Argentine bishop resumes work in Holy See as Vatican abuse probe wraps
By Nicole Winfield
Buenos Aires Times
June 15, 2020
https://www.batimes.com.ar/news/world/argentine-bishop-resumes-work-in-holy-see-as-vatican-abuse-probe-wraps.phtml
Vatican spokesman confirms Archbishop Gustavo Zanchetta has resumed work in Holy See, but claims it in no way interferes with investigations probing alleged sexual abuse.
An Argentine bishop close to Pope Francis has gone back to work at the Holy See’s financial administration office while under investigation in his native Argentina and at the Vatican for alleged sexual abuse.
The Vatican spokesman, Matteo Bruni, confirmed Bishop Gustavo Zanchetta had resumed work at the APSA patrimony office but said it in no way interferes with the investigations. He said Zanchetta remains at the disposition of Argentine judicial authorities.
The developments came as Francis on Monday named a new number two at the office, an Italian layman and auditor, Fabio Gasperini.
The Vatican in January 2019 said Zanchetta would abstain from his job as APSA’s “assessor,” the number three position, pending the outcome of a preliminary investigation into the allegations.
Zanchetta has been formally accused in Argentina of “aggravated continuous sexual abuse” of two seminarians in Orán, in Salta Province, starting in 2016. He has denied the charges.
He is also facing a canonical investigation at the Vatican. While such probes usually wait for the outcome of any secular investigation, Zanchetta’s lawyer, Javier Belda, told The Associated Press that the Vatican’s investigation into Zanchetta was “nearly finished.”
In an email, Belda said the investigation actually wrapped up in December, but was then delayed and complicated by the coronavirus outbreak, which shut down the Vatican for nearly three months. He said he and Zanchetta are “confident about the outcome of the procedures in both fora.”
“We are fully convinced that this long judicial process will serve to rehabilitate the name of Monsignor Zanchetta and reinforce justice, because while it’s right to protect victims it’s also right to absolve those who have been falsely accused," he said.
Francis accepted Zanchetta’s resignation in August 2017 after priests in Orán complained about what they said was his authoritarian rule. In addition, a former vicar, a seminary rector and another prelate provided reports to the Vatican alleging abuses of power, inappropriate behaviour and sexual harassment of adult seminarians.
The Argentine pontiff created a new job for Zanchetta at APSA later that year. After the scandal erupted, the Vatican said in early 2019 that Zanchetta was only facing “governance” problems at the time of his abrupt 2017 resignation and appointment at the Vatican, and that the first sexual abuse allegation was only made in late 2018.
Testimony from Orán priests and documents obtained by the local El Tribuno de Salta newspaper, however, suggest that the Vatican was aware of allegations of inappropriate sexual behaviour by Zanchetta two years before he resigned.
The Zanchetta case was particularly grave for Francis, given it erupted at the same time that the pope was defending a Chilean bishop accused of covering up for the country's most notorious abuser
|