Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Senate buys surveillance cameras without tenders or transparency

The Senate is tightening security but without inviting tenders and with a lack of transparency, the newspaper El Financiero reported.

The Senate’s administrative director has arranged to purchase security cameras for the legislature from a company without an invitation for tenders.

Mauricio Farah Gebara said he awarded contracts worth 134 million pesos (US $6.8 million) to Grupo IDSEC without a public invitation for tenders for security reasons, citing the urgent need to protect the “the integrity of goods and persons” within the Senate chambers and the Chamber of Deputies.

The contract for the installation of 600 security cameras in the Senate was awarded directly to the company and signed on June 1. Under the conditions of the contract, the company will provide service for five years, for which the senate paid a 30% advance.

The signing of a contract may have been hastened after a parcel bomb exploded in Senator Citlalli Hernández’s office on May 29. After the attack, Ricardo Monreal, president of the committee for political coordination, called for increased security measures within the legislature.

In both cases, Gebara insisted that he had the right to directly award the contract without tenders because of the urgent need to improve security in the legislature. But El Financiero said he has maintained “an opaque relationship” with the supplier.

In the last two years, Gebara has signed contracts without tenders worth 134.68 million pesos to the same company.

Source: El Financiero (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Cyclists enjoy a car-free Paseo Dominical along Reforma Avenue in Mexico City.

99 facts you need to know about Mexico: 1-20

13
What is the most common household appliance? How many tortillerías are in operation? What is the average combined monthly household income? Find out or test your knowledge of the 99 facts you need to know about Mexico.
Line 1 trains

A totally renovated Metro Line 1 — Mexico City’s oldest — is up and running again 

1
The capital's most important metro line, serving commuters since its inception in 1969, has been completely refurbished. As Mayor Brugada put it: "Every last screw has been replaced."
Smuggled parakeets

US man caught smuggling Mexican parakeets in his pants faces 20 years in prison

1
An American citizen living in Tijuana who was caught trying to smuggle two parakeets across the border into the U.S. last month was indicted in San Diego last week on federal smuggling charges.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity