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Pope condemns violence in Mexico after killings of 2 Jesuits

Pope Francis said "violence never resolves problems but just increases useless suffering" following the slayings of two Jesuits by apparent drug gang members.
Image: Pope Francis
Pope Francis, flanked by the prefect of the Pontifical House, Monsignor Leonardo Sapienza, and Monsignor Luis Maria Rodrigo Ewart, an Argentine priest, speaks Wednesday at the weekly general audience at St. Peter's Square in the Vatican. Alberto Pizzoli / AFP - Getty Images
/ Source: The Associated Press

Pope Francis on Wednesday blasted the violence that plagues Mexico as he mourned the slayings of two of his “brother” Jesuits who were gunned down in a remote Mexican church by apparent drug gang members.

Francis, an Argentine Jesuit, offered prayers to the Jesuit community at the end of his weekly general audience, saying he was “saddened and dismayed” to learn of the slayings in Mexico’s mountainous Chihuahua state.

“How may killings there are in Mexico!” he said. “Once again, I repeat that violence never resolves problems but just increases useless suffering.”

Javier Campos Morales, 79, and Joaquín César Mora Salazar, 80, were killed Monday inside the church in Cerocahui. A man being pursued by a drug gang had apparently sought refuge in the church, and the gang members killed him and the priests when they found him, authorities said.

Francis ministered to drug addicts when he was archbishop of Buenos Aires and has long condemned the “dealers of death” who fuel the drug trade, which he has blamed on the “devil” and lust for money. During a 2016 visit to Mexico, he urged Mexicans to shun the trade.

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