USAID Provides $5 Million for Justice Reforms in Mexico
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Washington, D.C. - The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) will provide $5 million over the next four years to support
justice reforms in Chihuahua, Mexico. The money will be used for legal education, technical assistance and professional
exchanges for state prosecutors, judges and defense attorneys.
Tony Garza, the U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, announced the initiative on February 3 and emphasized that the program would
advance justice reform and assist crime victims. He added that part of the U.S. assistance being provided would
facilitate legal assistance and provide mental health services to help with the anguish and trauma suffered by families
of the hundreds of women killed over the last decade in the state of Chihuahua.
The funding will be provided by the U.S. government through USAID to support justice reform being carried out by Mexican
states. The Ambassador said Chihuahua citizens "will decide the specific path and timing of any reform, but I want them
to know that many people in the United States stand in solidarity with this cause."
Since 1993, approximately 340 women have been slain in the Juarez area. The Mexican Federal Prosecutor named a special
prosecutor to review these crimes. More than 200 cases have been reviewed by federal lawyers. Ambassador Garza made
special mention of Chihuahua Governor Reyes-Baeza's strong public commitment to improve the administration of justice in
his state. He noted that many people on both sides of the border are deeply concerned about the unsolved murders of
women in Ciudad Juarez, and this has raised interest in justice reform more broadly.
According to Ambassador Garza, the new initiative will help ensure "the safety and well-being of both Mexican and
American citizens." Part of the USAID assistance will help provide legal assistance and mental health services to
victims' families.