We present results from an XMM-Newton observation of the nearby Seyfert 2
galaxy NGC5643. The nucleus exhibits a very flat X-ray continuum above 2 keV,
together with a prominent K-alpha fluorescent iron line. This indicates heavy
obscuration. We measure an absorbing column density N_H in the range 6-10 x
10^{23} atoms/cm/cm, either directly covering the nuclear emission, or covering
its Compton-reflection. In the latter case, we might be observing a rather
unusual geometry for the absorber, whereby reflection from the inner far side
of a torus is in turn obscured by its near side outer atmosphere. The nuclear
emission might be then either covered by a Compton-thick absorber, or
undergoing a transient state of low activity. A second source (christened "X-1"
in this paper) at the outskirts of NGC5643 optical surface outshines the
nucleus in X-rays. If belonging to NGC5643, it is the third brightest (L_X ~ 4
x 10^{40} erg/s) known Ultra Luminous X-ray source. Comparison with past large
aperture spectra of NGC 5643 unveils dramatic X-ray spectral changes above 1
keV. We interpret them as due to variability of the active nucleus and of
source X-1 intrinsic X-ray powers by a factor >10 and 5, respectively.Comment: 11 LATEX pages, 12 figures, to appear in Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Societ