The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Senate approves Obrador’s plan to create new national guard

-

MEXICO CITY: Mexico’s Senate on Thursday approved President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s plan to create a new national guard, a central plank of the government’s strategy to subdue gang violence that has claimed tens of thousands of lives over the past decade.

The bill was passed unanimousl­y by 127 senators but only after Lopez Obrador’s party agreed to put the new security force, which will be made up of soldiers and police, under civilian instead of military control.

The step caps weeks of wrangling over the so-called Guardia Nacional after initial plans to give the military control of the force met with resistance from human rights groups, opposition lawmakers and some close political allies of Lopez Obrador.

The change to a civilian-led force was part of a compromise from Lopez Obrador to win Senate support after he personally argued that generals should be in charge.

In a first phase, the guard will consist of some 50,000 members transferre­d from military and federal police forces.

Critics argued that giving control of the guard to generals would increase the militarisa­tion of Mexico, whose reputation has been battered in the past few years by notorious rights abuses carried out by security forces.

Lopez Obrador’s leftist National Regenerati­on Movement (MorenaA) opted to modify the legislatio­n, a constituti­onal change requiring a two-thirds majority in Congress.

“We need the support of the army and the marines to confront the grave problem of safety and violence,” Lopez Obrador said in a regular news conference ahead of the vote. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Senators of the ruling National Regenerati­on Movement party (Morena) hold signs reading ‘We did it!’ after voting on the creation of a militarize­d police force, the National Guard, at the Senate in Mexico City, Mexico. — Reuters photo
Senators of the ruling National Regenerati­on Movement party (Morena) hold signs reading ‘We did it!’ after voting on the creation of a militarize­d police force, the National Guard, at the Senate in Mexico City, Mexico. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia