Another evangelical
Christian pastor was assassinated last Friday near the town of San Juan Chamula
in Mexico’s troubled southern state of Chiapas, while on his way to a prayer
service.
Mariano Díaz, 38, was a
minister of the indigenous Tzotzil Evangelical Church, he was traveling near
the village of Botatulán around 3 p.m. when heavily armed assailants made him
stop his automobile. Witnesses said that
it appeared that Diaz got out of the car and attempted to run away from his
attackers before they shot him to death.
Díaz is the second
evangelical pastor to die in the space of two weeks. According to sources in Chiapas, Jairo Solís
López was recently killed in the municipality of Mapastepec.
The circumstances of
Solís’s death were not clear, but sources in Chiapas believe the murders are
the most recent chapter in a 30-year saga of severe persecution of evangelical
Christians by local caciques, or powerful community chieftains. Caciques practice a “traditionalist”
religion, a semi-pagan mix of Roman Catholic beliefs and an ancient Mayan
religion.
Since the advent of
evangelical Christianity in the Chiapas Highlands in the 1960s, caciques have constantly
used violent tactics to discourage the spread of Christianity in indigenous
regions. Literally scores of evangelical Christians have been killed and even hundreds
more have suffered injury. About 35,000
evangelical Christians live in ghettos surrounding the district capital of San
Cristóbal de las Casas, and have been driven from their ancestral homes by
caciques and their henchmen.
Caciques have enjoyed
near impunity while carrying out the anti-Christian campaign. In three decades, only six caciques and their
accomplices have been punished for these crimes.
The Chiapas newspaper
Cuarto Poder reported that Diaz’s funeral procession, in which about 500
evangelical Tzotzils participated, turned into a march calling upon authorities
to put an end to the aggression.
Leaders of the
Regional Organization for the Welfare of Evangelicals of the State of Chiapas
(ORBECH in Spanish), a non-governmental organization that defends the rights of
evangelical Christians, issued calls to Mexican officials to capture and punish
Diaz’s murderers.
ORBECH director,
Agustín Gómez Patishtán, told mourners that the state’s justice attorney should
conduct an exhaustive investigation to solve the case, else, “I think we are
going to take other action.”
“But we trust in God
and the authorities, that they will get to the bottom of this,” Gómez said, “I
believe they have the power to do justice according to the law.”
At the same time,
Gomez lamented official failure to protect evangelicals against continuing
attacks. He reminded officials that
caciques had issued threats in San Juan Chamula.
“(They said) that our
(church) leaders are going to fall one by one.
I think they are carrying out those threats; I think we are seeing that
with clarity.”
Veteran human rights
attorney, Esdras Alonso, expressed fears that the caciques are stepping up
attacks against evangelical Christians.
According to the
report in Cuarto Poder, Alonso told mourners, “These are messages that the
(caciques) are sending to the evangelical community in Chiapas. The conflict is radicalizing, and more
violence is seeking to surface.”
Alonso called upon the
justice attorney’s office to renew investigations into recent cases of
aggression against evangelicals in the communities of Mitzitón and Flores
Magon, where arsonists strike Evangelical homes in Chiapas, with regularity.
“This aggression must
not go unpunished,” Alonso said. “Years
ago, (Chiapas governor) Pablo Salazar, was one of the first to witness, as a
lawyer, these assaults in Chiapas and become acquainted with the background of
this situation.”
“As leaders of social
organizations, we are still awaiting official action. We want to see results.”
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