Cruise, Holmes agree split, vow to 'respect beliefs'

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LOS ANGELES: Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes have reached a “private” settlement less than two weeks after she announced their bombshell divorce — and vowed Monday to honor each other’s beliefs over their daughter.

 

The Hollywood pair issued a joint statement pledging to act in the “best  interests” of six-year-old Suri, and to take account of their “respective  beliefs” in her upbringing — an apparent reference to Scientology.
 
The announcement heads off what some had expected could be acrimonious  haggling over the divorce, amid reports Holmes was concerned about the role of  the Church of Scientology in their daughter’s life.
 
“The case has been settled and the agreement has been signed. We are  thrilled for Katie and her family and are excited to watch as she embarks on  the next chapter of her life,” her lawyer Jonathan Wolfe said.
 
No details of the settlement terms were given, but Holmes and Cruise’s  joint statement said: “We are committed to working together as parents to  accomplish what is in our daughter Suri’s best interests.
 
“We want to keep matters affecting our family private and express our  respect for each other’s commitment to each of our respective beliefs and  support each other’s roles as parents,” they added.
 
Asked about the terms of the settlement, Cruise’s publicist Amanda Lundberg  reiterated: “They are private.”    
 
Holmes announced on June 29 that she was filing for divorce to end the star  couple’s five-year-old marriage, apparently taking Cruise by surprise — he  said he was “deeply saddened” by the announcement.
 
Speculation over the cause of the split has focused on Holmes’ reported  concern that Cruise wanted their daughter to be immersed more deeply in the  Church of Scientology, of which he is a prominent member.
 
Holmes was raised as a Catholic, but joined Cruise’s Scientology religion after their whirlwind romance and wedding in a storybook Italian castle in  November 2006.
 
Lawyers for both Cruise — who celebrated his 50th birthday last Tuesday —  and 33-year-old Holmes were thought to have been negotiating through the  weekend to reach the deal.
 
Financial details of the settlement will likely remain secret.
 
In the 26 years since he made his name in the first “Top Gun” movie in  1986, Cruise has established himself as one of the most powerful and bankable  players in Hollywood, earning an estimated $75 million over the year to May.
 
Following Holmes’ divorce announcement, reports suggested that the actress  was seeking sole custody because she fears Cruise wants to draw the child  deeper into Scientology.
 
Celebrity news website TMZ reported that the settlement was “extremely  complicated,” and details things which both Cruise and Holmes can and cannot do  with their daughter.
 
Holmes will have primary physical custody, but Cruise has significant  custodial time, it said, while dismissing a report that Holmes was insisting  that a nanny or bodyguard always accompany Suri when she was with him, it said.
 
Specifically there will be restrictions on what Holmes or Cruise can discuss with their daughter on religion, including Scientology, although these will ease as Suri gets older, according to TMZ.
 
Underlining the religious split, the Huffington Post meanwhile reported  that Holmes had rejoined the Catholic church, by registering as a parishioner  at the Church of St. Francis Xavier in New York.
   
“Everyone is thrilled to have Katie join us,” the online newspaper quoted a  member of the church’s choir as saying.
 
The divorce is the third for Cruise, following his marriages to US actress Mimi Rogers from 1987-1990 and Australian Nicole Kidman from 1990-2001. He also  had a three-year relationship with Spanish star Penelope Cruz. AFP

 

 

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