Cardinal Peter Turkson, seen by some as a candidate to become the first African pope in about 1,500 years, has abruptly offered his resignation from a key Vatican department, sources familiar with the matter said on Saturday.
Turkson, 73, from Ghana, has been a key adviser to Pope Francis on issues such as climate change and social justice, and is the only African to head a Vatican department.
According to the Vatican sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, the pope has yet to decide whether to accept the resignation.
Turkson heads a large Vatican department known as the Dicastery for Integral Human Development. It was formed in 2016 to merge four offices that dealt with issues such as peace, justice, migration, and charities.
One source said Turkson, who is about two years shy of the mandatory retirement age of 75 for bishops, had become “fed up” with internal disputes.
Another source said Turkson had told staff he would say more after the pope made his decision.
His departure would leave the Vatican with no African heading a major department, following the retirement of Cardinal Robert Sarah of Guinea earlier in 2021.
Turkson’s department underwent an external review headed by Cardinal Blase Cupich of Chicago at the pope’s request earlier in 2021.
His offer to resign follows two high-level departures from the department over the summer, one because of retirement and another sudden and unexplained.
A view shows St. Peter’s Basilica in The Vatican on March 27, 2021 before the lights are turned off for Earth Hour. Photo: VCG