Murky Intrigue Shrouds Conclave Countdown for Pope

Saturday, April 16, 2005

By Steve Pagani

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - The countdown to the conclave to elect a new pope
combines the tension of a nomination to the U.S. presidency with the
intrigue that surrounded the rise of a Caesar in ancient Rome.

With the period of respectful silence after the death of Pope John Paul II
now over, Italian newspapers have launched into tangled speculation over who
is tipped to become the next pontiff and whose star is on the wane.

Top contender mid-week in many newspapers was the late Pope's close aide and
arch-ideologue Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. But by Saturday, some of the same
newspapers were giving Germany's most famous Roman Catholic son the
thumbs-down.

Most commentators agreed Ratzinger seemed able to attract a bloc of
conservatives in a first ballot of the 115 cardinal electors scheduled for
Monday or Tuesday.

But they said he seemed unlikely to gain the 77 votes needed to become the
264th successor to the first pope, St. Peter.

"Cardinal Ratzinger's candidacy has lost momentum or at least does not
appear to be able to attract the sufficient votes for the first ballots," Il
Messaggero newspaper said.

What could happen, newspapers were saying, is that the conservatives, among
them Latin Americans and some Germans, might in a first vote show their
support for traditionalist Ratzinger who turned 78 on Saturday.

Leading Church historian Paul Collins, speaking on the sidelines of a news
conference in Rome of the Catholic reform group We Are Church, said he
doubted Ratzinger's chances.

"There will be more progressive forces working within the conclave to oppose
him. There's absolutely no doubt about that," Collins said.

Newspapers agreed. In the murky intrigues surrounding the conclave, the
progressives may back a "no-hope" candidate such as retired archbishop of
Milan, Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, who is 78 and suffering from a form of
Parkinson's Disease.

"They will vote for Martini not to elect him ... but to show there are other
possibilities than choosing Ratzinger," Corriere della Sera said.

CANDIDATES EMERGE

Pages of profiles and commentary on the leading contenders have filled
newspapers as if it were the runup to a U.S. political convention.

While all cardinals are sworn to secrecy, at least two newspapers said
whispers in the corridors are now bearing a new name -- Colombian cardinal
Dario Castrillon Hoyos.

He works at the Vatican as head of the Congregation of the Clergy and is
passionate about new technology. He uses the Internet and videoconferencing
to train priests -- a fitting candidate for the first conclave of the 21st
century.

Also nodding toward Latin America, Il Giornale gave space to Cardinal
Claudio Hummes of Brazil and his address on poverty at a pre-conclave
gathering of cardinals on Friday.

Historian Collins said the region is where most Catholics live and much
Latin American culture is derived from Europe.

"It just seems the right place at the right time," he said.

Over past days, commentators have variously leaned toward Cardinal Oscar
Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga of Honduras, Nigeria's Cardinal Francis Arinze
and Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn of Austria.

But outsiders may emerge as a compromise figure, as did Polish cardinal
Karol Wojtyla in 1978 before becoming John Paul II.

"The word going around is that there is as much uncertainty as there was
before the conclave which elected Wojtyla," Corriere della Sera said.

This time two camps could also emerge. After the first votes, moderates
could rally around Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi, the 71-year-old archbishop
of Milan, and Rome's Cardinal Camillo Ruini could become the conservatives'
standard bearer.

In 1978, cardinals voted themselves into an impasse with arch-conservative
Cardinal Giuseppe Siri of Genoa on one side and the more moderate Cardinal
Giovanni Benelli of Florence on the other. That time the "princes of the
Church" turned to Poland.

(Additional reporting by Trevor Huggins in Rome)





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