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A deal brokered with Mexico's government has freed 145 prisoners after campaigning by thousands worldwide - including CAFOD - about their unlawful imprisonment
The Catholic Church has successfully helped broker a deal with Mexico's Chiapas state government to freee 145 political prisoners.
The prisoners – 43 of whom spent more than a month on hunger strike in protest against their detention – had been accused of being linked to the Zapatista revolutionary movement.
Earlier this week the Chiapas Minister of Justice, Amador Rodriguez Lozano, publically acknowledged the inmates’ innocence and said they had not had adequate legal representation.
He also promised to prosecute those responsible for unlawfully imprisoning them.
Prominent bishops and The Fray Bartolomé de las Casas Human Rights Centre, which works in partnership with CAFOD, campaigned for the release of the hunger-strike prisoners, which in turn led to almost 300 cases being reviewed.
At the beginning of March, the Chiapas state governor, congress and judiciary, set up a Reconciliation Commission.
Some 100 lawyers were brought in to study cases from 1994-2006 and discovered the systematic use of torture and sexual abuse and the fabrication of evidence.
On March 18, Zacario Hernandez - who began the hunger-strike - was freed, followed by the remaining 143 men and one woman on March 31 and April 1.
However, 17 political prisoners who are supported by the Fray Bartolomé de las Casas Centre are still being held in Chiapas jails and continue to fast.
Please remember these innocent people in your prayers as they struggle for justice over the coming weeks.
You can also send them a message of solidarity and support in English, which will be translated.
Please email the Fray Bartolomé de las Casas Human Rights Centre at frayba@frayba.org.mx or medios@frayba.org.mx
In 1994 the Zapatistas led an armed uprising – which gained massive public support – protesting against the poverty and deprivation of the indigenous communities and calling for greater political autonomy in Chiapas.
Since then, successive Mexican governments have stationed large numbers of soldiers in the region to repress any further unrest.
Sarah Smith-Pearse, CAFOD Latin America and Caribbean, says: “This is a real breakthrough in the long-standing political conflict in Chiapas.
"The Mexican authorities haven’t just freed a few prisoners; they are saying that torture and false imprisonment are unacceptable and that they are going to address the issue.
"It’s a complete turn-around and a gesture of peace and reconciliation after so many years of military repression.”
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