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Pope says option of resigning is only 'a distant hypothesis'

Italian journalist and writer Fabio Marchese Ragona, left, talks with Pope Francis as they meet at Casa Santa Marta at The Vatican, Saturday, Dec. 18, 2021. (Mediaset Press Office via AP, handout) Italian journalist and writer Fabio Marchese Ragona, left, talks with Pope Francis as they meet at Casa Santa Marta at The Vatican, Saturday, Dec. 18, 2021. (Mediaset Press Office via AP, handout)
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Pope Francis has no intention of resigning as he feels that his health is good enough to allow him to carry on, he says in a new book whose excerpts were published by Italy's Corriere della Sera newspaper on Thursday.

"This is a distant hypothesis, because I don't have reasons serious enough to make me think about giving up," Francis was quoted as saying in "Life - My Story in History," a book based on an interview with the pope that is due to be out in Italy on March 19.

Francis is 87 and has been increasingly frail in recent years, using a wheelchair or a cane to move around and recently suffering from what has been described as bouts of bronchitis or colds that have led him to limit his public speaking.

Nevertheless, in the book he reassures about his condition.

"Thank the Lord, I enjoy good health and, God willing, there are many projects still to be realized," he said, repeating that he would consider quitting only in case of a "serious physical impediment."

Francis' predecessor Benedict XVI was the first pope to resign in around 600 years, citing the strains of old age. He quit in February 2013, aged 85, and went on to live for almost 10 more years, dying at the age of 95.

(Reporting by Alvise Armellini, editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

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