Priest Honored for Investigating Attacks in Mexico
ICC Note: On March 30, the National Club of Journalists honored a Catholic priest, Father Oman Sotelo Aguilar, for his 2016 investigative report, which detailed 10 years of persecution in Mexico. The report covered incidents from 2006 to 2016 and ranged from extortion to murder. While he received the honors, Father Sotelo dedicated the award to his fellow priests and “those who suffer persecution and violence in silence.”
04/05/2017 Mexico (Christian Solidarity Worldwide) – Father Omar Sotelo Aguilar, a Catholic Priest who has documented attacks on priests and other Catholic Church members by criminal groups in Mexico for over a decade, has been honoured for his work by the National Club of Journalists.
Father Sotelo is the director of the Catholic Multimedia Centre (CCM). On 30 March he received the National Journalism Award in the category of Human Rights for his December 2016 investigative report “The Tragedy and Crucible of the Priesthood in Mexico: Ten Years of Persecution”.
Three priests and four catechists were murdered last year, making 2016 the eighth consecutive year that Mexico has been ranked by the Catholic Church to be the most dangerous country in the world for priests. On 26 March, another priest was killed in the state of Nayarit. A statement from the Mexican Bishops’ Conference indicated that criminal groups are believed to be responsible.
Father Sotelo’s report covers the ten year period between 2006 and 2016 when “the assassinations of 31 priests were registered … and 15 of those took place in just the last four years. It is necessary to recall that in the vast majority of these cases, the modus operandi has been: threats, extortion, kidnapping, torture and murder. These tragic numbers demonstrate that these crimes cannot be categorized alongside common crime, these are high impact crimes, without doubt. Neither any of the state prosecutors, nor the Attorney General have provided a clear or efficient response to this phenomenon. On the contrary, their investigations are full of irregularities and holes. More than 80% of the cases of murders of priests are unresolved or have been categorized as archived.”
In the introduction of the report, lawyer and human rights expert Guillermo Gazanini Espinoza wrote: “Mexico has become a country where there are no safety guarantees for the peaceful exercise of the priestly ministry, and just like other professions, including journalists, the ministers of the Church are a target because of their pastoral activities in favour of the wellbeing of their fellow human beings.”
