A group of Protestant Christians in Chiapas, who have been the target of threats and physical attacks, in late July called on state and federal government officials to protect their religious freedom.
Leaders of the village of Cuahutémoc Cárdenas, Palenque Municipality, have cut off water and electricity and restricted the access of a group of 42 Protestants to their farmland. The former village commissioner, Leonarda Damas Cruz, justified this action by referring to an old legal agreement which stipulates that inhabitants of Cuahutémoc Cárdenas must be members of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and Roman Catholics.
Rather than prosecute
As in other cases, the government has preferred to facilitate the negotiation of extra-legal agreements to resolve religious freedom issues, rather than prosecute those responsible for criminal acts or enforce the law. These efforts led to an agreement, signed by local officials and the villagers in January 2014, which declared that religious freedom would be respected in Cuahutémoc Cárdenas, but restricted this right to the inhabitants of the village. Visitors would not be permitted to participate in any non-Roman Catholic religious activities. However, the January agreement appears to have had no impact on the actions of the local authority. On the contrary, threats and acts of aggression against the Protestant community have increased in number and severity, and municipal and state officials have taken no action to enforce the agreement.