Departments
used to have 'free hand', but this is changing
Jakarta Globe, Reuters, Dec 04, 2014
Nuns take pictures in St. Peter's square on Dec. 4, 2014 at the Vatican during the installation of the traditional Christmas tree. (AFP Photo/Vincenzo Pinto) |
Vatican
City. The Vatican’s economy minister has said hundreds of millions of euros
were found “tucked away” in accounts of various Holy See departments without
having appeared in the city-state’s balance sheets.
In an
article for Britain’s Catholic Herald Magazine to be published on Friday,
Australian Cardinal George Pell wrote that the discovery meant overall Vatican
finances were in better shape than previously believed.
“In fact,
we have discovered that the situation is much healthier than it seemed, because
some hundreds of millions of euros were tucked away in particular sectional
accounts and did not appear on the balance sheet,” he wrote.
“It is important
to point out that the Vatican is not broke … the Holy See is paying its way,
while possessing substantial assets and investments,” Pell said, according to
an advance text made available on Thursday.
Pell did
not suggest any wrongdoing but said Vatican departments had long had “an almost
free hand” with their finances and followed “long-established patterns” in
managing their affairs.
“Very few
were tempted to tell the outside world what was happening, except when they
needed extra help,” he said, singling out the once-powerful Secretariat of
State as one department that had especially jealously guarded its independence.
“It was
impossible for anyone to know accurately what was going on overall,” said Pell,
head of the new Secretariat for the Economy that is independent of the now
downgraded Secretariat of State.
Australian
outsider
Pell is an
outsider from the English-speaking world transferred by Pope Francis from
Sydney to Rome to oversee the Vatican’s often muddled finances after decades of
control by Italians.
Pell’s
office sent a letter to all Vatican departments last month about changes in
economic ethics and accountability.
As of Jan.
1, each department will have to enact “sound and efficient financial management
policies” and prepare financial information and reports that meet international
accounting standards.
Each
department’s financial statements will be reviewed by a major international
auditing firm, the letter said.
Since the
pope’s election in March, 2013, the Vatican has enacted major reforms to adhere
to international financial standards and prevent money laundering. It has
closed many suspicious accounts at its scandal-rocked bank.
In his
article, Pell said the reforms were “well under way and already past the point
where the Vatican could return to the ‘bad old days’.”
Reuters
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