LONDON
(AFP) – Francis Arinze of Nigeria, Peter Turkson of Ghana and Marc
Ouellet of Canada were among the cardinals hotly tipped by bookmakers on
Monday to take over from Pope Benedict XVI.
William
Hill bookmakers named 80-year-old Arinze as their favourite to replace
the pontiff following Monday’s shock announcement of the pontiff’s
resignation with odds of 2-1, followed by Turkson at 5-2.
Coral
also tipped Arinze as the likeliest successor with odds of 7-4,
followed by Turkson at 2-1 and Ouellet in third place at 5-1.
The
bookmaker also offered odds of 8-1 on Archbishop Angelo Scola of Italy
and 10-1 on Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga of Honduras.
Irish bookmaker Paddy Power named Ouellet as the favourite with odds of 5-2, followed by Arinze at 3-1 and Turkson at 4-1.
During
the 2005 conclave of the Vatican’s College of Cardinals that elected
Benedict, Arinze was considered “papabile,” or a potential successor to
the late John Paul II.
“When we opened betting last time around, in 2005, Francis Arinze was our favourite,” a William Hill spokesman told AFP.
“His
odds did drift towards the date of the announcement when Joseph
Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict XVI) became the favourite, but he
remained in the top three.
“Also,
when Ratzinger became pope, Arinze took over from him as cardinal
bishop of Velletri-Segni (a Catholic diocese close to Rome) — it could
be that he’ll follow in his footsteps again.”
A
quarter of the cardinals that can elect a new pope are Italian. The
last non-Italian pope before Benedict, who is German, and his Polish
predecessor John Paul II was Adrian VI, who died in 1523.
Arinze
and Turkson, the head of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace
who is considered a progressive candidate, are among 18 Africans in the
Vatican’s College of Cardinals.
Ouellet,
a respected theologian who heads up the world’s bishops and is seen as a
“modern conservative”, has also been frequently named in Vatican
circles as a possible successor to Benedict.
At the humorous end of the scale, Coral was offering 2000-1 on disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong becoming pope.
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