Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options

A Mexican priest reported kidnapped in the border state of Tamaulipas was reported to have been safely returned on March 30, the Diocese of Tampico said in a statement.

Father Oscar Lopez Navarro, 40, a member of the Misioneros de Cristo Mediador (Missionaries of Christ the Mediator), was followed by his assailants as he left St. Joseph the Worker Parish in Altamira, a port city some 300 miles south of the Texas border at Brownsville. The priest was abducted as he arrived at his order's residence at around 10:30 p.m. March 28, reported local media.

The diocese gave no other details, although Bishop Jose Dibildox Martinez of Tampico said on March 29 that the priest's captors had contacted him and negotiations were occurring.

Local media reported that Father Angel Vargas Uribe, diocesan spokesman, told a news conference: "We do not know the reasons why he was abducted. He did not have problems with anyone. ... We are not scared."

"We do not know the reasons why he was abducted. He did not have problems with anyone.

The kidnapping was reminder of the violence in Tamaulipas state, where a 2010 split between drug cartels—the incumbent Gulf Cartel and its former armed wing, Los Zetas—provoked a wave of violence, including attacks on civilians and a surge in crimes such as extortion and kidnapping. Father Carlos Ornelas Puga, a priest in the Diocese of Ciudad Victoria, was kidnapped in 2013 and has not been seen since. The diocese has said little on his disappearance, which observers attribute to the fear and insecurity in the state.

The news of Father Lopez's kidnapping came as news broke of another priest being murdered in Mexico.

Father Felipe Altamirano Carrillo, 54, an indigenous priest, was murdered March 27 in the prelature of Nayar. The prelature serves a rugged region of western Mexico populated by the indigenous Cora and Huichol peoples.

Regional news outlets reported that Father Altamirano was shot in the head during an assault on a rural roadway in Nayarit state, after celebrating Mass.

At least 17 priests have been murdered in Mexico since December 2012, according to the Catholic Multimedia Center.

More: Mexico
Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

Pope Leo XIV has appointed the French archbishop of Chambéry, Thibault Verny, as the new president of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors. He succeeds Cardinal Seán O’Malley, 81, the emeritus archbishop of Boston.
Gerard O’ConnellJuly 05, 2025
U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., speaks with other members of the House July 3, 2025, on Capitol Hill in Washington after final passage of U.S. President Donald Trump's sweeping spending and tax bill. (OSV News photo/Jonathan Ernst, Reuters)
“Deep cuts” to SNAP and Medicaid will “inflict real suffering on these families…. SNAP and Medicaid are not luxuries, they are lifelines for millions of children across our country.”
Kevin ClarkeJuly 03, 2025
It was one of the first times Leo has spoken unscripted at length in public, responding to questions posed to him by the children.
The Vatican has named the judges that will preside over the trial of disgraced Father Marko Rupnik.