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Pope Francis wants women in top jobs

A lack of professional expertise within the Vatican was highlighted by recent scandals centred on the Holy See's finances.

Vatican City: Pope Francis on Thursday told Vatican officials to start appointing women and lay people to top jobs in the Curia, the Holy See bureaucracy that he is seeking to shake-up.

In his latest broadside against resistance to change in the Catholic Church’s corridors of power, the 80-year-old pontiff warned that the reform process he launched in 2013 had to lead to more than a cosmetic “face-lift” or plastic surgery to remove wrinkles.

“Dear brothers, it’s not the wrinkles in the church that you should fear, but the stains!” Pope Francis said in his Christmas speech to senior Curia officials.

The blistering tone will have come as no surprise to the assembled staff. In 2014 he described some of them as hypocritical, status-obsessed careerists who were suffering from “spiritual Alzheimer’s”.

Referring to the Vatican dicasteries, or departments, that he has sought to streamline and reorganise, Pope Francis said it would be “appropriate” to bring in more lay people, especially where their expertise made them more competent than staff drawn from the clergy.

“The development of the role of women and lay people in the church and their appointment to leading roles in the dicasteries, with particular attention to multiculturalism, is furthermore of great importance,” Pope Francis said.

A lack of professional expertise within the Vatican was highlighted by recent scandals centred on the Holy See’s finances.

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