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    THE DAILY TELEGRAPH

    11/02/2013 to 17/02/2013

    Fr. Cyril Victor Joseph

    India

    Monday 11/02/2013

    Gordon Rayner and Nick Squires

    Pope Benedict XVI resigns: Softly spoken in Latin, the resignation that

    shocked the world

    From his throne-like chair on a purple dais in the Sala del Concistoro, part of the

    Apostolic Palace, the Holy Father quietly told, due to an advanced age, is no longer

    suited to an adequate exercise of the Petrine ministry. Popes, after all, do not

    resign, they carry on stoically, no matter how frail, until death. Italians are among

    the worlds great conspiracy theorists, and there were hypotheses aplenty among

    the crowds gathering in St Peters Square. The Popes spokesman pointed to a

    phrase in Benedict XVIs pronouncement in which he said he had made the decision

    with full freedom. Tellingly the Popes brother, Georg Ratzinger, also a priest, said

    he had known for months that the announcement was coming, ruling out any

    suspicion that the resignation had been prompted by events.

    Pope Benedict XVI resigns: World leaders react

    As Pope Benedict XVI shocks the world by announcing he is stepping down,

    Telegraph has collected quotes and reaction from global leaders. Chancellor Angela

    Merkel, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, David Cameron, The Archbishop of

    Canterbury, Silvio Berlusconi and others have reacted with surprise and

    appreciation. While President Barack Obama said, The Church plays a critical role

    in the United States and the world, and I wish the best to those who will soon gather

    to choose His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI's successor. While Cardinal Timothy

    Dolan of New York said, He unified Catholics and reached out to schismatic groups

    in hopes of drawing them back to the Church. More unites us than divides us, he

    said by word and deed. That message is for eternity.

    Alex Spillius

    Could the Catholic Church elect the first black Pope?

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    Cardinal Peter Turkson of Ghana and Cardinal Francis Arinze of Nigeria are in the

    frame to become the first ever black pope, certainly in the modern era. With a

    Canadian, a Honduran and other Latin Americans among the unofficial front-

    runners, the Roman Catholic Church could well elect its first non-European since the

    Great Schism with the Eastern church in the 11th century when it replaces Benedict

    XVI. Swiss Cardinal Kurt Koch, head of the Vatican department for Christian unity,

    said that the church's future was not in Europe."I know a lot of bishops and

    cardinals from Latin America who could take responsibility for the universal

    Church," said Archbishop Gerhard Mueller, who now holds the Pope's old post as

    head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.About half the cardinals who

    can vote are from Europe, even though only a quarter of the world's 1.2 billion

    Catholics live there.

    Tuesday 12/02/2013

    Malcolm Moore

    Pope resigns: Peter Turkson reveals vision for the Church and 'alternative

    lifestyles'

    Cardinal Turkson, who holds one of the most important jobs in the Roman Curia and

    has been repeatedly promoted by Pope Benedict, was quick to take a conservative

    line on gay marriage and other "alternative lifestyles". He told The Daily Telegraph

    Tuesday that his biggest challenge, should he be elected, would be to maintain an

    orthodox Catholic doctrine while "at the same time knowing how to apply it so that

    you do not become irrelevant in a world that has continuous changes". Cardinal

    Turkson also said the Vatican needs to "restore and repair" an image that has been

    "badly compromised by recent scandals". He acknowledged that he will be in the

    running when 118 cardinals enter into a conclave in the Sistine Chapel next month

    to select their next leader.

    John Bingham, and Nick Squires in Rome

    Pope Benedict XVI's replacement will be 'ideological clone'

    The new Pope will be chosen in a secret conclave of Cardinals in Rome next month,

    with only those under the age of 80 eligible to vote. Despite Benedict XVIs

    expressed intention to withdraw from public life, commentators said he had already

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    done enough to ensure that his successor could be an ideological clone. John

    Thavis, a veteran analyst whose book The Vatican Diaries is about to be published,

    said: Even a pope that dies in office has a strong influence over the selection of his

    successor because he has appointed many of the cardinals who will be voting.

