The
president and four non-executive members of the governing board of the Vatican
bank are due to step down, the BBC has learned.
The
move, part of a restructure of the Catholic Church's central government, will
be announced on Wednesday.
Pope
Francis has sought to stamp out corruption and other abuses at the bank, which
handles the Church's funds.
The
news comes after the bank said its profit fell to
2.9m euros (£2.3m) in 2013,
down from 86.6m euros in 2012.
Attempts
to create a more transparent banking system for the Catholic Church, begun by
Pope Benedict after allegations were made that the Vatican bank had been used
by money launderers, will continue under new management.
Balance sheet woes
The
Vatican's precarious financial situation was revealed by the simultaneous
publication in Rome of balance sheets for 2013 of the Holy See, of the Vatican
City state, a separate entity, and of the Vatican bank, known officially as the
Institute for Religious Works (IOR).
The
IOR moves money around the world to finance Catholic missions and provides
banking services for the pope, clergy and religious orders.
Alongside
the bank's massive drop in profits, the Holy See, the administrative
headquarters of the Church, ran up a deficit of 24.2m euros (£19.2m) last year.
However
Vatican City state, the tiny sovereign enclave in the heart of Rome, which
derives a large part of its income from tickets to the Vatican museums,
reported a profit of 32.3m euros (£25.7m).
Vatican
bank president Ernst von Freyberg says the bank's problems have been blown out
of proportion
The
bank's losses were attributed in part to writedowns of investments made before
the bank's reform programme started and when less vigilance was exercised.
The
cost of bringing in American anti-money laundering experts to comb through and
vet some 18,000 individual accounts at the Vatican amounted to 7.3m euros
(£5.8m).
As a
result of this year-long operation, Pope Francis has called to Rome the former
head of the Catholic Church in Australia, Cardinal George Pell.
He
will head a new economic affairs department at the Vatican, with oversight of
all the Vatican's financial dealings and will report directly to the Pope.
Vatican
bank president Ernst von Freyberg, appointed by former Pope Benedict just
before his retirement in February 2013, will be replaced by a French
businessman, Jean Baptiste Franssu.
The
Vatican bank has lost 3,000 of its customers, leaving about 15,000 current
accounts still active
In
an exclusive interview with the BBC in his Vatican bank office overlooking St
Peter's Square, I asked Mr von Freyberg if he had discovered many skeletons in
the cupboards of the IOR during his term of office.
"Only
small ones," he replied. "There is much less to the IOR than people
think. We are smaller than most small town savings and loans [banks] in the
world and the same is true of our skeletons."
"Whatever
we found is much smaller than you might believe reading up about the Vatican
bank in the media," he added.
According
to the IOR website, the total assets of the Vatican bank amount to 5.9 billion
euros (£4.7bn).
Under
Mr von Freyberg's management some 3,000 customer relationships have been
terminated, leaving about 15,000 current accounts active.
BBC
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