After the Mexican branch of the “hacktivist” group Anonymous reported
that the Archdiocese of Mexico had let off an alleged priest who
confessed to having molested 30 girls, the Church in Mexico has denied
that the priest even exists, calling the Anonymous report “irresponsible
and malicious.”
On Sept. 8 Anonymous Mexico claimed
that the Archdiocese of Mexico “decided to let off from any crime and
punishment José Ataulfo García, the priest who allegedly confessed to
raping more than 30 indigenous girls in the state of Oaxaca.”
The report by the hackers group was picked up this weekend by several Spanish-language newspapers, and this week by some English media.
Religión Digital posted an article with the headline “Priest with HIV
who confessed to molesting 30 girls let off”, but it has since been
deleted.
SIAME, the communications office of the Archdiocese of Mexico, has
stated that the supposed priest José Ataulfo is not listed in their
jurisdiction's records, nor in those of the Archdiocese of Antequera,
Oaxaca.
“This supposed priest does not belong to the Archdiocese of Mexico –
as Anonymous Mexico asserts – much less has he been let off, as the post
irresponsibly and maliciously states,” stated Fr. Hugo Valdemar Romero,
a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Mexico.
SIAME stated the accusations probably originated in “Hablemos de
Mexico”, a publication which “several weeks ago, in wake of the
opposition of the Catholic Church to the presidential initiatives to
legalize so-called 'marriage equality' throughout the country,
threatened to publish a supposed list of homosexual priests and bishops
which included this personage.”
“However, the existence of such a priest is increasingly doubtful,
since according to the information gathered by SIAME, in the dioceses
that makes up the Province of Oaxaca, there is no record of such a
minister,” the publication of the Archdiocese of Mexico City explained.
Archbishop José Luis Chávez Botello of Antequera, Oaxaca, stated, “I don't know him [Ataulfo], he's not from the archdiocese.”
Archbishop Chávez cautioned that the accusations are reactions “from
some quarter” which wants to silence the voices calling for peace and
recalled that “the Pope has also been attacked by some groups.”
“I invite them, as I've already told them, when there's something
like that, seriously investigate it, don't just repeat what's being
said,” he urged, while assuring that “lies unravel all by themselves.”