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Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu Alamy Stock Photo

Italian cardinal convicted of embezzlement will not participate in upcoming conclave

Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu is convicted of embezzlement and will not take part in the conclave.

ANGELO BECCIU, AN Italian cardinal convicted of embezzlement and stripped of his privileges by Pope Francis, confirmed today he will not take part in the conclave to elect a new Catholic leader.

In a statement from his lawyer, Becciu said he would abide by the late pontiff’s will, ending days of speculation on whether he would join other cardinal electors in the Sistine Chapel on May 7.

“I have decided to obey, as I have always done, the will of Pope Francis not to enter into conclave,” Becciu said, while continuing to protest his innocence.

The 76-year-old said he decided to take a step back “having at heart the good of the Church” and “to contribute to the communion and serenity of the Conclave”.

The conclave

The conclave to select the next pope will commence next week, on 7 May. 

The highly secretive vote will be held in the Sistine Chapel in The Vatican and follows strict rules and ceremonial procedures.

There are four votes per day – two in the morning and two in the afternoon – until one candidate secures a two-thirds majority. The process could take several days, or potentially longer.

All 252 cardinals were called to Rome following the death of Pope Francis on 21 April but just 135 of the group are under 80 and therefore are eligible to vote. 

Many of them are newly appointed and do not know each other but they have had four meetings in the last week to get better acquainted. 

Speaking to The Journal last week, Archbishop of Dublin Dermot Farrell (who will not vote in the conclave as he is not a cardinal) said he believes the next Pope will be selected on the basis of faith, not politics.

Becciu’s history 

Becciu, a former adviser to Francis who was once considered a papal contender himself, was removed from office and stripped of his cardinal “rights and privileges” in September 2020.

He subsequently went on trial along with nine others in a case focused on a disastrous investment by the Vatican in a luxury building in London.

In 2023, he was sentenced to five years and six months in jail for financial crimes, although he is appealing the conviction.

Becciu, once one of the most powerful figures in the Vatican, had reportedly been pushing to take part in the conclave, despite not being on the official list of electors.

On Monday Cardinal Pietro Parolin, who as secretary of state was Francis’s number two, presented him with two documents signed by the Argentine pontiff which said he could not, according to Italian media.

The letters dated from 2023 and last month, according to the Domani newspaper.

Becciu was the most senior clergyman in the Catholic Church to face a Vatican criminal court.

His very rare punishment came as Francis enacted a series of reforms aimed at cleaning up the Vatican’s notoriously murky finances.

- © AFP 2025, with reporting from Sam Starkey 

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