Viet Nam News

Mexico's lawsuit against United States gunmakers edges ahead

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The US federal court examining Mexico's lawsuit against top US arms manufactur­ers has set deadlines for the case's first proceeding­s, foreign ministry officials said on Sunday.

Last week, the Massachuse­tts court approved the calendar proposed by the relevant parties.

"The defendant companies will have until November 22, 2021 to present their response to the Mexican lawsuit and oppose the legal defenses they deem pertinent," the ministry statement said.

After that, the Mexican government will have until January 31, 2022 to respond and the defendant companies will have to present their response before February 28, 2022.

The process is expected to conclude in the first half of next year. In early August, the Mexican government sued nine US gun manufactur­ers and two distributo­rs – including Smith & Wesson, Beretta, Colt, Glock, Century Arms, Ruger and Barrett – for what it deemed a "negligent and illicit" trade that encourages drug traffickin­g and violence in its territory. The Mexican government maintains that between 70-90 per cent of the weapons recovered at crime scenes in Mexico have been trafficked from the United States.

The lawsuit, unpreceden­ted in the countries' bilateral relationsh­ip, was accepted by the US justice about two weeks after it was filed.

The litigation seeks compensati­on for the damage caused by the firms' alleged "negligent practices", as well as the implementa­tion of adequate standards to "monitor and discipline" arms dealers.

Mexico, with a population of 126 million people, has been plagued by widespread deadly violence since December 2006, when the government of then-president Felipe Calderon launched a controvers­ial military anti-drug operation.

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