    Robert Mickens, Vatican correspondent for The Tablet, said: These are uncharted

    waters, we have never had an election in which a former pope was still alive. By

    resigning he has assured that he can have an influence on who becomes his

    successor. One of his guys is probably going to be elected Pope.

    Nick Squires

    Pope Benedict XVI had secret heart surgery, Vatican admits

    The fitting of the new pacemaker for the Holy Father was carried out by heart

    surgeons at the Pius XI medical clinic in Rome. The pacemaker was a replacement

    for one which had been fitted about 10 years ago, before he was elected John Paul

    II's successor in 2005. The operation went so well that the Pope made a speedy

    recovery and did not even miss his weekly Angelus address, which is held each

    Sunday. "It was an entirely routine procedure," said Father Federico Lombardi, the

    Vatican spokesman. "It had absolutely nothing to do with his decision to resign." "It

    will be interesting to see how we address him, how he will be called," said Father

    Lombardi. He will become possibly the world's best known retiree.

    Wednesday 13/02/2013

    Pope Benedict XVI says he has resigned 'for good of the Church'

    The pontiff was greeted by a standing ovation and chants of "Benedetto", his name

    in Italian, at his weekly audience in the Paul VI auditorium, with a prominent banner

    reading "Thank You, Holiness". Vatican sources said his decision was prompted in

    part by the fact that last March, during an official trip to Mexico, he had a fall whichleft him deeply shaken. The so-called Vatileaks scandal, in which Benedict's butler,

    Paolo Gabriele, was convicted in a Vatican court of stealing confidential papers from

    the Pope's apartment, also had a shattering effect on the German pontiff, insiders

    said. The Vatileaks affair, as well as controversy over the transparency of the

    Vatican bank, were key factors in his decision to become the first Pope in nearly 600

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    years to hand in his resignation, said a cardinal.

    Raveendran

    Juvenile in India gang-rape case told night of attack would be 'fun'

    In the confession, which his lawyers claim was produced under duress, the juvenile

    said he was told by Ram Singh, the bus driver, "let's go and have some fun today"

    as he and five others headed out for the night. The 17-year-old is due to appear in

    court today. He faces up to three years in prison for his alleged role in the deadly

    attack, but there are calls in India for him to face the death penalty, like his co-

    accused. The juvenile, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said in a statement

    seen by the Independent newspaper, that that the victims were then thrown out of

    the moving vehicle. The group then washed the bus and divided their victim's

    possessions among them. A member of the juvenile's legal team, who asked not to

    be identified, claimed police routinely fabricated statements in order to make sure

    individuals were booked by the courts. He said the confession had "no value in law".

    Thursday 14/02/2012

    Nick Squires

    Pope Benedict awoke with blood in his hair after fall in Mexico

    The incident left the 85-year-old pontiff shaken, alarmed his doctors and

    precipitated his surprise decision to bring his eight-year old papacy to a close,

    Vatican sources said. It happened when Benedict got up in the middle of the night

    to go to the bathroom while staying in the Mexican city of Leon. Finding himself in

    unfamiliar surroundings, he could not find a light switch and tripped, hitting his

    head against a wash basin. Father Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman,

    confirmed on Thursday that the accident happened but denied that it had any

    bearing on the Pope's decision to resign.

    Sayeeda Warsi

    Pope Benedict XVI has left us with a great legacy on which to build

    The Popes hugely successful UK visit in 2010 has been cited as an important

    moment in his Pontificate for UK. It marked 30 years since full diplomatic relations

    were restored between the UK and the Holy See and despite the very long break in

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    those ties, it remains our oldest diplomatic relationship, dating back to 1479. Many

    have argued that the United Kingdom and the Holy See have never enjoyed a

    stronger bond than under Pope Benedict. Baroness Warsi is Minister for Faith and

    Communities and Senior Foreign Office Minister says, Pope's decision to step down

    was, Im sure, not taken lightly and would have been done so after much

    consideration and prayer. He has left us with a wealth of important scholarly

    teachings and a diplomatic legacy upon which we can only build.

