The Wall Street Journal - 21.08.2019

(Axel Boer) #1

A6| Wednesday, August 21, 2019 *** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.**


WORLD WATCH


AUSTRALIA

Cardinal’s Sex-Abuse
Conviction Is Upheld

Cardinal George Pell, the
most senior Roman Catholic
cleric ever to be jailed for child
sexual abuse, has lost his appeal
of his conviction.
The 78-year-old former Vati-
can finance chief was ordered
Wednesday to serve out the re-
mainder of his six-year sentence
in a maximum-security prison in
Australia, where as a convicted
pedophile he is likely to spend
much of his time isolated from
other prisoners.
A panel of judges ruled 2-1 to
uphold his December conviction
for assaulting two young choir-
boys inside the cathedral that
was the center of his diocese in
the late 1990s.
Three judges in the Supreme
Court of Victoria, the southeast-
ern state where the 78-year-old
cleric first served as a priest and
later was archbishop of Mel-
bourne, had been deliberating for
months and held an appeal hear-
ing in June.
Cardinal Pell is widely ex-
pected to challenge the decision
in the High Court of Australia.
Cardinal Pell’s conviction was
a landmark ruling in the wider
global scandal that has engulfed
the Roman Catholic Church and
has threatened to overshadow
Pope Francis’ reign.
In May, Vatican laid out new
rules for investigating bishops
over sexual abuse or for cover-
ing it up.
Wednesday’s judgment will
intensify pressure on the Vatican
to take action against the cleric.

The Vatican has reserved final
judgment on Cardinal Pell until
the appeal process concludes,
though it has banned him from
public ministry as a priest.
—Robb M. Stewart

BRAZIL

Sniper Kills Hijacker
Of Commuter Bus

Rio de Janeiro’s governor
lauded police after a sniper killed
a 20-year-old man who held
more than 30 commuters hos-
tage on a bus for about three
hours.
Gov. Wilson Witzel has called
for the use of police snipers to
combat Rio’s rampant crime, a
policy that has been criticized by
human-rights groups, which al-
lege it has caused the death of
innocent city residents.
“Our police showed great op-
erational capacity,” the governor
told reporters on Tuesday.
“Today there was no mistake.
We acted correctly,” he said.
The hijacker pointed a gun at
the hostages, but police later
said it appeared to be a toy.
None of the hostages was
harmed.
The man forced the bus to
stop on an 8-mile-long bridge
connecting Rio to the suburb of
Niterói, before being surrounded
by police, causing a traffic jam.
It wasn’t clear what the man,
identified by police as William da
Silva, wanted.
One of the hostages told lo-
cal news outlets the hijacker
looked calm, saw the news on a
passenger’s phone and bragged
about the buzz he was causing.
—Paulo Trevisani

SPRAY: Police in the Turkish city of Diyarbakir use water cannons to
disperse protests against the ouster of three mayors in the Kurdish-
populated southeast who are accused of having ties to rebels.

ILYAS AKENGIN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

lar party, with around 36%
support. The League has
served as the junior coalition
partner of the populist 5 Star
Movement since summer 2018.
In March 2018 elections, It-
aly’s mainstream parties suf-
fered a heavy defeat. Since
then, however, 5 Star has
struggled in government and
its support has halved, while
Mr. Salvini’s tough stance on
immigration has helped double
support for the League.
If Italy holds early elec-
tions, Mr. Salvini could be-
come the first leader of a ma-
jor EU nation who comes from
a self-described populist party
to the right of Europe’s main-
stream conservatives. The in-
terior minister, an avowed ad-
mirer of Russian President
Vladimir Putin, has challenged
the EU’s rules on fiscal disci-
pline, accusing Germany and
France of hypocritically break-
ing the rules while imposing
austerity on Italy.
Mr. Conte, a nonparty pre-
mier close to 5 Star, attacked
Mr. Salvini for undermining the
government in which Mr. Sal-
vini has served as interior min-
ister since June 2018. Mr. Sal-
vini said on Aug. 8 that he
wanted to “ask the Italians if
they want to give me full pow-
ers.” Some critics pointed out
that Italian fascist leader Benito

Mussolini used a similar phrase
to demand power in 1922.
“We don’t need people with
full powers, but people with a
culture of (respect for) institu-
tions and a sense of responsi-
bility,” Mr. Conte told the Sen-
ate on Tuesday. He accused Mr.
Salvini of putting personal and
party interests ahead of the
country’s needs and of lacking
respect for Italy’s constitution.
“We are the only supposed
fascists who want a vote,” Mr.
Salvini replied.
Italian President Sergio
Mattarella is expected to
sound out party leaders in
coming days to see whether a
new governing majority can be
assembled in Parliament. If
not, snap elections could take

place as early as late October.
Opinion polls suggest the
League could win an outright
majority in Parliament together
with two smaller allies: the far-
right Brothers of Italy and the
conservative Forza Italia of for-
mer Premier Silvio Berlusconi.
Mr. Salvini’s push to bring
down the government and
trigger snap elections has
caused some disquiet in the
League, where some other se-
nior officials have privately
criticized their leader’s timing.
Italy has to submit a draft
budget plan to the EU by Oct.
15 and pass a budget law by
2020 that satisfies EU rules by
reducing Italy’s deficit and its
high national debt. The gov-
ernment needs to find signifi-
cant savings to avoid an al-
ready legislated increase in
value-added tax, the equiva-
lent of U.S. sales tax, which
could hurt already-fragile con-
sumer spending.
Mr. Salvini repeated on
Tuesday that he wants to slash
income taxes and, if necessary,
defy EU authorities.
As opposition senators
jeered, a defiant Mr. Salvini
said: “You’ve decided upon the
target. Here I am. You’ve de-
cided upon the danger to Italy
and Europe. Here I am.”
—Caitlin Ostroff in London
contributed to this article.

migrants from parts of Africa
and the Middle East.
Italy’s economy, the world’s
eighth-largest, still hasn’t fully
recovered from the 2008
global financial crisis and its
aftermath. A modest revival of
growth in 2016-17 has faltered
over the past year. Global
trade tensions have hit Italy’s
export-oriented industries.
Political tensions between
Rome and the EU last year also
upset investors in Italian bonds
and banks, hurting the flow of
credit. Mr. Conte warned on
Tuesday against a repeat.
Amid signs that the Demo-
crats and 5 Star are preparing
to discuss an alternative gov-
ernment, investors reached for
the Italian 10-year bond, push-
ing the yield down to 1.346% on
Tuesday from 1.441% Monday.
Mr. Salvini began pressing
for snap elections on Aug. 8,
in a bid to capitalize on opin-
ion polls that show the League
has become Italy’s most popu-

ContinuedfromPageOne

Italian


Government


Collapses


ANDREAS SOLARO/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, above center, addressed the Senate in Rome on Tuesday, the day Premier Giuseppe Conte, below, resigned.

CLAUDIO PERI/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK


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