HIT MAN PULLED TRIGGER POINT BLANK AGAINST PASTOR, BUT GUN WOULDN’T FIRE
A Mexican pastor who survived an
assassination attempt in the border city of Juarez in June says he was targeted
because his church’s work is seen to negatively impact upon the efforts of drug
cartels.
Eduardo Garcia, pictured last year
holding a photo of his wife and late son, was shot six times on 8 June. (World
Watch Monitor)
A hit man entered the pastor’s home
on June 12th, making him kneel down on the floor and telling him “you don’t
know who you are messing about with”. The man then pulled the trigger on his
gun, but it failed to fire, so he knocked the pastor unconscious and stole his
wallet, before fleeing.
“All I can say is that with the work
we do as a church we have affected the activities of those groups involved in
drug trafficking and also the organized crime. We are not sure what comes
next,” said the pastor, whose name is being withheld to protect him.
The attack came just days after the
murder of fellow local pastor Eduardo Garcia.
In recent years the number of
violent deaths in Mexico has gone up dramatically. According to the National
Institute of Statistics and Geography, in 2017 there were over 30,000 homicides
in Mexico, the highest figure on record since the statistics were first
collected in 1997.
In cities like Ciudad Juarez, in the
state of Chihuahua, one of the most violent places in the country, 80 per cent
of the murders relate to the drugs industry.
In June alone, there were 177
murders in Juarez, according to municipal authorities – that’s six a day.
Background
While the violence affects everyone,
“actively practicing Christians” are particularly vulnerable according to
Dennis Petri, Latin American analyst at Open Doors International, a charity
that supports Christians under pressure for their faith around the world.
Given that as many as 90% of
Mexico’s population would identify as Christian, Petri told World Watch Monitor
last year that “it’s important not to look so much at their identity as
Christians, but more at their behavior that results from their Christian
convictions. Whenever a Christian starts to engage in social work – for example
setting up a drug rehabilitation clinic or organizing youth work – that is a
direct threat to the activities and interests of organized crime because it
takes the youth away from them, so it is a direct threat to their market”.
“Whenever a Christian starts to
engage in social work – for example setting up a drug rehabilitation clinic or
organizing youth work – that is a direct threat to the activities and interests
of organized crime because it takes the youth away from them, so it is a direct
threat to their market.”
Petri mentioned one church leader
who was killed for setting up a drug rehabilitation clinic and then refusing to
close it despite threats. He also cited the example of a church leader who set
up a football team for vulnerable boys, some of whom were working as informants
for cartels. When one boy then told the cartels he no longer wished to be an
informant, he was killed.
A more obvious example of why active
Christians are easy targets comes from the perception that churches and their
leaders have a lot of money, so congregations offer a ready source of cash –
cartels can simply enter, lock the doors and ask the congregation to empty their
pockets.
Chito Aguilar, 62, a former drug
trafficker who now leads a church, told World Watch Monitor: “Compared to a
convenience store, they say, ‘Well if in a church there are 40 or 50 people, or
100’ – because [the cartels] do this on Sunday, not during the week – they say,
‘So they will bring money, they’re going to give their offerings’. So they
become an easy target, because [the cartels] will come here, as they do here in
Ciudad Juarez: eight people walk into a church, one or two will remain at the
doors and the others will start collecting watches, rings, wallets …
everything. So they become an easy target of the attackers.


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