The 7 individuals who had been banished from a village in Oaxaca, Mexico, by religious intolerance, have decided to return to the U.S. , having received no decision by the Mexican authorities.
Donaciano Cruz and his wife, Angelica Ruiz, along with others, sought for 8 months rulings by the State authorities to be able to return home province with no response.
Evangelicals from the region of Santa Maria Yohueche, Oaxaca, withdrew from the petition to the government seeking his return to the region, which could not answer them.
On April 25, the spouses were detained by the authorities in the region because their religion was different from the traditional, which sparked outrage from the people and the people's governor.
stated that their human rights were neglected and denounced the helplessness and indifference of the authorities to The problem facing the 7 banished, some imprisoned for professing Christianity and Pentecostal leaders who oppose before showing favoritism acted in collusion against them.
the absence of intervention, the couple decided to go to the U.S. authorities to settle their case because their families are unprotected and vulnerable to accusations that they perpetrate, and disease conditions that face the people who determined exile, the petition asking the U.S. to seek to enable them to return to speak to their families in situations of illness, and ask for attention explaining special cases such as abuse, and taking advantage of the customs to trample the rights involved with the causes of the leaders. Dolores Reyna
was imprisoned to protect and intervene in the cause, "There is no justice, there act like they want," referring to his situation, in addition to emphasis on the abuses, "At this time, in this century, not there should be this, we are free to choose what religion they profess, "wrote Journal Digital Berea.
also explained the reason for his arrest and prosecution, saying that he was harassed by the alleged building a Protestant church, to which referred, "That was not true, but so have been, what's wrong would."
In 2010, National sources indicate the growing exile for intolerance and / or religious conflicts, agrarian and political, putting 469 families displaced by 14% by Credo Intolerance.
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