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  Vatican's US Envoy Dies Following Lung Surgery

Associated Press
July 28, 2011

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5h5qwThsYeuZ3IejD8IT9GUyrWyGg?docId=415aafac3a804699a19871b23a14cfdf

FILE -- In this file photo taken at Andrews Air force Base, Md., in this file photo dated April 15, 2008 Pope Benedict XVI, right, is seen with Papal Nuncio Pietro Sambi. The Vatican says its ambassador to the United States Archbishop Pietro Sambi has died in a U.S. hospital after suffering complications after recent lung surgery. The 73-year-old Sambi died Wednesday in Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore where he had been placed on assisted ventilation. He had undergone surgery two weeks ago. The Italian prelate had served as papal representative in Washington since 2006, one of Pope Benedict XVI's first major appointees.

FILE -- In this file photo taken at Andrews Air force Base, Md., in this file photo dated April 15, 2008 Pope Benedict XVI, right, is seen with Papal Nuncio Pietro Sambi. The Vatican says its ambassador to the United States Archbishop Pietro Sambi has died in a U.S. hospital after suffering complications after recent lung surgery. The 73-year-old Sambi died Wednesday in Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore where he had been placed on assisted ventilation. He had undergone surgery two weeks ago. The Italian prelate had served as papal representative in Washington since 2006, one of Pope Benedict XVI's first major appointees.

VATICAN CITY (AP) — The papal ambassador to the United States Archbishop Pietro Sambi, who helped bring about a meeting between Pope Benedict XVI and clerical sex abuse victims three years ago, has died in a U.S. hospital, the Vatican said Thursday.

Sambi, 73, died Wednesday in Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore where he had been placed on assisted ventilation. He had undergone surgery two weeks ago and was readmiited to the hospital following post-operative complications.

The Italian prelate had served as papal representative in Washington since 2006, one of Pope Benedict XVI's first major appointees. Previous posts in the Vatican's diplomatic corps included Israel and Indonesia.

In his Washington assignment, Sambi helped arrange a meeting between abuse victims and Benedict, one of the highlights of the pope's 2008 visit to the United States.

Cardinal Sean O'Malley, who had been sent to Boston after the archdiocese was rocked by the scandal, had invited Benedict to the city. When Boston was not included in the trip, he worked with Sambi to bring Benedict and victims together in Washington.

The previous year, Sambi caused a stir when he described difficulties in Vatican-Israeli relations, blaming the Jewish state in an interview for failing to keep promises related to church land, taxes and travel restrictions on Arab clergy.

The Vatican said the interview was a reflection of his personal experiences during his former diplomatic posting.

 
 

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