Arrest Warrant Issued for Alleged Killer of St. Oscar Romero

The suspect is a 78-year-old former army officer.

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St. Oscar Romero
Top of Form Bottom of Form St. Oscar Romero (photo: Courtesy photo, office of canonization, via CNA)

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — A court in San Salvador issued an arrest warrant for the man suspected of the March 24, 1980, killing of St. Oscar Romero, who was canonized this month by Pope Francis.

The suspect is Álvaro Rafael Saravia, a 78-year-old former army officer.

Charges against Saravia were dismissed in 1993 after an amnesty law prohibited criminal trials related to the country’s civil war.

In 2017, however, Judge Rigoberto Chicas reopened the case, after the amnesty law was rescinded.

Now the National Police and Interpol are charged with finding the former soldier so he can be tried for aggravated homicide.

No one else has been charged in connection with Romero’s death.

Romero was shot while he celebrated Mass at a hospital chapel, amid the civil war between leftist guerrillas and the right-wing government that left about 75,000 dead between 1980 and 1992.

Several investigations have concluded that the murder was carried out by a death squad linked to the military dictatorship, who falsely believed that Archbishop Romero was supporting Marxist guerrillas because of his concern for the poor of his country.

In his work with the poor and in his denunciations against the dictatorship, the archbishop was supported by Pope St. Paul VI and Pope St. John Paul II during their pontificates.

This article was originally published by CNA’s sister agency, ACI Prensa. It was translated and adapted by CNA.