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Acknowledgment: Catholic World News Service | |||
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VATICAN CITY (CWNews.com) - Pope John Paul II expressed his
revulsion on Tuesday at the murder of a Guatemalan bishop on
Sunday, calling it "an abominable crime."
Auxiliary Bishop Juan Gerardi Conedra of Guatemala City,
who headed the archdiocesan human rights office, was killed
in apparent retaliation for the release of a report critical
of the army for human rights abuses during the country's
36-year civil war. The Holy Father said the murder is an
example of the futility of violence in the central American
country.
"I express my strongest revulsion for this act of violence
which is an attack on peaceful co-existence," said the Holy
Father who lasted visited Guatemala in 1996. "I deeply hope
that this abominable crime, which has taken the life of a
true servant of peace and untiring worker for harmony among
all sectors of the population, clearly shows the futility of
violence."
Meanwhile in Guatamala City and all through the country, Guatemalans on Monday mourned
the murder of a human-rights crusading bishop who was killed
on Sunday, just two days after releasing a report critical
of the army for human rights abuses during the country's
36-year civil war.
Flags hung at half-mast, black bows adorned doors, and
people pinned black ribbons on their clothes as newspaper
ran full-page advertisements from business and civil groups
demanding justice for Auxiliary Bishop Juan Gerardi Conedra.
"For the first time in our history, a bishop is
assassinated, a deed that pains us and fills all
Guatemalans with shame," President Alvaro Arzu said in a
televised address on Monday evening.
Although many observers quickly linked the murder to the
bishop's report on human rights abuses during the civil
war, prepared in his position as head of the archdiocesan
human rights office, government officials and prosecutors
pointed out that no conclusions had been drawn. "We do not
want to enter into speculation," said president spokesman
Ricardo De la Torre.
When Bishop Gerardi was head of the Diocese of Quiche in
the late 1970s and early 1980s, he saw several priests in
his care killed by government-backed paramilitary groups.
He also survived an assassination attempt in 1980, and was
forced into exile in 1982 and 1984. A silent march and
vigil for Bishop Gerardi was planned for Tuesday afternoon
and a funeral Mass for Wednesday morning.
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