25, October 2024
Archbishop Andrew Nkea re-elected to the Ordinary Council of the Synod of Bishops in Rome 0
Synod delegates have elected new members of the Ordinary Council of the General Secretariat of the Synod of Bishops.
At the 15th General Congregation of the Synod of Bishops on Wednesday, delegates elected the new members of the Ordinary Council of the General Secretariat of the Synod.
Pope Francis made a modification to the current Instruction governing the Assembly’s work, increasing the total number of members to 17, according to a statement released by the Synod Secretariat.
Of these, twelve were elected in the afternoon from among the diocesan/eparchial bishops or equivalents who are part of the Assembly: 1 from the Eastern Catholic Churches, 1 from Oceania, and 2 each from North America, Latin America, Europe, Africa, and Asia.
In addition to these, the Pope will appoint 4 members, as well as, in due course, the head of the Dicastery of the Roman Curia responsible for the theme of the next Synod.
As stated in the Apostolic Constitution Episcopalis Communio (n. 24, 1-3), the Ordinary Council of the General Secretariat is responsible for preparing and implementing the Ordinary General Assembly.
Members of the Ordinary Council begin their term at the end of the Ordinary General Assembly that elected them, they are members of the next Ordinary General Assembly, and their mandate concludes when that Assembly is dissolved.
Chaired by the Holy Father, the Council is an essential part of the General Secretariat.
The new Ordinary Council will play a key role both in implementing this synodal process on synodality and in preparing for the next Synod.
Cardinal Mario Grech, in wishing the newly elected members well in their work, also expressed gratitude to the outgoing members for their valuable collaboration in bringing the current synodal process to fruition.
The elected members are:
From the EASTERN CATHOLIC CHURCHES
His Beatitude Youssef ABSI, Patriarch of Antioch of the Greek Melkites, Head of the Synod of the Greek Melkite Catholic Church
From OCEANIA
His Excellency Most Rev. Msgr. Timothy John COSTELLOE, S.D.B., Archbishop of Perth (Australia)
From NORTH AMERICA
His Excellency Most Rev. Msgr. Daniel Ernest FLORES, Bishop of Brownsville (United States of America)
His Excellency Most Rev. Msgr. Alain FAUBERT, Bishop of Valleyfield (Canada)
From LATIN AMERICA
His Eminence Most Rev. Card. Luis José RUEDA APARICIO, Archbishop of Bogotá (Colombia)
His Excellency Most Rev. Msgr. José Luis AZUAJE AYALA, Archbishop of Maracaibo (Venezuela)
From EUROPE
His Eminence Cardinal Jean-Marc AVELINE, Archbishop of Marseille (France)
His Excellency Msgr Gintaras GRUŠAS, Archbishop of Vilnius (Lithuania)
From AFRICA
Cardinal Dieudonné NZAPALAINGA, C.S.Sp., Archbishop of Bangui (Central African Republic)
H.E. Msgr. Andrew FUANYA NKEA, Archbishop of Bamenda (Cameroon)
From ASIA
His Eminence Cardinal Filipe Neri António Sebastião DO ROSÁRIO FERRÃO, Archbishop of Goa and Damão (India)
His Excellency Msgr. Pablo Virgilio S. DAVID, Bishop of Kalookan (Philippines)
To this list, Pope Francis will appoint 4 other members.
Source: Vatican News



















26, October 2024
Yaoundé: journalist Thierry Patrick Ondoua detained on insult charges 0
The Committee to Protect Journalists calls on Cameroonian authorities to immediately release journalist Thierry Patrick Ondoua, publishing director of the privately-owned Le Point Hebdo bimonthly newspaper, after he was arrested on Tuesday in connection with a report on the minister of housing’s alleged mismanagement, and to drop all charges against him.
“Journalist Thierry Patrick Ondoua’s troubling detention, as well as the continued imprisonment of five other journalists for their work, underscores the urgent need to reform the country’s laws to ensure journalism is not criminalized,” said Angela Quintal, head of CPJ’s Africa Program, in New York. “Government officials should be able to respond to journalistic coverage and criticism without resorting to censorious legal proceedings. Ondoua and the other jailed journalists should be released immediately and not punished for doing their jobs.”
On Tuesday, October 22, the regional division of the judicial police (DRPJ) in Yaoundé, the Cameroonian capital, summoned and arrested Ondoua on charges of false news, defamation, and insulting “constituted bodies,” which includes ministers, deputies and certain types of state officials, according to a CPJ review of the summons letters, and Prosper-Rémy Mimboé, the newspaper’s managing editor, who spoke to CPJ. The arrest followed a complaint filed by Célestine Ketcha Courtès, minister of Housing and Urban Development, and Ondoua is still waiting for arraignment in the Yaoundé court, according to those sources. He faces up to five years imprisonment if convicted.
Mimboé told CPJ that Ondoua’s arrest was in connection with several reports published by Le Point Hebdo criticizing Courtès’ management of housing policies, including one published on June 18, 2024, a copy of which CPJ reviewed.
Cameroon, which is preparing for a presidential election next year that could see the 91-year-old current president Paul Biya run for his eighth term, has seen numerous arrests and suspensions of media outlets and journalists in recent weeks related to the delay of parliamentary and local elections.
Cameroon was ranked as sub-Saharan Africa’s third-worst jailer of journalists in CPJ’s annual prison census, with six imprisoned as of December 1, 2023. One journalist, Stanislas Désiré Tchoua, was released on December 28 after serving a prison sentence for defamation and insult.
CPJ’s messages to Bangté Talamdio, a member of Courtès’ cabinet, and calls to the public listed number for Cameroon’s Ministry of Housing, DRPJ and Yaoundé court of first instance went unanswered.
Source: CPJ