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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico 

President Calderón Delivers Address
email this pageprint this pageemail usSuzanne Stephens Waller - Presidencia de la República
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June 17, 2010



President Felipe Calderon
Mexican Citizens:

Today, I would like to talk to you about a problem which I know concerns Mexican families; the lack of law and order.

I am aware of citizens' demands to put an end to crime throughout the country. Which is why, since the first day of my government, we have forcefully combated organized crime.

We have done so in Federal Government, not only because it is our obligation, but because your well-being and the future of our children is at stake.

I would like to explain how the country arrived at the situation we are now experiencing. For decades, organized crime was almost exclusively concerned with trafficking drugs to the United States which was and still is the world’s largest drug consumer.

For criminals, then, it was important to secure highways and one or two border crossing points. It suited them not to be seen. They kept a low profile. But from the mid-1990s onwards, they also wanted to sell drugs here, among Mexican children and youth.

That is when the violence began, because in order to control the local drug market and keep their rivals away from the places they wished to control, criminals needed to intimidate not only other criminals but also the authorities and society.

They began to fight among themselves, engaging in turf wars and also tried to scare government and citizens. Their actions went from being low profile to an overt challenge against everyone.

And this was exacerbated in 2004, when the US lifted the ban on the sale of assault weapons. Since then, it has been very easy for criminal groups to purchase powerful weapons in the US and bring them to Mexico for criminal purposes.

In some places, this situation exceeded the capacity of security and justice authorities, especially municipal and some state ones, who were not prepared to deal with a problem of this size and were often subdued by corruption or intimidation.

Once they were established in a territory, gangs and criminals began to commit other crimes, such as extortion, kidnapping innocent people and controlling local crime.

In the beginning, they only extorted money from other criminals: those that stole cars, sold adulterated alcohol or stolen gasoline but later they began to charge protection money or operating fees from honest citizens.

This is the main and most serious problem I observed, which is why Federal Government had to intervene, because criminal organizations were beginning to get directly involved with people, citizens like you. And we could not allow it nor will we permit it now.

That is what the country was like at the beginning of my government. It is crucial to act firmly to defend Mexicans’ lives, integrity, assets and families. It would have been easy to ignore the problem, as some suggest, but it is the duty of every government to protect citizens and respect and enforce the law.

And when the government does not act, criminals end up subjecting Mexican families to their ambitions and whims.

And I want to be clear. Ours is not a struggle solely or mainly against drug traffickers. It is a struggle against every expression of organized crime that affects citizens. It is a struggle against those that took over towns or communities with weapons and attack those that live there.

That is why it is a fight worth fighting, and one that must be waged. And this is not nor should be a fight by the president alone but by all Mexicans, particularly those that have public responsibility in government, at either the federal, state or municipal level or in the other branches such as the legislative or judicial branches, to act on behalf of people.

And I say that it is a fight by all Mexicans, because criminals make no distinction and harm all sectors equally. That is why your participation is vital, because this is everyone's fight, which is why your denunciation or the information you can give us is crucial to making progress in this respect.

The National Security Strategy has the following main axes:

First. Joint operations to support local authorities and citizens. In these operations, the Armed Forces and the Federal Police are deployed throughout various zones to re-establish minimal security conditions and deal with criminals.

I should point out that this is a temporary form of support for local authorities, designed to give them the time and opportunity to rebuild their own security and justice, attorney general's offices and local police, because they are also responsible for security in those states and municipalities.

Second. The purging and strengthening of the police and institutions in general, linked to security and justice.

Our aim is not only to combat crime, but to strengthen our security and justice institutions. That is why, for example, we are professionalizing the police force and in particular, we are improving the technical and operating capacities of Federal Police.

We are applying reliability tests to guarantee the honesty of members of the forces of law and order. We are constructing a scientific, professional Federal Police force, with honest young men with values, which is better paid and better equipped and has effective, high-tech information and intelligence systems.

We hope that the governments of states and municipalities will do the same so that we will be able to protect your families and you increasingly effectively.

Third. Redesign the legal framework to reduce impunity.

We are improving our laws to have more effective instruments against crime. With the Reform of the Penal Justice System, we will adopt a more transparent system, with oral trials, which will be more expeditious, and have simplified trials and above all, a system that protects victims.

Fourth. Prevention and strengthening of the social fabric.

To this end, we organized the Safe School Program, for example, used in virtually all the country’s state schools, to prevent there from being weapons, drugs, violence or gangs in schools. There we need the support of parents, teachers and the community as a whole.

And we are also supporting local governments, in order to recover public spaces, such as parks or sports grounds that had been taken over by criminals, to give them back to law-abiding citizens.

And we are also making a great effort to prevent and treat addictions among young people and teenagers.

Mexican Citizens:

We have a long-term crime-fighting strategy which is already underway.

During the first stage, we have weakened organized crime. We have significantly damaged all the cartels across the board. This has created divisions between criminal gangs.

This is why, but above all, because of their traditional rivalry and the wars between them, violent executions have taken placed between criminal gangs as well as confrontations between each other and between criminals and the authorities, particularly the federal authority.

I know that Mexicans are concerned about violent events and the deaths reported on a daily basis and what hurts and outrages us most is precisely, the loss of innocent lives.

That is precisely why we will spare no effort to stop criminal activity from continuing to affect innocent citizens.

Restoring law and order is no easy or fast task, but it is worth going on. It is worth it because that is how we will construct a free, safe country. Otherwise, we would leave society in the hands of our common enemy, which is crime, particularly organized crime.

We cannot and will not let our guard down in my government.

And as I said from the first day, this is a struggle that will take time, and cost money and unfortunately human lives, such as those we have unfortunately lost of those brave police, soldiers and marines who have sacrificed themselves for your well-being and security and that of all Mexicans.

But I also said and I repeat that it is a struggle that it is worth waging, because our future is at stake. And it is a fight which together, Mexicans will obviously win.

In order to build the Mexico we want, a Mexico where you can walk calmly down the streets and know that your children will be safe, we are going to carry on and win that fight.

Through history, Mexicans have overcome many enemies. We will also beat this one.

Today, the country is being tested again, but we will get over this, because there are many, many more Mexicans that want a free, safe Mexico and one that is at peace.

That is why my government is absolutely determined to continue fighting criminals until we achieve the Mexico we want.

With your support, we will achieve this.

The fight is worth it.

You and your family are the reason for this fight.

Thank you




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the included information for research and educational purposes • m3 © 2009 BanderasNews ® all rights reserved • carpe aestus