Vatican City, Feb 18, 2012: Pope Benedict XVI today put his stamp of authority on the body that will elect his successor as he appointed 22 new cardinals, including one from India, at a time of roiling tensions in the Vatican administration.
The 84-year-old pontiff presented the new "princes of the Church" with scarlet-red birettas and gold rings while urging them to "renounce the worldly style of power and glory" in a solemn ceremony in Saint Peter’s Basilica.
The new members of the College of Cardinals "are asked to serve the Church with love and vigour, with the clarity and wisdom of teachers, with the energy and moral force of pastors (and) with the faith and courage of martyrs," the pope said.
The German pope did not refer directly to recent days of high-profile leaks and corruption allegations that have raised fears of a power struggle at the heart of the Roman Catholic Church.
Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi has denied the rumours, saying that the leaks were intended to "sow confusion" and cast the Church "in a bad light."
Among the key appointments were those of New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan, Toronto Archbishop Thomas Collins, as well as the bishop of Hong Kong, John Tong Hon, and Archbishop George Alencherry from India.
Critics say the appointments show a strong bias towards Europe, as out of the 125 cardinals under age 80 -- "elector cardinals" eligible to elect the pope in a secret conclave -- 67 are from Europe.
Just 22 are from South America, 15 from North America, 11 from Africa and 10 from Asia and the Pacific.
Moreover, the induction of seven Italians in Benedict’s fourth consistory brings to 30 the number of Italian elector cardinals -- almost a quarter of the total, far outweighing any other country.
The new cardinals include nine other Europeans as well as two Americans, one Canadian, a Brazilian, an Indian and a Hong Kong Chinese.
Catholics in Kerala elated as Alencherry ordained cardinal
Catholics in Kerala were elated as Mar George Alencherry, the major archbishop of Ernakulam-Angamaly diocese of the Syro-Malabar Church, was Saturday ordained a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church.
Many of the Catholics, who form 50 percent of the over seven million Christians in Kerala, were glued to the live coverage from the Vatican as Alencherry was ordained by the Pope along with 21 other bishops from various countries.
Alencherry, 66, becomes the youngest cardinal in the country and the fourth Keralite to be ordained.
Counting Alencherry, there are now six cardinals in India, of whom three are above 80 years and hence do not have voting rights to elect a pope. However, Alencherry and the two others will be among the 120 cardinals who form the electoral college for the pope’s election.
Syro-Malabar Church spokesperson, Father Paul Thelekkat said this is a big moment for all of them because "their own son" has now been ordained as a cardinal.
"Alencherry is humility personified and a down to earth person," he said.
In Kerala, three churches -- the Syro-Malabar, Latin and Syro-Malankara -- owe their allegiance to the Pope.