    Friday 15/02/2012

    Nick Squires

    Pope Benedict XVI: media led the Church into profanity

    The Pope has launched a stinging attack against the media, saying that it had led

    the Church into "profanity" by spreading a message that Catholicism had to

    modernise and become more inclusive.

    The Pope blamed the media for wisting and misrepresenting the reforms of the

    Second Vatican Council in the 1960s, "The media saw the council as a political

    struggle, a struggle for power between different currents within the Church. It was

    obvious that the media would take the side of whatever faction best suited their

    world," he said. It gives the impression that Benedict will be keeping an eye on his

    successor," Robert Mickens, Vatican correspondent for The Tablet, said. "It puts a

    lot of pressure on the new Pope and people around him. They are going to feel very

    uncomfortable saying or doing anything negative about Benedict's papacy.

    Saturday 16/02/2012

    AFP

    Remote-control bomb kills 52 in Pakistan

    A remote-controlled bomb targeting Shiite Muslims killed 52 people includingwomen and children and wounded 200 in Pakistan's insurgency-hit southwest on

    Saturday, police and officials said. The bomb exploded in a bazaar in Hazara town,

    an area dominated by Shiites on the outskirts of Quetta, capital of oil and gas rich

    Baluchistan province. "The death toll is increasing. At least 52 people were killed in

    the bomb blast," Fayaz Ahmad, a senior police official told AFP. Colonel Maqbool

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    Ahmad, commandant of paramilitary group Frontier Corps Quetta, confirmed the

    new toll and warned it could rise. A spokesman for the banned Sunni Muslim

    extremist group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi claimed responsibility for the attack. Pakistani

    Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf late last month sacked the provincial government

    in Baluchistan after meeting Shiite Muslim protesters demanding protection.

    Harriet Alexander, Nsuta-Wassa, western Ghana

    Pope's successor: Ghana prays for Peter Turkson the miner's son to reach

    marbled halls

    Cardinal Peter Turkson, born in a two-room shack 170 miles from Ghana's capital, is

    currently the bookmakers' favourite to become the next pope. If selected, it would

    make him the first African pope in modern times. The 64-year-old Ghanaian was

    marked as one of the early front runners. "So if, by divine providence, God would

    wish to have a black man as pope, I say thanks be to God!" Furthermore, he is

    known to be highly regarded by Benedict; to be a like-minded social conservative

    against gay marriage, condom use and abortion, and to share his interest in

    academic study of the scriptures. Back in Nsuta-Wassaw, the several thousand

    inhabitants are all praying for "their" man to be chosen as the new pope. "It would

    make us all so, so happy," said Mr Pawosey, his childhood friend.

    Sunday 17/02/2012

    AFP

    Foreign 'missionaries' arrested in Libya

    Four foreigners suspected of carrying out Christian missionary activities have been

    arrested in the Libyan city of Benghazi. Hussein bin Hameida, a security official, told

    the AFP news agency that an Egyptian, a South African, a South Korean and a

    Swedish-American were arrested at a printing house, "where they were printing

    books calling for conversion to Christianity." Libya is a Muslim country and

    preaching another religion is a crime under Libyan law," he said. Mr bin Hameida

    said an investigation was still under way and the suspects "will be handed over to

    the intelligence services soon." Since the 2011 fall of Col Muammar Gaddafi's

    regime, the small Christian community fears for its safety, especially after a church

    bombing in December killed two people in the Mediterranean town of Dafniya. The

    Apostolic Vicar of Tripoli, Giovanni Innocenzo Martinelli, has said the situation was

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    "critical" and the "atmosphere very tense."