
Archbishop Jose Ulises Macias Salcedo of Hermosillo,
Mexico, celebrates Mass at a concert hall for victims of the June 5 fire
at the ABC day care center in Hermosillo. More than 5,000 people attended
the liturgy.
CNS PHOTO/ALONSO CASTILLO/REUTERS
Church’s
support extends around
the clock to families of fire victims
By David Agren
Catholic News Service
MEXICO CITY (CNS) — The Catholic Church in Hermosillo,
Mexico, has provided around-the-clock spiritual and material support to
the families that lost children in a June 5 fire at a day care center
that has claimed at least 46 young lives.
Hermosillo Archdiocese spokesman Father Luis Cobacame said Church staff
members have been accompanying families of victims to hospitals, funeral
homes and private residences.
In addition, the archdiocesan health ministry has provided medical and
psychological attention to burn victims, while the archdiocesan food bank
and Caritas, the international Catholic aid agency, have provided the
mostly poor and working-class families with groceries, household items
and transportation, he said.
Priests and others from the archdiocese led more than 100 religious services
June 8 in parishes and funeral homes across Hermosillo, an industrial
and agricultural center of 700,000 residents located 175 miles south of
the Mexico-Arizona border.
The services followed a June 7 Mass celebrated by Archbishop Jose Macias
Salcedo of Hermosillo in a sports complex for 10,000 people, who Father
Cobacame said have rallied to support the families of the deceased children
but have been distressed by the tragedy.
“We’ve never had such a painful event in this city that we
can remember,” Father Cobacame said.
“The city is in total mourning ... people are crying in the streets,”
he said.
The death toll from the tragedy climbed to 46 June13. Some of the injured
children were moved to hospitals in other parts of Mexico and five have
been sent to the burn unit of a hospital in Sacramento, California.
Local officials said the fire in the day care center, operated under contract
for the Mexican Social Security Institute, started in an adjacent storage
facility after a failure in its ventilation system. The fire spread quickly
and engulfed the center’s only working exit, trapping the children.
People familiar with the day care’s operation told local and national
media that a second exit was locked, that the 8-year-old building was
made of highly flammable materials and that fire extinguishers were not
available. Still, the center received a passing grade in its most recent
inspection, which Mexican Social Security Institute director Daniel Karam
said was carried out in May.
Firefighters attempted to save the trapped children by hacking through
the walls with picks. At least one driver resorted to ramming a concrete
wall with his vehicle.
Aldo Munoz, a political science professor at the Jesuit-run University
of Latin America in Mexico City, said allegations of corruption in the
social security institute contracting practices have been rife. The institute
provides health care and pensions for more than 50 million Mexican workers
and is mainly funded through payroll taxes.
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