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Pope
Benedict XVI resigned after an internal investigation informed him about a web
of blackmail, corruption and gay sex in the Vatican, Italian media
reports say.
A
team of three cardinals were asked by Benedict to verify allegations of
financial impropriety, cronyism and corruption exposed in the so-called
VatiLeaks affair.
In
December, they handed the pontiff a large portfolio of papers which was “an
exact map of the mischief and the bad fish” inside the Holy See, La
Repubblica said.
“It
was on that day, with those papers on his desk, that Benedict XVI took the
decision he had mulled over for so long,” said the centre-left newspaper.
It
said its article was the first of a series, Daily Telegraph reports.
Panorama, a conservative weekly, did not
speculate about the motives behind Benedict’s resignation, but its story about
the contents of the confidential report was broadly similar.
Vatican
spokesman, Father Federico Lombardi refused to “run after fantasies and
opinions” and warned reporters: “Don’t expect comments or rebuttals of what is
being said on this issue.”
Lombardi
said that the three cardinals had submitted their report privately to Pope
Benedict, and it would be passed on to his successor, CatholicCulture.org
reported.
The
three prelates who investigated the “Vatileaks” scandal and prepared a thorough
report – Cardinals Julian Herranz, Jozef Tomko, and Salvatore De Giorgi – will
not be giving interviews or divulging details regarding the contents of the
report, he said.
Cardinal
Herranz, who chaired the commission, confirmed, “The Pope is the only person we
have reported to on this question.”
La
Repubblica
claimed that in a lengthy report on the leaks, the cardinals had alerted the
Pontiff to the existence of factions within the Roman Curia, including a
powerful faction “united by sexual orientation.”
Some
members of that bloc, the cardinals reportedly said, may be vulnerable to
“external influence” because of their activities. The Italian newspaper said
that the report shocked Pope Benedict and contributed to his decision to
resign.
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