The Pope named 24 new cardinals, putting his mark on the body that will elect his successor and giving a boost to Italian hopes to regain the papacy.

He said the new “princes of the church” will be formally elevated at a ceremony in Rome on November 20, making the announcement “with joy” at the end of his weekly public audience.

Key posts include Warsaw, Poland; Munich; Kinshasa, Congo; Quito, Equador; Aparecida, Brazil; Lusaka, Zambia; Colombo, Sri Lanka; and the leader in Egypt of the Catholic Coptic church, who is currently heading a Vatican meeting on the plight of Christians in the Middle East.

Many of the new cardinals head Vatican offices, includ-ing Archbishop Kurt Koch, a Swiss in charge of the Vatican’s relations with other Christians and Jews.

Cardinals are close advisers to a Pope, but their key job is to elect the Pontiff.

With the installation of the new cardinals, the Pope in just five years has named nearly half of the 120 prelates under the age of 80 and, therefore, eligible to vote in a conclave following the death of a Pope.

Eight of the new cardinals under 80 are Italians, giving them a total of 25 – nearly half of the Europeans in the elect-ing body of the College of Cardinals.

Italians held the papacy for 455 years until the election of Poland’s John Paul II in 1978, followed by the current German-born Pope in 2005.

“The preponderance of Italians would suggest the scale has tipped in favour of an Italian candidate for the next conclave,” said Gerard O’Connell, a veteran Irish Vatican correspondent.

With the church rocked by a global clerical sex abuse crisis, the Pope named as cardinal in Munich, his former diocese, Archbishop Reinhard Marx, who has been prominent in efforts to clean up the scandal in Germany.

The 57-year-old Archbishop Marx, the youngest of the new cardinals, was behind efforts to force out a bishop accused of physical abuse of children.

“To be a cardinal in these times is also a great challenge,” Archbishop Marx said in a statement. “The tremors of the last few months must become the point of departure for a spiritual deepening of our faith and a new courage to evangelise inside and outside” the church, he added in a reference to the scandal.

However, the Pope passed up giving a cardinal’s red hat to Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin, who has been the Irish church’s leading advocate for Catholic openness in its child-abuse scandals.

With the new appointments, Europe retains its edge in the College of Cardinals. Ten of the new cardinals hold posts in the Curia, the Church’s administrative body at the Vatican.

However, the Pope named cardinals in such key posts as Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, a major Catholic country in Africa. The new cardinal is Archbishop Laurent Mosengwo Pasinya.

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