Catholic bishops call for authorities to step up against violence in
southern Mexico
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[October 29, 2024]
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Four Roman Catholic bishops in the southern
Mexican state of Guerrero called Monday for civilian and military
authorities to take steps to protect residents of a region rocked by
violence that has left more than a dozen dead in recent days.
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Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, center, reviews the troops with
Defense Minister Gen. Ricardo Trevilla Trejo, left, and Navy Secretary
Alt. Raymundo Pedro Morales, at Campo Marte in Mexico City, Oct. 3,
2024. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano, File) |
The violence around Tecpan de Galeana, about 65 miles (104
kilometers) up the Pacific coast from Acapulco, led authorities
to suspend classes at schools there and in two neighboring
municipalities on Monday.
In a statement circulated by the Catholic bishops conference of
Mexico, bishops Jesús González, Leopoldo González, Joel Ocampo
Gorostieta and Dagoberto Sosa said the power struggles among
criminal organizations are growing stronger “because they have
the complicity, tolerance or indifference of many of those who
must promote and ensure justice, legality and security.”
The same four bishops drew attention earlier this year when they
acknowledged meeting with Mexican drug cartel bosses in a bid to
negotiate a possible peace accord. The truce did not come to
fruition because one of the parties allegedly did not agree.
Then-President Andrés Manuel López Obrador had said at the time
that he approved of such talks.
The first month of his successor President Claudia Sheinbaum’s
administration has been roiled by violence. Not only in
Guerrero, where the newly elected mayor of the state capital was
killed and decapitated days after taking office, but also in the
western state of Sinaloa and the southern state of Chiapas,
where gunmen last week killed a well-known Catholic priest and
Indigenous activist.
On Monday, Sheinbaum responded to a reporter’s question by
saying that her security policies – largely a continuation of
her predecessor’s – “are going to be seen little by little.”
Sheinbaum said she would not negotiate with criminals, but
rather battle impunity and address the root causes of violence
through social problems.
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