Dubai Telegraph - Pope's illness spreads doubt at Vatican

EUR -
AED 3.979939
AFN 78.410261
ALL 99.350331
AMD 427.501425
ANG 1.955407
AOA 991.005543
ARS 1153.983848
AUD 1.723916
AWG 1.950577
AZN 1.846513
BAM 1.955807
BBD 2.190607
BDT 131.82044
BGN 1.955807
BHD 0.408501
BIF 3214.210717
BMD 1.083654
BND 1.443805
BOB 7.497025
BRL 6.272083
BSD 1.084904
BTN 94.288314
BWP 14.752049
BYN 3.550612
BYR 21239.610816
BZD 2.179307
CAD 1.557373
CDF 3115.50453
CHF 0.954532
CLF 0.026197
CLP 1005.293352
CNY 7.839422
CNH 7.851233
COP 4450.014837
CRC 548.601829
CUC 1.083654
CUP 28.716821
CVE 110.265368
CZK 24.946469
DJF 193.200644
DKK 7.460309
DOP 67.870226
DZD 144.407481
EGP 54.918183
ERN 16.254804
ETB 141.850973
FJD 2.48894
FKP 0.839134
GBP 0.839814
GEL 3.007182
GGP 0.839134
GHS 16.817056
GIP 0.839134
GMD 77.485406
GNF 9381.031278
GTQ 8.368028
GYD 226.990757
HKD 8.420802
HNL 27.744093
HRK 7.536165
HTG 142.450475
HUF 398.113084
IDR 17663.553893
ILS 3.932417
IMP 0.839134
INR 94.397612
IQD 1421.304739
IRR 45621.817492
ISK 147.128069
JEP 0.839134
JMD 170.080567
JOD 0.768748
JPY 160.429542
KES 140.400468
KGS 94.765925
KHR 4348.014497
KMF 493.116993
KPW 975.317513
KRW 1571.298118
KWD 0.333863
KYD 0.904103
KZT 532.441775
LAK 23491.078323
LBP 97211.824119
LKR 320.551069
LRD 216.990723
LSL 19.665666
LTL 3.199748
LVL 0.655492
LYD 5.237017
MAD 10.549735
MDL 19.692066
MGA 5082.016944
MKD 61.530205
MMK 2274.688295
MNT 3760.725259
MOP 8.684129
MRU 43.279144
MUR 49.003226
MVR 16.699512
MWK 1881.306273
MXN 21.962592
MYR 4.783793
MZN 69.249507
NAD 19.665666
NGN 1641.735596
NIO 39.930133
NOK 11.768374
NPR 150.861503
NZD 1.897651
OMR 0.417191
PAB 1.084904
PEN 3.963913
PGK 4.430015
PHP 61.990447
PKR 303.787013
PLN 4.171614
PYG 8591.028644
QAR 3.955413
RON 4.976792
RSD 117.180391
RUB 96.500322
RWF 1527.605093
SAR 4.065514
SBD 9.11492
SCR 15.978514
SDG 651.276189
SEK 10.930168
SGD 1.442239
SHP 0.851582
SLE 24.761887
SLL 22723.680549
SOS 620.102068
SRD 38.798765
STD 22429.441902
SVC 9.493032
SYP 14090.172453
SZL 19.660066
THB 36.579852
TJS 11.826039
TMT 3.803624
TND 3.351211
TOP 2.538029
TRY 39.445863
TTD 7.365025
TWD 35.589393
TZS 2869.709568
UAH 44.718549
UGX 3981.013273
USD 1.083654
UYU 46.230154
UZS 14016.046732
VES 69.980666
VND 27638.585401
VUV 134.525423
WST 3.053818
XAF 655.959187
XAG 0.033339
XAU 0.000372
XCD 2.928628
XDR 0.815803
XOF 655.959187
XPF 119.331742
YER 267.449603
ZAR 19.778218
ZMK 9754.186788
ZMW 30.894103
ZWL 348.936021
  • RBGPF

