Solutions to Mexico’s Skyrocketing Violence
Searching for Solutions to Mexico’s Skyrocketing Violence
On August 21, Mexican President Felipe Calderón Hinojosa held a security summit at the National Palace. In attendance were the Mayor of Mexico City, Marcelo Ebrard, and Mexico’s thirty-one state governors. Those in attendance, represented most of the nation’s political parties, were still able to display a stunning show of relative harmony and cooperation in the face of dangerously mounting violence brought about by growing street gangs and more violent drug cartels throughout Mexico. A seventy-five-point package of security measures was unanimously adopted and will be implemented over the next three years. The package includes initiatives aimed at purging police corruption, constructing several new maximum-security prisons, and creating a database for mobile phones that the government will use to track down criminals using them.
Violence Everywhere
The
unprecedented level of violence resorted to by Mexico’s
drug gangs has reached a fevered pitch. On August 16, masked
gunmen murdered thirteen people in a village in Chihuahua, a
state that has witnessed 1,026 deaths so far this year. The
number of gang-related deaths for all of Mexico so far this
year stands at 2,682, already surpassing the 2007 total of
2,673. The escalating violence represents an ugly offensive
by Mexican drug gangs retaliating against the government’s
increased determination to combat drug trafficking and the
drug-related violence that has plagued the country in recent
years. Since 2007, Calderón has ordered 36,000 troops to be
deployed against the gangs throughout Mexico’s thirty-one
states, with only modest results.
Complicating the situation, Mexico’s various police forces are saturated with corruption, and its tolerance of violence, systemic. Various drug cartels have taken advantage of this, bribing the authorities – particularly the intelligence service – to side with them by waging war on their rivals. According to a congressional Research Service Report, authorities in Nuevo Laredo municipal officials have been known to kidnap competitors of the Gulf cartel, while members of the Sinaloa cartel enjoy police protection. According to the same report, in December 2005, the Mexican Attorney General’s office (PGR) reported that one-fifth of its officials were under investigation for criminal activity. This culture of corruption was starkly revealed by the Fernando Martí case, where a fourteen-year-old boy was kidnapped last June 4 by drug gang members masquerading as policemen. His body was found on August 1 in the trunk of an abandoned car. Subsequent investigation uncovered the involvement of fourteen members of the Federal District Judicial Police in the killing.
No Respite from the
War’s Escalation
The chronic lack of integrity
displayed by the police has further weakened Mexicans’
plummeting confidence in their government’s ability to
cope with drug gangs. A poll taken in early June showed that
53 percent of the population believed that drug gangs were
winning their war against federal forces, while a mere 24
percent thought that the government had the matter under
control. Some 3,000 people from Ciudad Juárez - of mostly
middle-class families – crossing illegally into the United
States, do so out of fear of violence. Particularly hard hit
by gang violence, Ciudad Juárez has registered 800
homicides so far this year—tripling the 2007 figure—as
well as a spurt of bank and car robberies. The University of
San Diego’s Trans-Border Institute recently reported that
there has also been an increase in acts of extortion and
kidnappings that have specifically targeted the business
community.
In spite of Calderón’s intensified war against Mexico’s drug barons and the early phase in the implementation of Washington’s predictably under-funded Merida Initiative, the death toll continues to mount and there is no indication that the future will be any brighter than the past. This spotlights the inherent problems embedded in the Mexican government’s strategy, such as unrestrained venality in the police force as well as in the tainted bureaucracies at the municipal, state, and federal levels. On July 31, the government announced a shake-up in the PGR, with the departure of Noé Ramírez, the head of Mexico’s secret anti-organized-crime unit, Siedo, and three of the PGR’s deputy attorneys. This announcement followed a meeting during which the head of the PGR, Eduardo Medina-Mora, and public security minister, Genaro García Luna, blamed each other for their inability to coordinate and harness their respective intelligence-gathering units. This manifestation of ineptitude reinforced the need for Calderón’s call for the government to agree on public security policies and to improve coordination among the federal, state and municipal administrations in order to advance the nation’s uphill fight against crime.
A united campaign against the drug gangs, this time with Calderón and Ebrard de facto at the helm, has been necessary for a long time, but may be too much to ask for, especially amid the current escalating levels of violence with its skyrocketing death tolls reported from many Mexican cities. A coordinated and innovative bipartisan approach on the part of all government levels, rather than any further militarization, or going easy on the purveyor of crime, may prove to be the ultimate key to stemming the country’s current surge in violence. Added to this is the population’s flagging confidence in the bona fides of the country’s security forces. With the August 21 summit, Calderon and his colleagues may have made an initial move (albeit, a tiny one) in the right direction.
This
analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Amy
Coonradt
August 26th, 2008
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