BREAKING NEWS: Pope declares the seat of Bishop of Ahiara Diocese, Mbaise Vacant
Pope Francis appoints cardinal as administrator of troubled Nigerian
diocese. Pope Francis has appointed Cardinal John Onaiyekan of Abuja,
Nigeria’s capital, as the apostolic administrator of the Diocese of
Ahiara.
Founded in 1987 and
located in the Mbaise region of Imo State in southern Nigeria, the
diocese was governed by Bishop Victor Chikwe from its inception until
his death in 2010.
In December 2012, Pope Benedict appointed
Father Peter Okpaleke, a priest of the Diocese of Awka in neighboring
Anambra State, as the diocese’s new bishop. 400 priests, angered that a
Mbaise priest was not appointed, protested the decision.
The
appointment “sends a very reprehensible signal about the status and
reputation of about 500 Catholic priests that trace their origins to the
soil of Mbaise, a diocese that has been globally acclaimed as the
Ireland of Nigeria,” the priests said in a statement.
Some
priests and lay protesters saw Cardinal Francis Arinze, the retired
prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments, as the force behind the appointment of Father Okpaleke.
Cardinal Arinze comes from Anambra State.
“Awka has five bishops, Mbaise has no bishop,” said a placard at the priests’ protest. “We want Mbaise son as Mbaise bishop.”
Father Okpaleke was ordained bishop of Ahiara on May 21, but the
ordination took place at a seminary in another diocese amid heavy
security. At the time of the ordination, youth locked the cathedral of
Ahiara in protest. Some protesters placed a coffin with the new bishop’s
name at diocesan headquarters.
The Holy See has not announced
Bishop Okpaleke’s resignation from his see. Typically, the Pope appoints
an apostolic administrator when a see is vacant (sede vacante), but a
sede plena appointment is not unprecedented: Archbishop Joseph Miot
served as apostolic administrator of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, from 1997 to
2008, while Archbishop François-Wolff Ligondé remained archbishop, and
Bishop Thomas Olmsted was appointed apostolic administrator of the
Diocese of Gallup in 2008 while Bishop Donald Pelotte remained diocesan
bishop. via Catholicculture
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