New Cardinal Joseph Coutts, who belongs to Karachi, leaves after receiving the red three-cornered biretta hat from Pope Francis during a consistory in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican on Thursday. Pope Francis installed 14 new cardinals during the consistory.—AP
New Cardinal Joseph Coutts, who belongs to Karachi, leaves after receiving the red three-cornered biretta hat from Pope Francis during a consistory in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican on Thursday. Pope Francis installed 14 new cardinals during the consistory.—AP

VATICAN CITY: Pope Fra­ncis appointed 14 new cardinals on Thursday, a div­erse selection from all over the world including Iraq, Pakistan, Madagascar and Japan whom he warned to avoid the kind of “palace intrigues” which have pla­g­ued the Vatican over the years.

The appointments come as the Argentine pontiff gra­d­ually shapes a less Euro­pean college of cardinals.

Before the ceremony marking their appointment, Pope Francis warned the new batch of cardinals that they must not get involved in “palace intrigues” within the Vatican but focus on “those who are hungry, the forgotten, the prisoner, the sick, the addict, the abandoned person”.

Among the new “princes” of the church is Iraq’s Louis Raphael Sako who has often met Pope Francis to discuss the situation in the war-torn country and the plight of the dwindling Christian community.

From Pakistan comes Jo­­s­eph Coutts of Karachi who promotes dialogue bet­ween Christians and Mus­lims. De­­s­ire Tsara­ha­za­­na from Toa­masina in Madag­ascar is the only African among the new cardinals. “The people are suffering and need support,” he said of his appointment.

The Pope also appointed Thomas Aquinas Manyo from Osaka in Japan. Among the three Latin American prelates is Archbishop Pedro Barreto of Huancayo, Peru.

Barreto fights for the rig­hts of the communities living in the Amazon forest and has received death threats for denouncing working conditions in illegal mines.

Seven European cardin­als were also appointed, inc­l­uding Italy’s Giuseppe Pet­r­o­cchi, archbishop of L’Aquila, a city destroyed nine years ago by a violent earthquake.

As well as having the key role of choosing a new pope, cardinals often also hold the highest administrative offices in the church.

Each new appointee knelt in front of Pope Francis who placed the cardinal’s hat on their heads during the ceremony at St Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican.

Speaking at the beginning of the ceremony, Sako hailed “the special attention from the Pope... for the small flock of Christians in the Middle East, in Pakistan and other countries that are go­­i­ng through a difficult period because of wars and sectarianism and where there are still martyrs.”

Published in Dawn, June 29th, 2018

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