Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jan 2008
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2008 Los Angeles Times
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/bc7El3Yo
Website: http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Tracy Wilkinson, Reporting from Mexico City
Bookmark: Mexico Under Siege (Series) http://mapinc.org/find?255

Mexico Under Siege

VATICAN SUGGESTS EXCOMMUNICATING MEXICAN DRUG TRAFFICKERS

The Vatican's No. 2 Official, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, Calls for a 
'Harsh Deterrent' To the Drug Violence That Left More Than 5,000 Dead 
Last Year.

Decrying the violence that Mexicans are enduring, the Vatican has 
suggested excommunication as a possible punishment for drug 
traffickers whose war with the government has led to the deaths of 
thousands of people in the last year.

But the Roman Catholic Church's severest form of rebuke would 
probably have little effect on traffickers and killers who lack a 
religious conscience, the Vatican's No. 2 official, Cardinal Tarcisio 
Bertone, acknowledged.

Speaking to Latin American journalists at the Vatican before 
traveling to Mexico on Monday, Bertone said it was a "duty" to fight 
drug gangs because their actions represent "the most hypocritical and 
terrible way of murdering the dignity and personality of today's youth."

"Certainly, excommunication is a very harsh deterrent that the church 
has used to deal with the most serious crimes in its history, from 
the very first centuries," Bertone said when asked if the censure 
would be appropriate. Excommunication bars a Catholic from receiving 
sacraments and participating in public worship.

"But I should observe that excommunication is a punishment that 
touches only those who have some form of ecclesiastical conscience, 
an ecclesiastical education," he added.

The Vatican, Bertone said, is alarmed at the "disasters" of 
drug-fueled violence, kidnappings and generalized insecurity in 
Mexico and, increasingly, in some of its Central American neighbors. 
He called on Catholics to pray for traffickers to have a change of heart.

Bertone -- whose official title is Vatican secretary of state, making 
him a kind of prime minister to Pope Benedict XVI -- will be in 
Mexico for the sixth World Meeting of Families, a church conference 
that starts this week. His comments were published in Mexican 
newspapers Monday.

Within the "narco-culture" that surrounds the drug trade here, 
gangsters make use of a blend of Catholic observance mixed with 
superstition and their own iconography. For example, many revere the 
so-called saint of the narco-traffickers, a Robin Hood-type character 
named Jesus Malverde.

President Felipe Calderon launched the Mexican army a little over two 
years ago in a nationwide offensive against powerful and well-armed 
drug gangs. Rather than pacify the country, the conflict has only 
increased the bloodshed. More than 5,000 people were killed last year alone.

Officially, the church hierarchy in Mexico has been supportive of the 
government campaign while also urging dialogue and an end to 
violence. In some parts of the country, however, priests have been 
willing to accept money from local drug lords to pay for church 
repairs or other community projects.

"They are very generous with the societies of their towns," Bishop 
Carlos Aguiar Retes, president of the Mexican Bishops Conference, 
said in April, according to the newspaper Reforma. In some remote 
towns, he said, "they put up lights, communications, roads, at their 
own expense. . . . Often they also build a church or a chapel."

The remarks outraged many Mexicans, and church officials later said 
the bishop was taken out of context. But human rights activists have 
long complained of complacency by many priests.

"There are seminaries, churches, who accept money not knowing where 
it came from," Mercedes Murillo, president of the Sinaloan Civic 
Front in the city of Culiacan, a major drug-trafficking center, said 
in a recent interview. "They wash their hands like Pontius Pilate."