Archbishop demands Pope’s resignation, says corruption reaches the top

Archbishop demands Pope’s resignation, says corruption reaches the top

Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano who sparked a crisis in the Catholic Church by calling on Pope Francis to resign has said that he wasn’t motivated by pe

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Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano who sparked a crisis in the Catholic Church by calling on Pope Francis to resign has said that he wasn’t motivated by personal vendetta but sought to show that corruption had reached the top levels of the Church hierarchy. The archbishop has since gone into hiding since conservative media published an 11-page statement in which he alleged the pope knew for years about sexual misconduct by an American cardinal and did nothing about it.

Vigano has been communicating through Aldo Maria Valli, an Italian television journalist who Vigano consulted several times before releasing his statement last Sunday when the pope was in Ireland. However, Italian media reported the archbishop was upset because he was never made a cardinal by former Pope Benedict or because Francis blocked his further advancement in the Church. Also Francis’ supporters say the statement contains holes and contradictions and note that Vigano prepared it with help from two journalists who have been critical of Francis, citing this as evidence that it forms part of an ideological anti-Francis strategy. The journalists deny this.

“I have never had feelings of vendetta and rancour in all these years. I spoke out because corruption has reached the top levels of Church hierarchy,” Vigano, a former Vatican ambassador to Washington told Valli, who has been publishing statements from Vigano in his blog.

In his statement, Vigano accused a long list of current and past Vatican and U.S. Church officials of covering up the case of Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, who resigned last month in disgrace. One of the people he attacks in the statement is Cardinal Tarciscio Bertone, who was secretary of state under former Pope Benedict. Vigano did not include any supporting documents in his remarkably blunt statement in which he said cover-ups in the Church were making it look like “a conspiracy of silence not so dissimilar from the one that prevails in the mafia” adding that he himself gave up the possibility of becoming a cardinal “for the good of the Church”.

The Vatican had no comment on the new accusations by Vigano. On his flight home from Ireland on Sunday, Francis told reporters he would not say one word about the accusations.