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Acknowledgment: Catholic World News Service | |||
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VATICAN (CWN) -- Three new bishops have been named to dioceses in Vietnam. The announcement of those appointments-- made at the Vatican today-- suggested that a breakthrough had been achieved by the Vatican delegation which recently returned from Vietnam after a
special negotiating mission.
Bishop Jean-Baptiste Pham Minh Man, who is now a coadjutor bishop
of My Tho, was named to be the Archbishop of Ho Chi Minh City
(formerly Saigon), the most important Catholic center in the Asian
country. For several years this archbishopric has been vacant, as the
consequence of an impasse in negotiations between Holy See and the
government in Vietnam; the government had rejected the first
Vatican nominee for the position.
Archbishop Etienne Nguyen Nhu The of Tipasa, Mauritania-- who has
been serving as apostolic administrator of the Archdiocese of Hue--
will now officially become the archbishop there. And Cardinal Paul
Joseph Pham Děnh Tung of Hanoi will become the apostolic
administrator of Lang Son and of Cao Bing.
The episcopal changes were announced by the Vatican, without any
further public comment, just days after the return to Rome of a
delegation headed by Msgr. Celestino Migliore, which had been
charged with negotiating with the Vietnam government in an effort
to allow the appointment of new bishops. Vietnam, like China, has
sought to establish a "patriotic" Catholic Church, in which bishops
would be loyal to the national government rather than to the Holy See.
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