Pope ‘rested well’ on eighth night in hospital: Vatican

Pope Francis gestures at the end of the weekly general audience on September 18, 2024 at St Peter's square in The Vatican. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 22 February 2025
Follow

Pope ‘rested well’ on eighth night in hospital: Vatican

VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis “rested well” during his eighth night in hospital, where the 88-year-old is being treated for double pneumonia, the Vatican said Saturday.
Francis was admitted to Rome’s Gemelli hospital on February 14 with bronchitis, but it turned into pneumonia in both lungs, causing widespread alarm.
The pontiff’s doctors had told a press conference on Friday there was no imminent risk to his life but that he was “not out of danger.”
The Vatican’s early morning update Saturday was shorter than usual, without mentioning that he had eaten, saying simply: “Pope Francis rested well.”
The Gemelli’s Professor Sergio Alfieri told reporters Friday that the pontiff’s condition has been slightly improving, allowing doctors to incrementally lower the amount of medication he is taking.
“The question is, is the pope out of danger? No, the pope is not out of danger,” Alfieri said.
“If you then ask whether he is in danger of dying at this moment, the answer is still no,” he added.
His hospitalization has cast doubt over Francis’s ability to continue as head of the world’s almost 1.4 billion Catholics.
But Vatican Secretary of State Pietro Parolin dismissed this as “useless speculation” in an interview published Saturday with Italy’s Corriere della Sera daily.
“Now we are thinking about the health of the Holy Father, his recovery, his return to the Vatican: these are the only things that matter,” the cardinal said.
Parolin said he personally had not yet been to see the pope, saying he was available but so far there was no need.
“It is better if he remains protected and has as few visitors as possible, to allow him to rest and make the treatment he is undergoing more effective,” he added.

HEALTH ISSUES
Francis, who is staying in a special papal suite on the 10th floor of the Gemelli hospital, has been moving between his bed, a chair and an adjacent chapel where he prays.
He will remain in hospital “at least for all next week,” Alfieri said.
“If we send him to Santa Marta (his home at the Vatican), he’ll start working again as before,” he said.
Asked if the pope would be well enough to lead the Angelus prayer from his hospital window this Sunday, Alfieri said “the pope will decide.”
The doctor said “the real risk in these cases is that the germs pass into the blood,” which could result in sepsis, a life-threatening condition.
Doctor Luigi Carbone said the pope, who had part of one of his lungs removed as a young man, now has a chronic lung condition and “is by definition a fragile patient.”
But Alfieri stressed that “at the same time, he has incredible resilience — How many others would have endured all these infections with the workload he has?“
He added that Francis has difficulty breathing but was not on any machines and was “in good spirits.” He still has the wit of “a 70-year-old, maybe a 50-year-old.”
But Francis’s absence from the Vatican means questions are being raised over the future of a leader with a punishing schedule who has been increasingly plagued by health issues in recent years.
Since 2021 he has undergone colon and hernia surgery, is overweight and suffers constant hip and knee pain, which force him to use a wheelchair most of the time.
Francis is also one of the oldest popes ever — and though he has said the job is for life, the pope has left the door open to resigning like his predecessor Benedict XVI.


Spain urges EU to create joint army amid Greenland dispute

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Spain urges EU to create joint army amid Greenland dispute

  • EU should integrate defense industry and assemble coalition of the willing, Spain foreign minister says
  • Joint EU military more efficient than separate national forces, Albares says

ZURICH: Spain is urging the EU to move toward creating a joint army for the bloc as a deterrence measure, Spain’s Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares said in comments to Reuters on Wednesday ahead of a day of meetings in Davos.
The region should focus first on bringing together its tangible assets to properly integrate ‌its defense ‌industry, and then mobilizing a coalition of ‌the ⁠willing, ​the foreign ‌minister said.
The concern over whether European citizens would be willing to assemble militarily is a “legitimate debate”, but the chance of assembling a critical mass was higher as a bloc than on a national level, Albares said, adding: “A joint effort would be more efficient than 27 separate national armies.”
The comments come ahead of an emergency meeting between EU leaders later on Thursday ⁠in Brussels to coordinate a joint response to US President Trump’s threats to buy ‌or annex Greenland. A Council spokesperson confirmed late ‍on Wednesday the meeting will still ‍take place despite Trump’s announcement on social media that he and ‍NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte had “formed the framework of a deal”.
Albares, speaking after a meeting in Delhi on Wednesday with his Indian counterpart Subrahmanyam Jaishankar which included talks on deeper defense ties, stressed that the intention of such ​an army was not to replace NATO, underscoring the importance of the transatlantic alliance.
“But we need to demonstrate that ⁠Europe is not a place that will let itself be coerced militarily or economically,” Albares said.
His position remained unchanged despite Trump rowing back on his Greenland threats after speaking to Rutte, a senior foreign official said, adding that Spain was “glad a pathway for dialogue had been opened within the NATO framework, if that pathway is confirmed.”
The concept of integrating national military forces into a supranational European army was first proposed in 1951 to counter the Soviet Union and ensure German rearmament did not threaten its neighbors, but was voted down by France’s parliament in 1954.
“The idea of ‌European defense was part of the origin of the EU. It is up to my generation to finish this task,” Albares said.