Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Vatican interrogates journalist over leaks



Agence France-Presse
Nov 17, 2015 @ 12:15 PM




Emiliano Fittipaldi, one of two Italian journalists facing a criminal probe over leaks from the Vatican, gives a press conference on Nov. 17, 2015 in Rome, a day after a hearing at the Vatican.
GABRIEL BOUYS AFP/Getty Images



One of the two Italian investigative journalists facing criminal proceedings for revealing Vatican secrets said Tuesday he had been quizzed by Holy See prosecutors.

Emiliano Fittipaldi said he had responded to a Vatican summons to face questioning "because I wanted to understand" the motivations for his prosecution over the contents of his recently published book "Avarice."

The book is largely based on classified documents which were leaked in breach of an anti-whistle-blowing law enacted by the Vatican in 2013 with the blessing of Pope Francis.

"The accusations are crazy," Fittpaldi said. "Such restrictive laws do not exist in any democratic state."

More from GlobalPost: South America has become a safe haven for the Catholic Church’s alleged child molesters

Fittipaldi said he had come away from his interrogation convinced the landmark case would end in a trial of a Spanish priest currently in detention on suspicion of leaking the documents.

"They want to create a precedent, to send a signal to people in the Vatican to ensure there are no other leaks in the future," Fittipaldi said.

His comments came a day after Gianluigi Nuzzi, the journalist who broke the 2012 Vatileaks scandal, said he would ignore a Vatican summons over the content of his latest book, "The Merchants in the Temple."

Accusing Pope Francis of presiding over inquisition-style proceedings, Nuzzi said he had decided not to appear as requested as Vatican law did not guarantee his right to publish news in the public interest while protecting his sources.

Nuzzi and Fittipaldi's books use classified documents to back up depictions of corruption, theft and uncontrolled spending at the Vatican.

They claim charity money was spent on refurbishing the houses of powerful cardinals and that the Vatican bank continues to shelter suspected criminals.

More from GlobalPost: Could the Vatican face racketeering charges for harboring abusive clergy?

Vatican officials have dismissed the content of the books as either inaccurate or out of date, insisting that reforms instigated by Pope Francis have addressed some, if not all, of the irregularities highlighted.

Angel Vallejo Baldo, a Spanish priest suspected of leaking the documents, is currently in detention in the Vatican pending the outcome of the investigation.

An alleged accomplice, Italian PR executive Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, is also being investigated but was released from custody after saying she would cooperate with the authorities.

She has since insisted that Baldo acted alone and that the priest had been behind a secret recording of Francis railing against the chaotic state of Vatican finances he inherited on becoming Pope in 2013.

The anti-leaks legislation was adopted soon after Francis took power and was widely seen as a response to Vatileaks, a scandal which saw former pope Benedict XVI seriously undermined by revelations from his butler about intrigue and infighting in the upper echelons of the Church.

Watch GlobalPost's documentary "Fugitive Fathers: How the Vatican’s alleged sex abusers hide and preach in South America":


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