Mexico City, Mexico - Mexico City's famous cathedral was closed Monday after protesters raided the building, and church officials said they wouldn't reopen it until city authorities guarantee its security.
Dozens of supporters of former leftist presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador stormed the church bordering the capital's central square Sunday, scuffling with faithful and overturning pews, according to a statement posted on the church's Web site.
The Archdiocese of Mexico described the incident -- which delayed Sunday Mass, frightened some parishioners out of the building and forced priests to take refuge in the sacristy -- as an act of violence against the church.
One elderly parishioner was slightly injured in the scuffle, according to Father Ruben Avila, who is in charge of the cathedral.
"The whole cathedral shook with their shouting, and they pushed the parishioners within a few meters [yards] of the door of the sacristy," Avila said in an article posted on the archdiocese's Web site.
The protesters shouted slogans against Cardinal Norberto Rivera, who they claim has become involved in politics, something clerics are forbidden to do by Mexican law. Avila estimated the number of protesters at 150.
Mexican news media said the protesters complained that the church rang its bells for an unusually long time, disrupting a Lopez Obrador rally in the plaza known as the Zocalo.
Lopez Obrador's followers several times have interrupted services at the cathedral, chanting slogans against electoral fraud they believe cost their candidate the July 2006 presidential elections.
Since that loss, Lopez Obrador has declared a government in resistance and encouraged followers not to recognize President Felipe Calderon. Electoral officials upheld Calderon's slim victory after more than two months of investigating allegations of fraud.
At the Sunday rally of under 100,000 -- the smallest crowd Lopez Obrador has drawn in a series of mass meetings in the Zocalo since 2006 -- he called on Mexico's government to invest $36 billion to combat oil declining reserves.