SANTIAGO.- The Archdiocese premises of the Catholic church states that the acts of corruption increase the marginality and the poverty of thousands of Dominicans, depriving them of a decent health system and of others essential needs for human subsistence.
That position of the Catholic church is reflected in the editorial comment of the national Catholic weekly Pathunder the title “National Outrage”which together with another called “Thank you Monsignor Fello” will circulate in all the parishes of the country starting this next sunday 21 of the current month.
He refers that the acts of corruption they are hurting the heart of the countrysince its consequences are disastrous for the vast majority of dominicans.
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“As the deceased said, Pope Francisthe corruption it’s a social cancerand our political class He seems to have no idea of the damage he is doing to the democracy with his many misbehaviors,” underlines the written spokesperson of the Dominican Catholic Church.
It specifies that, as established by the Social Doctrine of the Churchthe political corruption It is one of the most serious deformations of the democratic systembecause it betrays, at the same time, the principles of moral and the rules of the social justice.
“People are getting tired of hearing so many promises of transparency in the management of public fundswhen reality says otherwise,” he points out. Path.
And you wonder: what’s going on with SENASA?
Path He maintains that now it is up to the justice assume their true role, and that those who have failed, once their crimesthey must assume the consequences, since there should be no privileges.
“Only in this way will we walk towards the institutionality; Otherwise, we are heading to the abysswhich should be avoided,” he says. Path.
Regarding the death of the bishop emeritus of Barahona, Monsignor Rafael Felipe Núñez (Fello), Path states that he left traces of service and total delivery to the evangelism.
“Monsignor Fello He lived light of baggage, and in his life we can read the pages of the Gospelwhich he fully fulfilled throughout the country,” concludes Path in his second editorial comment.
Monsignor Fello was buried in the Crypt of the Diocese of Barahonawhere he spent his last years of evangelizing mission.
