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Pope will have security, immunity by remaining in the Vatican, playing Mozart, tending to his cats, hugging his stuffed animals, and enjoying Bavarian potato ravioli




http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSBRE91E0ZI20130215?irpc=932

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I thank “Vatican Gate” for this link.

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The similarities between Richard Nixon and Joseph Ratzinger (Pope Benedict XVI) are clear. So are the differences. Nixon’s crime was covering up a burglary.  Ratzinger’s crime was and is (his crime is still ongoing) covering up rapes of tens of thousands of children by Roman Catholic priests. Nixon didn’t go to jail; neither will Ratzinger. That, unfortunately, is the way the world works.

We were recently told by Archbishop Gomez of Los Angeles, a member of Opus Dei, that Ratzinger is a saint for resigning. If Opus Dei rings a bell, it may be because you saw the Da Vinci Code. Do you remember Silas, the fictional albino in that movie? Silas is an Opus Dei numerary who practices severe corporal mortification.

Don’t expect Ratzinger to practice corporal mortification.  In his exile, in a convent in Vatican City, not on Elba, Ratzinger will continue to enjoy playing the piano, listening to Mozart and Bach, tending to his cats, hugging the stuffed animals his mother made for him when he was a child, and consuming his favorite meal: Bavarian potato ravioli with pancake strips.

What a guy! 

What a Church!

The One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic Roman Criminal Church!

[FJD]. 

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Pope will have security, immunity by remaining in the Vatican

Fri, Feb 15 13:59 PM EST

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – Pope Benedict’s decision to live in the Vatican after he resigns will provide him with security and privacy. It will also offer legal protection from any attempt to prosecute him in connection with sexual abuse cases around the world, Church sources and legal experts say.

“His continued presence in the Vatican is necessary, otherwise he might be defenseless. He wouldn’t have his immunity, his prerogatives, his security, if he is anywhere else,” said one Vatican official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“It is absolutely necessary” that he stays in the Vatican, said the source, adding that Benedict should have a “dignified existence” in his remaining years.

Vatican sources said officials had three main considerations in deciding that Benedict should live in a convent in the Vatican after he resigns on February 28.

Vatican police, who already know the pope and his habits, will be able to guarantee his privacy and security and not have to entrust it to a foreign police force, which would be necessary if he moved to another country.

“I see a big problem if he would go anywhere else. I’m thinking in terms of his personal security, his safety. We don’t have a secret service that can devote huge resources (like they do) to ex-presidents,” the official said.

Another consideration was that if the pope did move permanently to another country, living in seclusion in a monastery in his native Germany, for example, the location might become a place of pilgrimage.

POTENTIAL EXPOSURE

This could be complicated for the Church, particularly in the unlikely event that the next pope makes decisions that may displease conservatives, who could then go to Benedict’s place of residence to pay tribute to him.

“That would be very problematic,” another Vatican official said.

The final key consideration is the pope’s potential exposure to legal claims over the Catholic Church’s sexual abuse scandals.

In 2010, for example, Benedict was named as a defendant in a law suit alleging that he failed to take action as a cardinal in 1995 when he was allegedly told about a priest who had abused boys at a U.S. school for the deaf decades earlier. The lawyers withdrew the case last year and the Vatican said it was a major victory that proved the pope could not be held liable for the actions of abusive priests.

Benedict is currently not named specifically in any other case. The Vatican does not expect any more but is not ruling out the possibility.

“(If he lived anywhere else) then we might have those crazies who are filing lawsuits, or some magistrate might arrest him like other (former) heads of state have been for alleged acts while he was head of state,” one source said.

Another official said: “While this was not the main consideration, it certainly is a corollary, a natural result.”

After he resigns, Benedict will no longer be the sovereign monarch of the State of Vatican City, which is surrounded by Rome, but will retain Vatican citizenship and residency.

LATERAN PACTS

That would continue to provide him immunity under the provisions of the Lateran Pacts while he is in the Vatican and even if he makes jaunts into Italy as a Vatican citizen.

The 1929 Lateran Pacts between Italy and the Holy See, which established Vatican City as a sovereign state, said Vatican City would be “invariably and in every event considered as neutral and inviolable territory”.

There have been repeated calls for Benedict’s arrest over sexual abuse in the Catholic Church.

When Benedict went to Britain in 2010, British author and atheist campaigner Richard Dawkins asked authorities to arrest the pope to face questions over the Church’s child abuse scandal.

Dawkins and the late British-American journalist Christopher Hitchens commissioned lawyers to explore ways of taking legal action against the pope. Their efforts came to nothing because the pope was a head of state and so enjoyed diplomatic immunity.

In 2011, victims of sexual abuse by the clergy asked the International Criminal Court to investigate the pope and three Vatican officials over sexual abuse.

