Mexico President to bypass Congress to keep Army in streets
Mexico’s president has begun exploring plans
to sidestep congress to hand formal control of the National Guard to the army,
a move that could extend the military’s control over policing in a country with
high levels of violence.
That has raised concerns because President
Andrés Manuel López Obrador won approval for creating the force in 2019 by
pledging in the constitution that it would be under nominal civilian control
and that the army would be off the streets by 2024.
Neither the National Guard nor the military
have been able to lower the insecurity in the country, however. This past week,
drug cartels staged widespread arson and shooting attacks, terrifying civilians
in three main northwest cities in a bold challenge to the state.
Still, López Obrador wants to keep soldiers
involved in policing, and remove civilian control over the National Guard,
whose officers and commanders are mostly soldiers, with military training and
pay grades.
But the president no longer has the votes in
congress to amend the constitution and has suggested he may try to do it as a
regulatory change with a simple majority in congress or by an executive order
and see if the courts will uphold that.
López Obrador warned Friday against
politicizing the issue, saying the military is needed to fight Mexico’s violent
drug cartels. But then he immediately politicized it himself.
“A constitutional reform would be ideal, but
we have to look for ways, because they (the opposition) instead of helping us,
are blocking us, there is an intent to prevent us from doing anything,” López
Obrador said.
The two main opposition parties also had a
different positions when they were in power. They supported the army in public
safety roles during their respective administrations beginning in 2006 and
2012.
When López Obrador was running for president,
he called for taking the army off the streets. But being in power — and seeing
homicides running at their highest sustained levels ever — apparently changed
his mind.
He has relied heavily on the military not just
for crime-fighting. He sees the army and navy as heroic, patriotic and less
corruptible, and has entrusted them with building major infrastructure
projects, running airports and trains, stopping migrants and overseeing customs
at seaports.
Mexico’s army has been deeply involved in
policing since the start of the 2006 drug war. But its presence was always
understood as temporary, a stop-gap until Mexico could build trustworthy police
forces.
López Obrador appears to have abandoned that
plan, instead making the military and quasi-military force like the National
Guard the main solution. “Their mandate has to be prolonged,” he said.
“I think the best thing is for the National
Guard to be a branch of the Defense Department to give it stability over time
and prevent it from being corrupted,” he said. He also wants the army and the
navy to help in public safety roles beyond 2024, the current dateline
established in a 2020 executive order.
The force has grown to 115,000, but almost
80% of its personnel were drawn from the ranks of the military.
The United Nations and human rights groups
have long expressed reservations about having the military do police work. and
Mexico's Supreme Court has yet to decide on several appeals against what
critics say are unconstitutional tasks given to the National Guard.
The U.N. Human Rights High Commissioner’s
office said last week that militarizing civil institutions, such as policing,
weakens democracy. Soldiers aren’t trained for that, the military by nature
isn’t very open to scrutiny, it has been implicated in human rights abuses, and
the presence of troops hasn’t resolved the pressing question of how to reform
police, prosecutors and courts.
While López Obrador claims human rights
abuses are no longer tolerated, the governmental National Human Rights
Commission has received more than a thousand complaints alleging abuses by the
National Guard. The agency has issued five recommendations in cases where there
was evidence of excessive use of force, torture or abuse of migrants.
“The problem with using the military in
civilian roles is that we don’t have any control of what goes on inside” the
forces, said Ana Lorena Delgadillo, director of the civic group Foundation For
Justice.
Delgadillo said that placing the National
Guard under the Defense Department, despite constitutional language defining it
as a civilian-commanded force, is “authoritarian,” will be challenged in court
and will not help to pacify the country.
The Mexican Employers’ Association, Coparmex,
said in a statement that the capabilities of state police should instead be
strengthened. “It is them and the [state prosecutors’ offices] that are
authorized to interact with the civilian population,” the group said.
Perhaps more to the point, the quasi-military
National Guard has not been able to bring down Mexico’s stubbornly high
homicide rate.
Sofía de Robina, a lawyer for the Miguel
Agustín Pro Juárez Human Rights Center, said the National Guard “has not been
able to decrease violence,” in part because of its military-style strategy of
“occupying territory.”
While that strategy — of building barracks
and conducting regular patrols — may be helpful in remote or rural areas, it
has proved less useful and even drawn opposition in urban areas.
Police, who are from the towns they serve and
live among the inhabitants, would be more effective, experts say. Yet
widespread corruption, poor pay and threats by cartels against police officers
have weakened local and state police forces.
Over 15 years of experience with the military
in policing roles has shown “the falseness of the paradigm that the army was
going to solve the problems,” Delgadillo said.
De Robina added that López Obrador’s latest
move means trying to keep the military in policing indefinitely, “completely
defying the obligation that public safety be civil” with no limits on time or
strategy.
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