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'Spying' on The Pope Francis: Vatican Leaks Reveal Dirty Dealings
Wiretaps of the pope's private conversations allegedly recorded by a racy 
social climber and a Spanish prelate are rocking the Catholic Church after 
confidential information including claims of theft and debauchery was passed to 
investigative journalists.
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VATICAN CITY:  Wiretaps of the pope's private conversations allegedly recorded 
by a racy social climber and a Spanish prelate are rocking the Catholic Church 
after confidential information including claims of theft and debauchery was 
passed to investigative journalists.

Two books by the investigative journalists set to be published Wednesday claim 
charity money was allegedly spent on refurbishing the houses of powerful 
cardinals, while the murky Vatican bank continues to shelter suspected 
criminals.

Suspected moles -- PR expert Francesca Chaouqui and Monsignor Lucio Angel 
Vallejo Balda -- arrested at the weekend for allegedly stealing and leaking 
classified documents, risk up to eight years in prison if the case gets to 
court.

There was no official confirmation they had passed confidential information to 
journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi, but the Vatican on Tuesday 
published a statement on the arrests which also slammed the books.

While Vallejo Balda languishes in jail, Chaouqui, 33, was released after 
assuring investigators of her cooperation in a case which has thrown light on 
Pope Francis's struggles to clean up a centuries-old institution unwilling to 
give up its privileges.

"I am totally innocent and I'll prove it," La Stampa daily quoted the 
dark-haired woman dubbed a "sex bomb" by Italian media as saying, adding that 
Vallejo Balda "did everything, I tried to stop him".

The recording and publication of the pope's private conversations "is the most 
controversial aspect of all the dust blown up by the second Vatileaks," the 
Repubblica daily said, comparing the scandal to a similar one three years ago.

Then, it was Pope Benedict XVI's butler who leaked documents revealing fierce 
infighting in the highest echelons of the Church and allegations of serious 
fraud. He was sentenced to 18 months in prison, before being pardoned by the 
pope but banished from the Vatican forever.

'Wealth, scandals, secrets'

In wiretaps transcribed in "Merchants in the Temple" by journalist Nuzzi, 
Francis can be heard asking, "if we don't know how to look after money, which 
we can see, how can we look after the souls of the faithful, which we cannot?"

The pope also tells people described as "collaborators" by Nuzzi that "the 
costs are out of control".

Journalist Emiliano Fittipaldi, who is releasing "Avarice: Documents Revealing 
Wealth, Scandals and Secrets of Francis' Church", reveals how Church 
foundations for sick children act as bank accounts for cardinals.

He told a press conference on Tuesday that former Vatican secretary of state 
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone redirected funds from a Vatican-run hospital to do up 
his loft apartment and ran up outlandish expenses including a 23,800 euro 
($26,400) helicopter ride in 2012.

Fittipaldi also said he had access to documents showing that the Saint Peter's 
Pence offerings sent to the Vatican from parishes around the world -- totalling 
some 378 million euros in 2013 -- ended up in an account used largely to pay 
for Vatican bureaucracy rather than for charitable purposes.

A Vatican statement Monday denounced the upcoming works as "fruit of a serious 
betrayal of the pope's trust" and said it was considering legal action.

Religious experts said the leaks may have been motivated by frustrated 
ambitions, with Vallejo Balda, 54, publicly passed over for promotion and 
Chaouqui frustrated in attempts to climb the Vatican's social ladders.

In a Facebook post on Tuesday Chaouqui denied leaking "even one piece of paper" 
and said "there is nothing I have ever loved more or defended more than the 
Church and the pope".

Revengeful mudslingers

The former Ernst & Young lobbyist was selected to be part of a special 
commission set up by Pope Francis to advise him on economic reform within the 
Church -- an appointment which raised eyebrows in 2013 after it emerged she had 
been highly critical of the Vatican on Twitter in 2012.

Tweets -- which she claimed were written by a hacker -- included one which said 
Pope Benedict had leukaemia, one which said high-ranking Cardinal Tarcisio 
Bertone was corrupt and one which accused a former Italian minister of being 
gay.

The Vatican's embarrassment only increased when racy photos of her went viral 
on the Internet.

There were immediately questions as to whether Chaouqui, who has Moroccan 
origins, might be behind a rumour last month, denied by the Vatican, that 
Francis has a benign brain tumour.

The trained lawyer, who is reportedly pregnant, hit the headlines again in 2014 
when she was suspected of having organised a lavish party for the rich and 
famous on a Vatican terrace at the Holy See's expense.

It was Vallejo Balda who reportedly provided communion for 150 VIPs from a 
gaudy crystal cup -- much to Francis's fury.

Francis was tasked by his cardinal electors to stamp his authority on the 
bickering Curia, the Church's governing body, and clean up the Vatican bank -- 
but the fresh leaks looked set to fuel criticisms of his reform programme.
Story First Published: November 04, 2015 03:10 IST


















































































































































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