The New York-based rights group Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) and another group, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), filed a complaint with the ICC alleging that Vatican officials committed crimes against humanity because they tolerated and enabled sex crimes.

The ICC has not taken up the case but has never said why. It generally does not comment on why it does not take up cases.

NOT LIKE A CEO

The Vatican has consistently said that a pope cannot be held accountable for cases of abuse committed by others because priests are employees of individual dioceses around the world and not direct employees of the Vatican. It says the head of the church cannot be compared to the CEO of a company.

Victims groups have said Benedict, particularly in his previous job at the head of the Vatican’s doctrinal department, turned a blind eye to the overall policies of local Churches, which moved abusers from parish to parish instead of defrocking them and handing them over to authorities.

The Vatican has denied this. The pope has apologized for abuse in the Church, has met with abuse victims on many of his trips, and ordered a major investigation into abuse in Ireland.

But groups representing some of the victims say the Pope will leave office with a stain on his legacy because he was in positions of power in the Vatican for more than three decades, first as a cardinal and then as pope, and should have done more.

The scandals began years before the then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was elected pope in 2005 but the issue has overshadowed his papacy from the beginning, as more and more cases came to light in dioceses across the world.

As recently as last month, the former archbishop of Los Angeles, Cardinal Roger Mahony, was stripped by his successor of all public and administrative duties after a thousands of pages of files detailing abuse in the 1980s were made public.

Mahony, who was archbishop of Los Angeles from 1985 until 2011, has apologized for “mistakes” he made as archbishop, saying he had not been equipped to deal with the problem of sexual misconduct involving children. The pope was not named in that case.

In 2007, the Los Angeles archdiocese, which serves 4 million Catholics, reached a $660 million civil settlement with more than 500 victims of child molestation, the biggest agreement of its kind in the United States.

Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said the pope “gave the fight against sexual abuse a new impulse, ensuring that new rules were put in place to prevent future abuse and to listen to victims. That was a great merit of his papacy and for that we will be grateful”.

(Reporting by Philip Pullella; Additional reporting by Robin Pomeroy; Edited by Simon Robinson and Giles Elgood)

 

 




    5 Responses to “Pope will have security, immunity by remaining in the Vatican, playing Mozart, tending to his cats, hugging his stuffed animals, and enjoying Bavarian potato ravioli”

  1. Jim Jenkins Says:

    There is so much one can say about B16′s resignation. We can only speculate on the outcome of the conclave soon to assemble in Rome. Since Ratzinger has been such a careful politician over his entire career, it is hard for me to imagine that he has left the choice of his successor to chance.

    With the stink from the “Paolo-the-Butler-Did-It Affair” still hanging like acrid incense in the air, it could be very plausible that Ratzinger has quietly arranged to have his successor already fitted for his white cassock. The Butler Affair revealed, if nothing else, is that there are seismic tensions within the Vatican hierarchy that even the Panzer pope could not tame. Challenges galore ready for anyone who dares slip his big toe into the “shoes of the fisherman.”

    Nonetheless, to those of us still old enough to remember, miracles do happen: Angelo Roncalli, J23rd, defied the pundits and naysayers, and became what is arguably the greatest Christian apostle since Peter and Paul. IF, IF such a man could, or should emerge, I would be the first to cheer. But alas, I fear that we shall not see the like of J23rd again for at least another millennium.

    The problem is that no man can first rise to the rank of cardinal without the support and affection of the most conservative reactionaries in the Catholic hierarchy – most especially Joseph Ratzinger. How could such a man then after his election as pope turn his back so easily on these gargoyles in the hierarchy???

    Not going to happen!

    The biggest nut the hierarchs will have to crack is who among the cardinals is the best candidate to keep the corruption, complicity and cover-up going. If a cardinal still has any human dignity and self-respect left, why would he ever even consent to being elected? Who needs that mess? And, as in the case of Albino Luciano, JP1, it could mean your premature demise under very mysterious circumstances.

    On second thought, sadly that is all the hierarchs ever live for! All these cardinals probably get up every morning, look in the mirror and imagine that the next pope maybe, just maybe is staring at them!

  2. Thomas Says:

    Mirror mirror on the wall…floss 3 times before the fall.

  3. Frank Lostaunau Says:

    There is a very thoughtful individual from the mid-west who has high hopes that Bill Maher might be elected as the next pope…lets keep our fingers crossed.

  4. Thomas Says:

    If he can sing his way to glory…so be it! Even he won’t be able to handle the heat in that seat!

  5. Frank Lostaunau Says:

    estoy enamorado…locamente enamorado con joxean bengoetxea…GORA!

    http://www.argia.com/albistea/josean-bengoetxea-probokazioa-da-jendea-nahi-duzun-bidetik-eramatea?botua=0&albiste_id=40734


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