An
alleged organized crime group put 11 narcomantas in seven municipalities in the
state of Guanajuato which accepted the request made by Archbishop of Leon, José
Guadalupe Martín Rábago for the visit of Pope Benedicto XVl, who is expected to
arrive on March 23, 2012
LEON, Gto. February 7.Yesterday, an alleged organized crime group put 11 narcomantas in seven municipalities of Guanajuato, which accepted the request by Jose Guadalupe Martin Rabago on January 22 to , asked criminals to reduce violence during the visit of Benedict XVI Mexico, which will be March 23 - 26.
LEON, Gto. February 7.Yesterday, an alleged organized crime group put 11 narcomantas in seven municipalities of Guanajuato, which accepted the request by Jose Guadalupe Martin Rabago on January 22 to , asked criminals to reduce violence during the visit of Benedict XVI Mexico, which will be March 23 - 26.
However, sources from the
States Attorney said the truce prevents a rival cartel from operating in Guanajuato.
On January
22, Martin Rabago made his request to members of organized crime: "
collaborate even allowing all these people to come to a totally respectable
act. No advantage to do something that would lead to an experience of grief and
death" he said.
This wasn't
the first time the Mexican Catholic Church called for a truce with narcos. In
December 2010, Cardinal Juan Sandoval Iniguez, did it twice. Last August,
Conference Esiscopado Mexicano asked them to allow the tour of the relics of
John Paul II.
On Jan. 28,
the representative of the pope in Mexico , Christopher Pierre, said
that the church didn't ask for a truce: "What we asked is for a change in
mentality"
Narcos Accept Peace during Papal Visit
A criminal
group operating in Guanajuato allegedly accepted the proposal of truce
requested by Jose Guadalupe Martin Rebago for the visit of the Pope who is
expected to arrive in Mexico
on March 23.
Across seven
different municipalities of Guanajuato, the cartel allegedly distanced itself
from the attack on the Attorney General' Carlos Zamarripa Aguirre's body
guards, in which the attacker was killed and an escorting officer was wounded
in the leg.
Sources
at the Attorney General of Guanajuato reported that the contents of the
discarded blankets said that the organized group antagonistic to the Sinaloa
cartel has been responsible for the violents events in the Santa Fe residential subdivision.
The mantas
allegedly show their agreement with the Archbishop of Leon and the proposed
truce, days later rejected by Christophe Pierre, apostolic nuncio in Mexico,
information released three weeks ago.
On Jan. 23,
Martin Rebago called on organized crime to establish a truce, making free and
safe the roads of Mexico
to all those seeking to get to travel Guanajuato to see Pope Benedict XVl.
Given the
insecurity of the roads to Guanajuato, mainly from the north, Martin Rebago
appealed to the human sensiblity of assassins and drug traffickers in March to
respect the population.
"To collaborate allowing all these people to come
to a totally respectable act. No advantage to do something that would lead to
an experience of grief and death.
"We
believe in their hearts, which ultimately are human, there is sensitivity to
respect the lives of people"
In the narcomantas yesterday, the truce alleged the condition to prevent Nueva Generación, allegedly linked to Joaquin El Chapo Guzman access to Guanajuato
Recall José
Antonio Torres Marrufo, alias El Marrufo, líder de Nueva Generación, armed wing
of the cartel Sinaloa in Chihuahua
was detained in Leon, Guanajuato last week.
Calls For Peace
The Catholic
Church leaders have called several times on members of organized crime to
refrain from further offenses
On March 27,
2011, the archbishop of the Archdiocese of Leon, Jose Guadalupe Martin Rabago,
called on drug dealers and hit men to repent their sins, withdrawing from the
activity of death to obtain God's forgiveness. He admits that the punishment of
excommunication imposed on drug traffickers in some dioceses have not had
"much result."
On August 9,
2011, the Catholic hierarchy in Mexico
called for a truce that would deter violence while the relics of Blessed John
Paul II traveled to more than 100 locations around the country. Amid a climate
of violence in parts of Mexico ,
the Mexican Bishops Conference called for the criminal to allow Mexicans to
venerate the relics in the journey that began on 25 August.
On December 4, 2011, the Bishop of Cuernavaca, Alfonso Cortés Contreras, joined the call for Christmas truce, requested by the poet Javier Sicilia to the drug cartels, but also added his regret at the pain you have caused to the society.
The Catholic prelate specifies: "I am making a fraternal call to them, and on behalf of God to think that this is not the right path, that is not the path of peace, which is not the way to live as brothers and as human beings. "
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