The murders of two priests this week in Mexico have put President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador on the defensive over his governmentâs failure to significantly reduce violent crime.
Lopez Obrador hit back at his critics on Thursday, days after Javier Campos, 79, and Joaquin Mora, 81, were gunned down trying to protect a man seeking refuge in a church in the northern state of Chihuahua.
âWeâre not going to change the strategy. Let them continue with their smear campaigns,â the leftist leader told reporters.
Lopez Obrador has championed a âhugs not bulletsâ strategy to tackle violent crime at its roots by fighting poverty and inequality with social programs, rather than with the army.
The murder on Monday of the two Jesuit priests, as well as the man seeking sanctuary â tour guide Pedro Palma â, sparked shock and dismay, including from the United Nations and Pope Francis.
There was also strong criticism from opponents of the government, including former right-wing president Felipe Calderon.
âWhoever commits a crime knows that a hug awaits him and not punishment,â Calderon tweeted.
More than 340,000 people have been killed in a spiral of violence since 2006 when Calderon deployed the army to fight drug cartels with US military support.
About 30 priests have been among the victims over the past decade, according to the Centro Catolico Multimedial, a Catholic organization.
âDoing wellâ
Lopez Obrador lambasted the policies of Calderon and previous administrations that he alleged had led to more deaths and human rights violations.
He also accused them of colluding with criminal organizations and ignoring vulnerable members of society such as young people and poor families.
Mexico registered 2,833 murders in May, the highest monthly figure so far in 2022.
The government says there is a âdownward trendâ in homicides with a 7.8 percent decrease from a peak of 3,074 in July 2018, a few months before Lopez Obrador took office.
âItâs a process that takes time, but weâre doing well,â said the president, whose government attributes 75 percent of murders to gang violence.
On Wednesday night a gun battle left four police officers and eight suspected gang members dead in the western state of Jalisco.
The country of 126 million ended 2021 with a rate of 26 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants.
The governmentâs security policy âhasnât worked,â said Javier Oliva, an expert at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.
There has been âimprovisationâ by authorities in important areas overseen by officials without specialist knowledge, he told AFP.
âSocial decompositionâ
Campos and Mora had been working for several decades with Indigenous people of the Sierra de Chihuahua.
The 30-year-old man accused of killing the two priests is widely known in the area, where he had his own baseball team.
âThe person who shot them was someone they knew, thatâs why they felt comfortable talking to him,â said Father Jorge Atilano Gonzalez, a fellow Jesuit.
âBut this person was under the influence of drugs, and that explains his behaviour,â Atilano told AFP.
The triple murder âis a sign of Mexicoâs social decomposition. We need to review and change the security policy,â he said.
Francisco Rivas, director of the National Citizen Observatory, a civil society group, sees the governmentâs policy as inadequate.
Contrary to what Lopez Obrador says, the military still has a leading role in fighting drugs, he added.
Rivas cited the âbad exampleâ of the release of Ovidio Guzman, son of notorious drug lord Joaquin âEl Chapoâ Guzman, in October 2019.
Guzman was freed after more than five hours of clashes between the Sinaloa drug cartel and security forces in the city of Culiacan in response to his arrest.
Lopez Obrador has said he ordered the release to prevent a massacre of innocent citizens.