Philippine authorities will question a Roman Catholic  priest about ivory smuggling after his collection of ivory religious icons was  featured in National Geographic magazine, an investigator said.
Monsignor Cristobal Garcia, who rose to prominence in a Philippine  archdiocese despite a U.S. sex abuse case in the 1980s for which he was  suspended by the Vatican just this year, is quoted in the October issue of the  magazine as describing how to bring ivory figurines into the United States.
National Bureau of Investigation officer Sixto Comia said  Wednesday that authorities are investigating the origin of ivory icons widely  used in the predominantly Roman Catholic country. He said Garcia will be  questioned but declined to give details.
An international ban on trade in ivory and elephant tusks  has been in effect since 1990. But poaching for the black market is rife and  endangering elephant populations.
Customs officials have intercepted more than 10,000  kilograms (22,000 pounds) of elephant tusks in two separate smuggling attempts  in 2005 and 2009. A security guard in a government agency where part of the  4,000 kilograms from the 2009 shipment was stolen is facing criminal charges,  Comia said.
Archbishop Jose Palma, President of the Catholic Bishops  Conference of the Philippines, said Garcia should be given a "fair and just  hearing."
"The church does not condone ivory smuggling or other  illegal activities, although in the past, ivory was one of the materials used  in the adornment of liturgical worship," he said.
Garcia, who is based in Talisay city in Cebu province, is  reportedly ill and in a hospital.
He was expelled from the Dominican order in 1986 after he  allegedly sexually abused an altar boy in Los Angeles. He remains a priest but  Palma said Garcia's "past" case is being investigated by the Vatican.
In the Philippines' Archdiocese of Cebu, Garcia founded the  Society of the Angel of Peace and is chairman of the Archdiocesan Commission on  Worship.
Monsignor Achilles Dakay, spokesman for the Cebu Archdiocese,  said the Vatican suspended Garcia from his "ministerial duties" in June and  removed him as chairman of the Commission on Worship in connection with the sex  abuse case in the United States, before the issue of his ivory collection came  out. Garcia cannot say Mass or hear confession, he added.
He said it was unclear why the Vatican took action against  Garcia only this year. "We would like to know who initiated this in the Vatican  level because this was supposed to be closed already," he told The Associated  Press.
Dakay also said the church will cooperate with authorities  if they decide to file a case in court against Garcia and the church's  committee on cultural heritage will help in the inventory of his ivory  collection to determine which items were obtained after the international ban.
Cebu is where Christianity in the Philippines was founded  by Spanish conquistadors in the 16th century and where devotion to the child  Jesus is deeply ingrained and celebrated yearly in the feast of Santo Nino.
In the National Geographic article, Garcia was quoted  suggesting how an ivory figurine of the child Jesus may be smuggled out of the  country.
"Wrap it in old, stinky underwear and pour ketchup on it.  ... This is how it is done," Garcia was quoted as saying.
The report also said Garcia suggested that a certificate  from the National Museum of the Philippines could be obtained to declare a  religious image an antique, or an ivory carver could issue a document saying it  was made before the ban.
A fellow priest, the Rev. Brian Brigoli, curator of the  Cebu Cathedral Museum, said he doesn't believe Garcia would be involved in  illegal trade.
Brigoli said his mentor would not acquire icons with  questionable "provenance."
As a "serious collector" of ivory icons, Garcia "knows a  lot about how to smuggle, but he is not the one doing it," Brigoli said.
Read more National Geographic Channel ____
Online: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2012/10/ivory/christy-text
AP

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