Management Policies, approved last year by the Holy Father. The Council in late May received a detailed budget submission prepared by the Secretariat.

The submission highlighted proposed activities as well as anticipated revenue and expenditure for the coming year and included specific recommendations for each of the 136 entities on the list, as approved  by  the  Holy  Father,  who  are  subject  to  control  and  vigilance  of  the  Council  and Secretariat.  The Budgets indicate the deficits experienced in recent years are likely to continue in 2015.

While rapid progress is being made in implementing reforms requested by the Holy Father, the complete transition to the IPSAS is likely to take several years.  The 2015 Budgets and the 2015

Statements are the first important steps. From 2015, the Consolidated Statements for the Holy See will include the new practices and additional entities, as required under the new Financial Management Policies and the IPSAS Standards.