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{{Wikify|date=May 2011}}
{{Wikify|date=May 2011}}


The Most Reverend Archbishop '''José Domingo Ulloa Mendieta''', OSA, born in [[Chitre]], [[Panama]], December 24, 1956. He was ordained [[priest]] on December 17, 1983 in Chitre and was consecrated a [[bishop]] on 17 April 2004. He took canonical possession of the Archdiocese of Panama on April 18, 2010.
'''José Domingo Ulloa Mendieta''', OSA, born in [[Chitre]], [[Panama]], December 24, 1956, was ordained [[priest]] on December 17, 1983 in Chitre and was consecrated a [[bishop]] on 17 April 2004, taking canonical possession of the Archdiocese of Panama on April 18, 2010.


José Domingo Ulloa Mendieta was born in Chitre, [[Herrera Province]], Republic of Panama, on December 24, 1956, the third of three children of the marriage of Dagobert and Clodomira Ulloa Mendieta. He was ordained priest on December 17, 1983 by the then Bishop of Chitre, Bishop José María Carrizo Villarreal, at the Cathedral of San Juan Bautista Chitre. He joined the [[Augustinian Order]] in 1987, making his solemn vows on August 28, 1991. On February 26, 2004, S.S. [[Pope John Paul II]] appointed him Auxiliary Bishop of Naratcata y Auxiliar de Panama. His episcopal consecration took place in the Metropolitan Cathedral, on April 17, 2004, with Monsignor [[José Dimas Cedeño Delgado]], Archbishop of Panama, presiding.
José Domingo Ulloa Mendieta was born in Chitre, [[Herrera Province]], Republic of Panama, on December 24, 1956, the third of three children of the marriage of Dagobert and Clodomira Ulloa Mendieta. He was ordained priest on December 17, 1983 by the then Bishop of Chitre, Bishop José María Carrizo Villarreal, at the Cathedral of San Juan Bautista Chitre. He joined the [[Augustinian Order]] in 1987, making his solemn vows on August 28, 1991. On February 26, 2004, S.S. [[Pope John Paul II]] appointed him Auxiliary Bishop of Naratcata y Auxiliar de Panama. His episcopal consecration took place in the Metropolitan Cathedral, on April 17, 2004, with Monsignor [[José Dimas Cedeño Delgado]], Archbishop of Panama, presiding.

Revision as of 16:40, 28 September 2011


José Domingo Ulloa Mendieta, OSA, born in Chitre, Panama, December 24, 1956, was ordained priest on December 17, 1983 in Chitre and was consecrated a bishop on 17 April 2004, taking canonical possession of the Archdiocese of Panama on April 18, 2010.

José Domingo Ulloa Mendieta was born in Chitre, Herrera Province, Republic of Panama, on December 24, 1956, the third of three children of the marriage of Dagobert and Clodomira Ulloa Mendieta. He was ordained priest on December 17, 1983 by the then Bishop of Chitre, Bishop José María Carrizo Villarreal, at the Cathedral of San Juan Bautista Chitre. He joined the Augustinian Order in 1987, making his solemn vows on August 28, 1991. On February 26, 2004, S.S. Pope John Paul II appointed him Auxiliary Bishop of Naratcata y Auxiliar de Panama. His episcopal consecration took place in the Metropolitan Cathedral, on April 17, 2004, with Monsignor José Dimas Cedeño Delgado, Archbishop of Panama, presiding.

On February 18, 2010 Pope Benedict XVI named him as the new Archbishop of Panama.[1]

According to an online Catholic News Agency article dated Monday, September 26, 2011:

"He recently denounced a proposal to legalize the death penalty in the country. "We cannot counteract violence with violence. There are other means," the archbishop said according to the AFP news agency.

Representative Marco Gonzalez of the ruling party in Panama previously announced a proposal to legalize the death penalty in the country. He claimed it would end widespread violence in the region.

Gonzalez said he plans to move forward with his proposal in the coming weeks and is calling for lawmakers to debate the measure.

His announcement came after the discovery of five Panamanians of Chinese origin who were found buried together in a mass grave. Police suspect they were murdered by a man from the Dominican Republic.

Archbishop Ulloa instead called for tougher and stricter prison sentences and he called on the government to "clarify its security policy.""[2]

References