s slaying

? After filing past the open casket of slain Archbishop Isaias Duarte on Sunday, Maria Cristina Rosas fought back her tears.

“We’ve lost all of our values,” said Rosas, a housewife, her voice trembling inside Cali’s cool, dark cathedral. “Now, not even the Church is safe.”

Two gunmen shot the Roman Catholic archbishop at point-blank range Saturday night as he left a group wedding ceremony he had presided over in a poor neighborhood in Cali, Colombia’s third largest city.

The 63-year-old was one of seven archbishops in Colombia and the highest-ranking clergyman ever killed in a country torn by decades of violence.

A wooden cross and bouquets marked the spot where the archbishop had collapsed after being riddled with bullets, some 50 feet from the front door of the lime-green church.

The government offered a $434,000 reward for information on the gunmen or those who ordered the slaying, and Colombia’s attorney general told The Associated Press that the investigation was centering on drug traffickers.

Shortly before March 10 legislative elections, Duarte had said some candidates were financing their campaigns with drug money. He did not name names despite calls by President Andres Pastrana for him to do so.

“The first hypothesis points to hot money of drug traffickers and their relationship with subversives, because of the recent statements the archbishop made,” Atty. Gen. Luis Camilo Osorio said.

By “subversives,” Osorio meant leftist rebels who have been financing their 38-year war against the government by producing cocaine, which is exported to the United States and beyond by traffickers.

A top church official in Cali, the Rev. German Robledo, said, “We presume this was the work of drug traffickers.”

Robledo said Duarte made his public remarks about the elections after parish priests presented him with evidence that at least three drug trafficking organizations in the area were buying votes and financing candidates.

Thousands in this largely Roman Catholic country came to pay their last respects Sunday, forming a line that stretched for many blocks from the colonial-era cathedral downtown.

Dressed in white vestments, Duarte’s body was laid out in an open wooden casket flanked by white-helmeted military police and illuminated by candles.

Workers broke through the cathedral’s tile floor with picks and shovels to prepare a grave for his burial Tuesday.

Before coming to Cali, Duarte was a bishop in a war-wracked northern region, where he gained a reputation for criticizing not only the guerrillas, but also right-wing paramilitaries who have massacred people they suspect of sympathizing with the rebels.

Pope John Paul II, who named Duarte archbishop in 1995, said Sunday that the cleric had “paid the highest price” for defending human life and opposing violence.

“I urge Colombians once again to follow the way of dialogue, excluding all types of violence, blackmail and kidnapping of people and to firmly commit themselves to what are the true roads of peace,” the pope said at St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican.

Colombia’s war has intensified since peace talks with the main rebel group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, collapsed last month.