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Acknowledgment: Catholic World News Service | |||
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MEXICO CITY (CWNews.com) - During a press conference held
at the end of the Mexican Bishops' Conference ordinary
assembly on Thursday, Cardinal Norberto Rivera Carrera of
Mexico City denounced a massive sterilization campaign
launched by the government among the Indian population in
the southern state of Chiapas, "taking advantage of the
tension and violence that currently reigns in the region."
According to Cardinal Rivera, in the recent weeks several
health workers have begun to convince large groups of poor
women in the Indian region of Chiapas to be sterilized. The
cardinal said these actions were "the climax of a process
started in early 1997, when the Mexican government launched
a national campaign to reduce the poor population through
the massive distribution of contraception methods,
preservatives, and recently free sterilization surgeries."
Chiapas has been gripped by violence since 1994 when
Zapatista rebels, mainly drawn from Indian villages, took
up arms against the government.
"It is regrettable that in the context of Chiapas, where so
many things are dramatically needed, the government has a
sterilization campaign as its official response to the
native people," the cardinal said. "It is easier to
sterilize native people than to propose a development and
educational program," he said, adding: "The government must
launch new developments and peace strategies instead of
fighting the poor as if they were the disease and not the
reason for government."
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