Pope Election: Black Smoke Signals No New Pope

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 13 Maret 2013 | 18.25

Black smoke from the first two votes of the conclave entering its second day has signalled the cardinals tasked with electing a new pope are still not agreed on Benedict's successor.

They reconvened for the papal conclave behind closed doors after the first round of voting last night proved inconclusive.

They attended mass in the Pauline Chapel in the Vatican's Apostolic Palacve and returned to the Renaissance splendour of the Sistine Chapel to hold two morning ballots.

Black smoke rises from the chimney on the roof of the Sistine Chapel meaning that cardinals failed to elect a new pope Black smoke billows from the chimney of the Vatican's Sistine Chapel

All eyes remain on the chimney atop the Vatican's Sistine Chapel as the process of finding a successor to Benedict XVI, who brought a troubled eight-year papacy to an abrupt end by resigning last month, will continue until his replacement is chosen..

They are expected to hold a further two ballots later on the first full day of voting.

The 115 voting eligible church leaders first filed into the chapel chamber, renowned for its ceiling fresco painted by Renaissance master Michelangelo, on Tuesday morning to begin their deliberations.

Cardinals enter the Sistine Chapel to begin the conclave in order to elect a successor to Pope Benedict at the Vatican. The cardinals are scheduled to hold four votes each day

Hours later after sunset, black smoke billowed from the chimney above the Vatican, indicating that no-one had gained the two-thirds majority needed to become the 266th pope.

Only the emergence of white smoke - produced by mixing the smoke from burning ballots with special flares - will signal that a new leader for the world's 1.2 billion Catholics has been chosen.

The tens of thousands that braved the rain and gathered in St Peter's Square to bear witness to the centuries-old tradition cheered in excitement or booed in mock disappointment.

Papal Conclave TV Promo For Sky News

Among the cardinals gathered in Rome, Italy's Angelo Scola, Brazil's Odilo Scherer and Canada's Marc Ouellet - all conservatives like Benedict - are the three favourites.

Modern-day conclaves normally last no more than a few days.

However, there is no clear frontrunner, meaning the election could go on for much longer than the two days and four rounds of voting that it took to elect Joseph Ratzinger in 2005, following the death of John Paul II.

People crowd Saint Peter's Square to await the sight of smoke from the chimney above the Sistine Chapel, at the Vatican. People packed St Peter's Square on Tuesday night awaiting the site of smoke

Some analysts have suggested that Benedict's dramatic departure - the first papal resignation in over 700 years - could push the cardinals to take an equally unusual decision and elect an outsider.

Hopes are high in the Philippines for the popular Archbishop of Manila, Luis Antonio Tagle, and on the African continent for South Africa's Wilfrid Napier, the archbishop of Durban, but in practice their chances are very slim.

Two-thirds of the cardinals are from Europe and North America and the view among many experts is that only someone with experience of the inner workings of the Vatican administration can drive reform and repair the scandal-ridden reputation of the Catholic Church.


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