Almost half of Mexicans feel that crime is the biggest problem in their area. But less than two months before the country's presidential election, it's not clear the candidates understand the problem, argues The Economist. "Mexico's location, between South America's coca fields and the United States' drugs market, makes it vulnerable. But the persistence of violence is the fault of a weak state, and especially of inadequate policing, prosecution and courts. Widespread corruption greatly worsens the problem. Rather than correcting those defects, recent governments have cracked down ineptly," The Economist says. "Police investigate just a quarter of murders. In part that is because there are too few police. The interior ministry has set a target of 1.8 police for every 1,000 people. Only Mexico City and the state of Tabasco have met it. Police and officials are underpaid, and thus tempted to work for criminals rather than against them." "Another problem is co-ordination. Mexico has municipal, state and federal police forces, plus the army[…]In many states municipal and state-level police do not use the same radio frequencies and therefore cannot communicate. The army resents being asked to chase domestic criminals, a job it thinks the police should do." |
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