Italy should get back taxes from Vatican, court rules

A view of St Peters Basilica from the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross April 14 2016 Credit Alexey Gotovskiy CNA 4 14 16 A view of St. Peter's Basilica from the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross. | Alexey Gotovskiy/CNA.

Catholic leaders are open to discussing with the Italian government a court ruling saying Italy has the right to recover millions of dollars from the Church from a previous tax exemption.

According to DW, an exemption was established in the beginning of 2012, which allowed for non-commercial Church properties to be exempt from paying an Italian municipal tax – the IMU.

The case had been opened that year by a Montessori school and an owner of a bed-and-breakfast, who called the exemption unfair to properties offering similar services.

In December 2012, the European Commission in Brussels declared the exemption to be unlawful. However, the court ruled that it would be too complicated to recover the money, as the tax database and Italian property title registry were not up-to-date.

However, the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg overruled that decision this month, saying that Italy has the right to take back millions of euros, the Associated Press reported.

On Thursday, Cardinal Gualtiero Bassetti, head of the Italian bishops' conference, said the Church had not yet begun a discussion with the government, but "certainly some contacts will be necessary," according to the Associated Press.

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