    70.2100

    70.21

    +100%

  • SCS

    0.2100

    11.73

    +1.79%

  • RIO

    0.6200

    62.31

    +1%

  • NGG

    1.3900

    60.83

    +2.29%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.33

    -0.17%

  • VOD

    0.4100

    9.42

    +4.35%

  • AZN

    0.0300

    77.5

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    0.7500

    40.05

    +1.87%

  • RYCEF

    0.2400

    10.55

    +2.27%

  • BCE

    0.3100

    24.8

    +1.25%

  • BCC

    0.8300

    101.62

    +0.82%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    12.75

    +0.31%

  • BP

    0.3600

    32.07

    +1.12%

  • BTI

    0.7400

    40.9

    +1.81%

  • RELX

    0.8600

    48.1

    +1.79%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    23.11

    -0.39%

Pope's illness spreads doubt at Vatican
Pope's illness spreads doubt at Vatican / Photo: Dimitar DILKOFF - AFP

Pope's illness spreads doubt at Vatican

St Peter's Square is bustling, but behind the Vatican's walls, activities have slowed as the Catholic Church grapples with the uncertainty caused by the absence of Pope Francis.

Text size:

Tourists take photos in the spring sunshine and streams of pilgrims marking the Catholic "Holy Year" head to the basilica, while journalists from around the world file reports on the 88-year-old's health.

Inside the tiny Vatican city state, however, departments running the pope's notoriously packed daily schedules lie quiet.

"We are at minimum service," Corporal Eliah Cinotti, spokesman for the Swiss Guard, which handles the pope's security, told AFP.

"Extraordinary services -- masses, audiences, receptions of ambassadors and heads of state -- are in free fall," he said, with cardinals stepping in to lead some masses, but most events cancelled.

"It's a period of dormancy" that recalls "the end of Covid, when everything was running at a slow pace", he added, referring to the coronavirus pandemic.

Activity within the Roman Curia -- the government of the Holy See, which oversees the Church's global activities -- has not been as affected.

Though Francis's portrait hangs on the walls of the dicasteries, or ministries, the work is not directly dependent on the Argentine pope.

But the severity of his condition, and his doctors' unwillingness to give a medical prognosis, make it difficult to make medium-term plans.

The pontiff has not appeared in public since February 14, when he was admitted to the Gemelli hospital in Rome with breathing difficulties, which developed into double pneumonia.

The window of the Apostolic Palace from which he recites the weekly Angelus prayer has remained closed for three Sundays in a row -- a first since his election as head of the world's nearly 1.4 billion Catholics in 2013.

- Day by day -

Instead, the days are marked by two medical bulletins issued by the Vatican in a rare effort at transparency. One in the morning describes how Francis's night went, followed by a more detailed evening update.

In the press room just off St Peter's Square, reporters used to tackling the subtitles of church law are fast becoming experts in medical terms instead.

The Vatican has been through periods like this before. Between May and August 1981, Pope John Paul II spent 77 days at the Gemelli after an assassination attempt.

But the longer it goes on, the more Francis's hospitalization -- already the longest of his papacy -- weighs on morale.

"There is a slowdown due to the fact that we do not know what tomorrow will bring. We live day-by-day, we do not take holidays," said a Vatican source who wished to remain anonymous.

"There are times when we are very afraid, others when we say to ourselves 'he is getting back on track'. It is a rollercoaster, and it is very stressful," the source said.

- Crisis mode -

Francis's health woes have long fuelled speculation he might one day resign and his critical illness has prompted some to prepare for the next conclave -- the meeting of cardinals which votes in a new pope.

But in an absolute monarchy, venturing to discuss the future while the pope is still alive is taboo.

"It would be considered inappropriate," an anonymous official from the Secretariat of State said. "The truth is that no one knows anything."

Italian Vatican expert Marco Politi agreed "it is a strange situation".

"This is not the time for the cardinals to meet in secret, to plan the future," he said, because it would undermine the "elegance of the great Catholic hierarchy".

And yet, as the faithful pray every evening in St Peter's Square, behind the scenes preparations are inevitably being made for all possible eventualities.

"We are in crisis mode," said a diplomatic source from a European embassy to the Holy See, admitting that he had "updated the files for the conclave".

Francis has sent signals that he remains in charge, receiving aids and working from his hospital suite on the days he feels well enough.

But Ash Wednesday celebrations, marking the beginning of the religious season of Lent, will take place without him.

And no-one knows whether he will be present at Easter, the biggest event in the Catholic calendar, in 40 days time.

C.Masood--DT