Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Mexican president: Restoring peace is country’s top priority

Homicides have soared this year

- Bloomberg News By Eric Martin and Nacha Cattan

MEXICO CITY –– President Enrique Pena Nieto on Saturday called for Mexico to redouble efforts against violence, saying that restoring peace to the nation is the biggest demand of society and top priority of his government.

After falling in the first years of his administra­tion, the rate of killings is on the rise again. That requires improvemen­t in security forces at the local level across the country, Mr. Pena Nieto said. He urged Congress to turn 1,800 local police forces into 32 state units, a proposal that has been stalled for years, saying that the nation can’t depend on federal forces to permanentl­y provide security in towns and municipali­ties.

“We still have much to do,” Mr. Pena Nieto said in a nationally televised speech to his Cabinet and hundreds of guests at the National Palace in Mexico City. “Today a great part of homicides aren’t related to organized crime but with common crimes, for which states and municipali­ties are responsibl­e. It’s imperative that we address this weakness and the historical lags that exist in our local security forces.”

Homicides have soared this year, reaching the highest rate this century, as drug cartels fight over traffickin­g routes. The drug war has also spread to beach resorts like Cancun and Los Cabos, triggering a U.S. State Department travel advisory for both resorts and endangerin­g a tourism industry that generates $20 billion annually.

The president’s reference to the spiraling violence signals the severity of the problem, and its likely importance in the upcoming presidenti­al election to choose his successor next July.

While the Pena Nieto administra­tion is credited with passing key economic reforms that ended the state’s oil monopoly and triggered a plunge in prices for mobilephon­e service, its record on security has been widely criticized. Successes at taking down drug kingpins like Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman may have only backfired by triggering bloody battles among trafficker­s fighting to replace them.

One of the biggest blots on the administra­tion’s security record is its inability to resolve the case of 43 students almost three years after they disappeare­d at the hands of police who handed them over to heroin trafficker­s in the state of Guerrero.

In the speech, Mr. Pena Nieto touted the administra­tion’s economic achievemen­ts and advances in education and developmen­t. He also focused part of his speech on the U.S., drawing his biggest applause by saying Mexico “won’t accept anything that goes against our dignity as a nation.”

U.S. President Donald Trump has repeatedly demanded that Mexico pay billions of dollars for a border wall to keep out undocument­ed immigrants, some of whom he has called criminals and rapists. Mexico’s government has consistent­ly said paying for the wall is out of the question.

Mr. Pena Nieto expressed Mexico’s desire to strengthen the North American Free Trade Agreement, with the second round of negotiatio­ns to update the treaty in Mexico City through Tuesday.

The Mexican president also voiced his support for immigrants illegally brought into the U.S. as children. Mr. Trump plans to announce Tuesday whether he’ll scrap protection­s for them as he comes under new pressure from top congressio­nal Republican­s and hundreds of business leaders to keep the program.

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