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

A Mexican bishop has rebuked the federal government for sending soldiers to seize the weapons of self-defense groups formed to fight off violent drug cartels and criminal gangs in the western state of Michoacán. Bishop Miguel Patino Velázquez of Apatzingán said the strategy was wrong and targeted the people trying to protect themselves. Bishop Patino issued a pastoral letter on Jan. 15, shortly after an attempt by soldiers to disarm a self-defense group near the town of Antúnez went awry, leaving at least three villagers dead. “Instead of searching for the criminals harming the community, the Mexican military, acting on the orders of superiors, went to disarm the self-defense groups,” Bishop Patino said. “The situation got out of control and [the soldiers], seeing themselves surrounded by the population, started to shoot, first in the air and later at persons.” The incident demonstrated the deep distrust many in this rugged region of Michoacán have in their institutions, which have been unable or unwilling to dismantle a drug cartel known as Knights Templar and its predecessor, La Familia Michoacana, over the past seven years.

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

The latest from america

Nothing in my life has been as freeing as the realization that not everyone is going to love, like or approve of me.
James Martin, S.J.July 29, 2025
As hundreds of Catholic content creators descend on Rome for the Jubilee of Digital Missionaries and Catholic Influencers, it’s worth asking: What’s the best way to evangelize online?
The editors of 'America' have been opining on what you should read for over a century. Some of their suggestions have aged better than others.
James T. KeaneJuly 29, 2025
On Tuesday, Pope Leo XIV addressed a crowd of digital missionaries and Catholic influencers about the responsibilities and challenges of their ministry.