By PAUL VALLELYJUNE 13, 2014
CreditAngelo Carconi/Associated
Press
LONDON — It looked extremely dramatic when Pope Francis fired
the entire board of the Vatican’s financial watchdog last week. But that was only the
half of it. The seismic changes that are underway behind the scenes in Rome are
even more radical than public appearances suggest. And they offer illuminating
insights into the steely character of the man who likes to present himself to
the world as a model of smiling humility.
The body known as Rome’s Financial Information Authority
(F.I.A.) supervises everything from the Vatican Bank to the real estate of the
Holy See, its staff salaries and even the Vatican pharmacy. Its five Italian
members were due to serve until 2016 when Francis asked them to resign early —
to be replaced by an international team of financial experts that includes
Joseph Yuvaraj Pillay, the man who turned around the Singapore economy, and
Juan Zarate, a former financial security adviser to President George W. Bush.
The drastic move came after months of infighting
between the old guard and the F.I.A.’s director, René Brülhart, a Swiss
anti-money-laundering expert, charged with cleaning up one of the world’s most
secretive banks, which has assets worth more than $8 billion. A former head of
Liechtenstein’s financial intelligence unit, he found his reforms continually
frustrated by an old-boy network. He complained to the pope, who swept aside
the obstacle in a single move.
But there was more to it than that, as anyone would
have suspected who knew the modus operandi of Jorge Mario Bergoglio when he was
archbishop of Buenos Aires before he became pope. There, too, he had faced a
banking scandal in which his predecessor, Cardinal Antonio Quarracino, had
become embroiled in underwriting a multimillion dollar insurance deal for a
family of prominent bankers who turned out to be paying all his credit card
bills. When the bank went insolvent, bankers were jailed, and the Catholic
Church was asked to repay huge sums it did not have, Cardinal Bergoglio called
in the international accountants Arthur Andersen, closed the church bank and
transferred its assets to commercial banks.
He acted swiftly, decisively and transparently — on
several levels at once. And that is what he has been doing for the past year
with the opaque finances of the Vatican and its scandal-mired bank.
He certainly needs to do so. The bank has had a highly
dubious history since the 1980s when it was implicated in the collapse of
Italy’s largest private bank, the Banco Ambrosiano, whose chairman, Roberto
Calvi, was found hanging from Blackfriars Bridge in London, an incident that
was widely seen as a murder disguised as suicide. A warrant was issued for the
arrest of the president of the Vatican Bank, Archbishop Paul Marcinkus,
alleging he was an accessory to fraudulent bankruptcy, but he was never put on
trial.
The bank’s checkered history has continued until
recent times. In a 2012 report, the Council of Europe’s monetary authority
failed the Vatican Bank on seven of its 16 core anti-money-laundering regulations.
Other banks distanced themselves from it to such an extent that in 2013
Deutsche Bank closed down the Vatican’s 80 cash machines and credit card
payment services. Impropriety clung to the institution like a bad smell.
Quite rightly Pope Francis made reform of the Vatican
Bank one of his first priorities. Within days of becoming pope he stripped the
bank’s five supervisory cardinals of their $42,000 annual stipend. In a sermon
at a Mass for bank staff he pointedly described their organization as
“necessary up to a certain point.” He demanded tighter accounting, better
reporting practices and enhanced internal controls. Ten months later, unhappy
with progress, he dismissed all but one of the five cardinals in January. He
also replaced the F.I.A.’s president with an archbishop with a track record of
reform within the Vatican bureaucracy.
Shrewdly, as before, he has brought in outsiders. The
U.S. regulatory and compliance consultants of Promontory Financial Group are
combing through the bank’s 19,000 accounts. They have found poor cash-flow
checks, inadequate documentation, ignorance on due diligence and a system of
proxies that clouds who really controls many accounts. When the clerics in
charge were asked how they answered to the regulator, they replied: “We answer
to God.” Now they answer to Mr. Brülhart. Some 1,600 accounts have been closed
so far.
He has hired other external advisers. Ernst &
Young is scrutinizing Vatican property holdings. KPMG is bringing its
accountancy systems up to international standards. McKinsey is reforming its
media operations, which include TV, radio and a newspaper. Deloitte is advising
on management.
But Francis wanted to address the issue at a deeper
level too. Does the Catholic Church need its own bank at all? He set up a
committee, which included the Harvard law professor Mary Ann Glendon, to ask more
fundamental questions. It was given powers, in a letter of authority
handwritten by Francis, to summon any documents and data it deemed necessary
and told to report directly to the pope, bypassing the Curia, the Vatican
bureaucracy.
That committee issued its report last month — and
explains the timing of the F.I.A. house-cleaning. And that was not all. Two of
the bank’s most longstanding senior officials were eased into early retirement.
And a new business manager from Australia, Danny Casey, was brought in to force
fiscal transparency and discipline across all Vatican departments. He will be
the right-hand man of Cardinal George Pell, former archbishop of Sydney, a
traditionalist but also a vocal critic of the dysfunction of the Curia under
the last papacy. Cardinal Pell is head of the new Secretariat of the Economy
created by Francis in February to bring financial discipline to the Vatican,
where each department has been acting as an individual center of power.
At one point Francis seemed set on closing the Vatican
Bank, which was founded more than 70 years ago. In the 1970s, the Vatican used
it to finance covert anti-Communist missions in central America. In the 1980s,
Pope John Paul II used it to channel money to the Polish Solidarity movement.
Now, Francis appears to have been convinced that the bank is still needed
because so many bishops, priests and religious orders work in countries without
secure banking systems.
But the pope is adamant it must become transparent and
accountable. He is considering setting up a Vatican central bank to more
closely control transfers of money abroad. That would remove the possibility
that the $3 billion the bank transfers each year could be used for
money-laundering — though other measures will be needed to combat the abuse of
accounts for Italian tax evasion.
The scandal clinging to Vatican finances taints an
institution that Francis famously said he wants, above all, to be “a poor
church, for the poor.” There are many in the Vatican, wedded to a more elitist
view of the church, who are unhappy at this. So far they have been unsure how to
resist a pope who operates outside the old Curia channels and acts with
admirable unpredictability.
What helps Francis, oddly enough, is that the scandal
is far from over. One of the Vatican’s most senior accountants, Msgr. Nunzio
Scarano, who worked for 22 years in the Administration of the Patrimony of the
Apostolic See, the department in charge of paying Vatican salaries and managing
its property and financial portfolios, is currently under arrest, awaiting
trial on corruption and money laundering charges.
Nicknamed “Monsignor Cinquecento” after the 500-euro
bills he routinely flashed in public, Monsignor Scarano owned luxury properties
and expensive works of art. He has been accused by Italian magistrates of
having transferred millions out of the Vatican Bank and smuggling it to
Switzerland to help rich friends avoid taxes. The director of the Vatican Bank
and his deputy, who were named in Italian court documents, have resigned. The
court case will undoubtedly bring more explosive and embarrassing revelations.
On it goes. Even the previous pope’s right-hand man,
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, is under investigation for using his influence to
steer almost $20 million in Vatican Bank loans — money that was eventually lost
— to a film company run by a friend. “It’s something that’s under study,” Pope
Francis has told reporters. “It’s not clear. Maybe it could be true, but at
this time nothing is definitive.”
One thing, however, is definite. Pope Francis knows
that he has to get a grip on the Vatican’s chaotic finances. He has only just
begun.
Paul Vallely is a visiting professor in public
ethics at the University of Chester and the author of “Pope Francis: Untying
the Knots.”
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